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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Football Dataco Ltd & Ors v Sportradar GmbH & Anor [2012] EWHC 1185 (Ch) (08 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/1185.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1185 (Ch) |
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HC09 C00391 |
CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Royal Courts of Justice Rolls Building, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) FOOTBALL DATACO LIMITED (2) THE SCOTTISH PREMIER LEAGUE LIMITED (3) THE SCOTTISH FOOTBALL LEAGUE (4) PA SPORT UK |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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(1) SPORTRADAR GMBH (a company registered in Germany) (2) SPORTRADAR AG (a company registered in Switzerland) |
Defendants |
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and between: |
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(1) FOOTBALL DATACO LIMITED (2) THE FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION PREMIER LEAGUE LIMITED (3) THE FOOTBALL LEAGUE LIMITED (4) THE SCOTTISH PREMIER LEAGUE LIMITED (5) THE SCOTTISH FOOTBALL LEAGUE (6) PA SPORT UK |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) STAN JAMES ABINGDON LIMITED (2) STAN JAMES PLC (a Gibraltarian company, formerly known as Stan James Gibraltar Limited) (3) ENETPULSE APS (a Danish company) |
Defendants |
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Henry Carr QC and Hugo Cuddigan (instructed by Bird & Bird LLP) for the Sportradar Defendants
Philip Roberts (instructed by Olswang) for Stan James PLC
Hearing dates: 27th, 28th and 30th March 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Floyd :
Introduction
Database Right - Law
The Legislation
1. Member States shall provide for a right for the maker of a database which shows that there has been qualitatively or quantitatively a substantial investment in either the obtaining, verification or presentation of the contents to prevent extraction and/or re-utilization of the whole or a substantial part, evaluated qualitatively and/or quantitatively, of the contents of that database.
"a collection of independent works, data or other materials arranged in a systematic or methodical way and individually accessible by electronic or other means."
"…the permanent or temporary transfer of all or a substantial part of the contents of a database to another medium by any means or in any form;"
"The repeated and systematic extraction and/or re-utilization of insubstantial parts of the contents of the database implying acts which conflict with a normal exploitation of that database or which unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests of the maker of the database shall not be permitted." (my emphasis)
Subsistence
"32. Article 7(1) of the directive reserves the protection of the sui generis right to databases which meet a specific criterion, namely to those which show that there has been qualitatively and/or quantitatively a substantial investment in the obtaining, verification or presentation of their contents.
33. Under the 9th, 10th and 12th recitals of the preamble to the directive, its purpose is to promote and protect investment in data 'storage' and 'processing' systems which contribute to the development of an information market against a background of exponential growth in the amount of information generated and processed annually in all sectors of activity. It follows that the expression 'investment in … the obtaining, verification or presentation of the contents' of a database must be understood, generally, to refer to investment in the creation of that database as such.
34. Against that background, the expression 'investment in … the obtaining … of the contents' of a database must, as Veikkaus and the German and Netherlands Governments point out, be understood to refer to the resources used to seek out existing independent materials and collect them in the database, and not to the resources used for the creation as such of independent materials. The purpose of the protection by the sui generis right provided for by the directive is to promote the establishment of storage and processing systems for existing information and not the creation of materials capable of being collected subsequently in a database.
35. That interpretation is backed up by the 39th recital of the preamble to the directive, according to which the aim of the sui generis right is to safeguard the results of the financial and professional investment made in 'obtaining and collection of the contents' of a database. As the Advocate General points out in points 61 to 66 of her Opinion, despite slight variations in wording, all the language versions of the 39th recital support an interpretation which excludes the creation of the materials contained in a database from the definition of obtaining…
37. The expression 'investment in … the … verification … of the contents' of a database must be understood to refer to the resources used, with a view to ensuring the reliability of the information contained in that database, to monitor the accuracy of the materials collected when the database was created and during its operation. The expression 'investment in … the … presentation of the contents' of the database concerns, for its part, the resources used for the purpose of giving the database its function of processing information, that is to say those used for the systematic or methodical arrangement of the materials contained in that database and the organisation of their individual accessibility…
44. Finding and collecting the data which make up a football fixture list do not require any particular effort on the part of the professional leagues. Those activities are indivisibly linked to the creation of those data, in which the leagues participate directly as those responsible for the organisation of football league fixtures. Obtaining the contents of a football fixture list thus does not require any investment independent of that required for the creation of the data contained in that list.
45. The professional football leagues do not need to put any particular effort into monitoring the accuracy of the data on league matches when the list is made up because those leagues are directly involved in the creation of those data. The verification of the accuracy of the contents of fixture lists during the season simply involves, according to the observations made by Fixtures, adapting certain data in those lists to take account of any postponement of a match or fixture date decided on by or in collaboration with the leagues. As Veikkaus submits, such verification cannot be regarded as requiring substantial investment.
46. …
47. It follows that neither the obtaining, nor the verification nor yet the presentation of the contents of a football fixture list attests to substantial investment which could justify protection by the sui generis right provided for by Article 7 of the directive.
49. In the light of the foregoing, the answer to the first question referred should be that the expression 'investment in … the obtaining … of the contents' of a database as defined in Article 7(1) of the directive must be understood to refer to the resources used to seek out existing independent materials and collect them in the database. It does not cover the resources used for the creation of materials which make up the contents of a database. In the context of drawing up a fixture list for the purpose of organising football league fixtures, therefore, it does not cover the resources used to establish the dates, times and the team pairings for the various matches in the league."
"38. However, investment in the selection, for the purpose of organising horse racing, of the horses admitted to run in the race concerned relates to the creation of the data which make up the lists for those races which appear in the BHB database. It does not constitute investment in obtaining the contents of the database. It cannot, therefore, be taken into account in assessing whether the investment in the creation of the database was substantial.
39. Admittedly, the process of entering a horse on a list for a race requires a number of prior checks as to the identity of the person making the entry, the characteristics of the horse and the classification of the horse, its owner and the jockey.
40. However, such prior checks are made at the stage of creating the list for the race in question. They thus constitute investment in the creation of data and not in the verification of the contents of the database.
41. It follows that the resources used to draw up a list of horses in a race and to carry out checks in that connection do not represent investment in the obtaining and verification of the contents of the database in which that list appears."
"28. I now turn to what I think is the flaw in [BHB's counsel's] reasoning. He starts from the beginning of the process, working down to the final, officially published, list of riders and runners. By a series of steps he says Art 7(1) databases are created by a process of gathering in and checking.
29. But the Court has, I think, implicitly rejected that approach. It focussed on the final database - that which is eventually published. What marks that out from anything that has gone before is the BHB's stamp of authority on it. Only the BHB can provide such an official list. Only from that list can you know the accepted declared entries. Only the BHB can provide such a list. No one else could go through a similar process to produce the official list.
30. So if one asks whether the BHB published database is one consisting of "existing independent materials" the answer is no. The database contains unique information - the official list of riders and runners. The nature of the information changes with the stamp of official approval. It becomes something different from a mere database of existing material.
31. It is only on this basis that one can understand the crucial paragraphs in the ECJ's reasoning [37 -41].
...
34. It is true that in [38] the word "selection" is used. Out of context this might be taken to mean something like "creative choice" but in context it clearly does not have that meaning. Other language versions of the judgment (particularly the French determination) do not have the nuance of creative choice.
35. It follows that despite all [BHB's counsel's] ingenuity, the answer from the Court is clear. So far as BHB's database consists of the officially identified names of riders and runners, it is not within the sui generis right of Art.7(1) of the Directive. And I think the same reasoning applies in those cases (big races) where the BHB publishes a list of provisional runners prior to final declarations. Again what is published is different in character from a mere list of gathered in information. It is a list of horses that BHB have accepted as qualifying to race – as properly and actually entered"
"35 In that light, the fact that the creation of a database is linked to the exercise of a principal activity in which the person creating the database is also the creator of the materials contained in the database does not, as such, preclude that person from claiming the protection of the sui generis right, provided that he establishes that the obtaining of those materials, their verification or their presentation, in the sense described in [31] to [34] of this judgment, required substantial investment in quantitative or qualitative terms, which was independent of the resources used to create those materials. "
21 …. In my judgment it is not supported by the British Horseracing Board or Fixtures Marketing cases. In those cases, the key information which the defendants had taken, namely the lists of horses in races and the lists of football fixtures, had been created by or on behalf of the claimants. It is true that the lists were created using pre-existing information (such as the names of the horses, the owners and the jockeys in British Horseracing Board), but nevertheless what resulted was new information: see the judgment of Jacob LJ when the British Horseracing Board case returned to the Court of Appeal [2005] EWCA Civ 863, [2005] RPC 35 at [29]-[30] and [35]. The CJEU held that the investment in creating that new information did not count for the purposes of subsistence or infringement of database right. By contrast, in the present case for the most part Sky do not create new information when they enter a customer's details into the Chordiant database, they simply record pre-existing information in a systematic way. It might be argued that the installation date was created by Sky, but even if it that is right it does not assist the Personal Defendants with regard to information such as the customer's name, address and telephone number. Counsel for the Personal Defendants' argument would substantially deprive the contents of many databases of protection, contrary to the whole purpose of the Database Directive."
Extraction
"69. In that connection, it must be borne in mind that protection by the sui generis right covers databases whose creation required a substantial investment. Against that background, Article 7(1) of the directive prohibits extraction and/or re-utilisation not only of the whole of a database protected by the sui generis right but also of a substantial part, evaluated qualitatively or quantitatively, of its contents. According to the 42nd recital of the preamble to the directive, that provision is intended to prevent a situation in which a user 'through his acts, causes significant detriment, evaluated qualitatively or quantitatively, to the investment'. It appears from that recital that the assessment, in qualitative terms, of whether the part at issue is substantial, must, like the assessment in quantitative terms, refer to the investment in the creation of the database and the prejudice caused to that investment by the act of extracting or re-utilising that part.
[70] The expression substantial part, evaluated quantitatively, of the contents of a database within the meaning of Article 7(1) of the directive refers to the volume of data extracted from the database and/or re-utilised, and must be assessed in relation to the volume of the contents of the whole of that database. If a user extracts and/or re-utilises a quantitatively significant part of the contents of a database whose creation required the deployment of substantial resources, the investment in the extracted or re-utilised part is, proportionately, equally substantial.
[71] The expression substantial part, evaluated qualitatively, of the contents of a database refers to the scale of the investment in the obtaining, verification or presentation of the contents of the subject of the act of extraction and/or re-utilisation, regardless of whether that subject represents a quantitatively substantial part of the general contents of the protected database. A quantitatively negligible part of the contents of a database may in fact represent, in terms of obtaining, verification or presentation, significant human, technical or financial investment."
"86. It follows that the purpose of Article 7(5) of the directive is to prevent circumvention of the prohibition in Article 7(1) of the directive. Its objective is to prevent repeated and systematic extractions and/or re-utilisations of insubstantial parts of the contents of a database, the cumulative effect of which would be to seriously prejudice the investment made by the maker of the database just as the extractions and/or re-utilisations referred to in Article 7(1) of the directive would.
87. The provision therefore prohibits acts of extraction made by users of the database which, because of their repeated and systematic character, would lead to the reconstitution of the database as a whole or, at the very least, of a substantial part of it, without the authorisation of the maker of the database, whether those acts were carried out with a view to the creation of another database or in the exercise of an activity other than the creation of a database."
FDC's activities
The database
Sportradar's activities
The pop-up box
The errors
Subsistence of database right
"Meteorological data ... are records … of natural phenomena, not the phenomena themselves, and it would be difficult for scientists to argue that they have simply collected the data rather than creating them."
Infringement by users: substantial part
Infringement by users: insubstantial part
Joint liability - law
"The underlying concept for joint tortfeasance is that the joint tortfeasor has been so involved in the commission of the tort as to make himself liable for the tort. Unless he has made the infringing act his own, he has not himself committed the tort."
Joint liability – Sportradar with punters
Joint liability – Stan James with punters
Abus de droit and freedom of expression
"52. A finding of an abuse requires, first, a combination of objective circumstances in which, despite formal observance of the conditions laid down by the Community rules, the purpose of those rules has not been achieved.
53. It requires, second, a subjective element consisting in the intention to obtain an advantage from the Community rules by creating artificially the conditions laid down for obtaining it. ..."
Reference to CJEU
Conclusions
i) although customers of Stan James (and Bet 365) were, prior to the date of the defence, committing acts of infringement of the claimants' database right, they did not do so thereafter;
ii) Sportradar were not joint tortfeasors with customers of Stan James or Bet 365 in respect of those acts;
iii) Stan James were joint tortfeasors with their customers in respect of those acts.
(7) Whereas the making of databases requires the investment of considerable human, technical and financial resources while such databases can be copied or accessed at a fraction of the cost needed to design them independently;
(8) Whereas the unauthorized extraction and/or re-utilization of the contents of a database constitute acts which can have serious economic and technical consequences;
(9) Whereas databases are a vital tool in the development of an information market within the Community; whereas this tool will also be of use in many other fields;
(10) Whereas the exponential growth, in the Community and worldwide, in the amount of information generated and processed annually in all sectors of commerce and industry calls for investment in all the Member States in advanced information processing systems;
(11) Whereas there is at present a very great imbalance in the level of investment in the database sector both as between the Member States and between the Community and the world's largest database-producing third countries;
(12) Whereas such an investment in modern information storage and processing systems will not take place within the Community unless a stable and uniform legal protection regime is introduced for the protection of the rights of makers of databases;
(13) Whereas this Directive protects collections, sometimes called 'compilations`, of works, data or other materials which are arranged, stored and accessed by means which include electronic, electromagnetic or electro-optical processes or analogous processes;
(17) Whereas the term 'database` should be understood to include literary, artistic, musical or other collections of works or collections of other material such as texts, sound, images, numbers, facts, and data; whereas it should cover collections of independent works, data or other materials which are systematically or methodically arranged and can be individually accessed; whereas this means that a recording or an audiovisual, cinematographic, literary or musical work as such does not fall within the scope of this Directive;
(19) Whereas, as a rule, the compilation of several recordings of musical performances on a CD does not come within the scope of this Directive, both because, as a compilation, it does not meet the conditions for copyright protection and because it does not represent a substantial enough investment to be eligible under the sui generis right;
(38) Whereas the increasing use of digital recording technology exposes the database maker to the risk that the contents of his database may be copied and rearranged electronically, without his authorization, to produce a database of identical content which, however, does not infringe any copyright in the arrangement of his database;
(41) Whereas the objective of the sui generis right is to give the maker of a database the option of preventing the unauthorized extraction and/or re-utilization of all or a substantial part of the contents of that database; whereas the maker of a database is the person who takes the initiative and the risk of investing; whereas this excludes subcontractors in particular from the definition of maker;
(42) Whereas the special right to prevent unauthorized extraction and/or re-utilization relates to acts by the user which go beyond his legitimate rights and thereby harm the investment; whereas the right to prohibit extraction and/or re-utilization of all or a substantial part of the contents relates not only to the manufacture of a parasitical competing product but also to any user who, through his acts, causes significant detriment, evaluated qualitatively or quantitatively, to the investment;
(44) Whereas, when on-screen display of the contents of a database necessitates the permanent or temporary transfer of all or a substantial part of such contents to another medium, that act should be subject to authorization by the rightholder;
(45) Whereas the right to prevent unauthorized extraction and/or re-utilization does not in any way constitute an extension of copyright protection to mere facts or data;
(46) Whereas the existence of a right to prevent the unauthorized extraction and/or re-utilization of the whole or a substantial part of works, data or materials from a database should not give rise to the creation of a new right in the works, data or materials themselves.