South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal

You are here:
SAFLII >>
Databases >>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal >>
1986 >>
[1986] ZASCA 157
| Noteup
| LawCite
Klep Values (Pty) Ltd. v Saunders Value Company Ltd. (493/84/av) [1986] ZASCA 157; [1987] 4 All SA 147 (AD (15 December 1986)
Download original files |
493/84/AV
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between:
KLEP VALVES (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED Appellant
AND
SAUNDERS VALVE COMPANY LIMITED Respondent
CORAM: CORBETT, JOUBERT, GROSSKOPF, JJA, GALGUT et NICHOLAS AJJA
HEARD: 2 September 1986
DELIVERED: 15 December 1986
JUDGMENT
GROSSKOPF, JA
Introduction
The respondent is a British company which designs
and manufactures valves. Among its products are diaphragm
valves
2 valves which are widely used for the handling of industrial
fluids. The respondent has been selling its valves in South Africa for
many
years. Two types of diaphragm valves which have been popular in South Africa are
described as the type KB or straight through
diaphragm valve and the type A or
weir diaphragm valve. Although the respondent manufac-tures a full range of
these valves, the present
case is con-cerned with only one model of each type,
viz. the 2 inch (50mm) type A and type KB valves. For convenience I shall
express
all dimensions in Imperial units, as was done in the affidavits.
The appellant, a South African company, also manu-factures valves. Diaphragm valves of the type with which
we
3 we are now concerned are used in South Africa mainly in the mining
industry. In the 1970's the appellant came to realise that a
demand existed for
valves which were interchangeable with those already being used on the mines.
The appellant investigated whether
the respondent's valves were protected by
patents, and came tó the conclusion that any patents which might have
been relevant
had already lapsed. It is common cause that this conclusion was
correct. Accordingly the appellant has since 1977 been manufacturing
and selling
com-ponents which are interchangeable with the components used in the
respondent's valves. For purposes of its trade
it has issued illustrated
brochures, two of which are before the Court. They bear, respectively, the
headings "Klep Type A
Diaphragm
4
Diaphragm Valve" and "Klep Type KB Diaphragm Valve". After
setting out advertising material and particulars concerning
the valve with which it deals, each brochure contains the
following:
"Interchangeable with 'Saunders' Dia-phragm Valves.All KLEP DIAPHRAGM VALVE parts are independently manufactured and are interchangeable with 'Saunders' dia-phragm valves."
It is common cause that engineering drawings are
essential to the production of equipment such as the valves
manufactured by the parties. Such drawings serve the purpose
of controlling the processes of repetitive manufacture. In
manufacturing
its 2-inch types A and KB valves the respondent
uses eleven engineering drawings which were executed at dif-
ferent ....
5
ferent dates between 1938 and 1958. Six of these relate
to
the type A valve and five to the type KB.
On 4 October 1982 the respondent, through a firm
of
South African patent agents, wrote to the appellant inter
alia
as follows:
"Our client holds the copyright in cer-tain drawings covering their well-known type 'A' and type 'KB' diaphragm valves and parts thereof. Up until having recently consulted with us, our client was not aware of the existence of its rights.
We have examined certain valves manufac-tured by you and it is our opinion that such manufacture constitutes a repro-duction by you in a three-dimensional form of our client's drawings and as such infringes our client's copyright."
The letter then continued by calling upon the ap-
pellant
6 pellant to stop infringing the
respondent's rights as set out in the letter. The appellant's attorneys replied,
disputing both that
the appellant had infringed the re-spondent's copyright,
and, indeed, that any copyright existed as claimed by the respondent. The
respondent sub-sequently instituted proceedings on motion in the Transvaal
Provincial Division in which it claimed an order interdicting
the appellant from
infringing the respondent's copyright in the said drawings by "manufacturing
and/or selling valves or components
for valves known as TYPE A or TYPE KB
valves, which manufacture and sale of such valves or components there-for
constitute a reproduction
and/or adaptation and/or publi-cation of the said
original drawings or a substantial part
thereof
7
thereof in three dimensional form". In addition the
respon-
dent claimed various ancillary orders, some of which will
be
considered in more detail later. The respondent also com-
plained that
the above-mentioned brochures infringed its re-
gistered trade mark
"Saunders" and claimed an order interdict-
ing such infringement. The matter
came before O'DONOVAN J,
who decided in favour of the respondent. His
judgment is re-
ported as Saunders Valve Co. Ltd v Klep Valves (Pty)
Ltd 1985
(1) SA 646 (T). References hereinafter to the judgment of
the Court a quo will be to this report. With the leave of the judge a quo the matter now comes on appeal to this court. The applicable law.
It will be convenient to commence by sketching the legislative background against which this case falls to be decided. When the drawings on which the respondent relies were made, copyright in this country was governed by the
Patents
8 Patents, Designs, Trade Marks, and Copyright
Act, no. 9 of 1916. Sec 143 of this Act declared that the 1911 British
Copyright Act (1 & 2 Geo. 5 ch. 46) would thenceforth be in force in South
Africa subject to certain minor modifications and additions. The British Act was
set
out in the Third Schedule to the 1916 Act.
One effect of the 1916 Act was
to create vir-tual uniformity between South African . and British copyright law.
This continued until
1956 when the British Copyright Act of that year was
promulgated (4 & 5 Eliz. 2 c. 74). In 1965 a new Copyright Act (Act no.
63 of 1965) was introduced in South Africa. This act was substantially
modelled on the British Act of 1956. The Act of 1965 was in
turn
9
turn repealed by the Copyright Act of 1978 (Act no.
98 of
1978) which now governs copyright in this country. Sec.
43
of this Act provides (in so far as it is relevant):
"This Act shall apply in relation to works made before the commencement of this Act as it applies in relation to works made thereafter; Provided that -(a) hothing in this Act contained shall -
(i)... affect the ownership, duration or validity of any copyright which subsists under the Copyright Act 1965 (Act No 63 of 1965); or
(ii) be construed as creating any copyright which did not subsist prior to 11 September 1965;"
11 September 1965 was the date of commencement of
the 1965 Act. The effect of sec. 43 of the 1978 Act ac-
cordingly is to render earlier legislation applicable to the
question whether copyright subsists in works made prior to
the
10 the commencement of the 1978 Act, whereas the 1978 Act governs
the remedies for infringement of copyright and the procedures relating
thereto.
It was common cause in argu-ment before us (otherwise than in the written heads
of argument) that the 1916 Act governs the
subsistence of copyright in the
respondent's engineering drawings, which, as I have indicated, were made while
that Act was in force.
I assume without deciding that the parties' attitude in
this regard is correct, particularly since I do not consider that the outcome
of
the case would be any different if, as had been urged by the appellant in its
heads of argument, the transitional provisions of
sec. 48 of the 1965 Act and
the Sixth Schedule to that Act were to be applied.
I turn now to the question whether the respondent's
engineering
11
engineering drawings were entitled to the protection
of
copyright pursuant to the 1916 Act. Sec. 1(1) of the 1911
British Act,
which, as noted above, was incorporated in the
1916 Act as the Third Schedule
thereto, reads as follows:
"1(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, copyright shall subsist throughout the parts of His Majesty's dominions to which this Act extends for the term hereinafter mentioned in every original literary dramatic musical and artistic work, if -
(a) in the case of a published work, the work was first published within such parts of his Majesty's dominions as aforesaid; and (b) in the case of an unpublished work, the author was at the date of the making of the work a British subject or resident within such parts of his Majesty's dominions as aforesaid;
but in no other works "
In terms of sec. 35 "artistic work" includes "works
of
12
of painting, drawing, sculpture and artistic
craftmanship, and architectural works of art and engravings and
photo-graphs".
The questions which arise in this appeal under sec. 1(1) of
the 1911 British Act are whether the respondent's drawings are "artistic
works";
whether they were original; and whether paragraphs (a) or (b) were complied
with. I shall first consider these questions
before turning to other issues
which were raised. Are the drawings "artistic works"?
Mr. Plewman, who
appeared for the respondent in this matter, contended that the engineering
drawings in issue are "artistic works"
because, as "works of drawing", they fall
within the definition quoted above. This contention was
contested
13 contested by Mr. Kentridge, who appeared for the appellant.
He submitted that the words "works of drawing" when read in their context
are
confined to works made with artistic intent. Drawings of a purely technical
nature would, according to this submission, not fall
within the concept of
"artistic works".
Both these contentions start from the premise that the word
"drawing" in its ordinary sense has no necessary relationship with the
fine
arts. I agree with this approach. The Shorter Oxford Dictionary defines "draw"
(in its relevant sense) as, primarily, "(t)o
trace (a line, figure, etc.) by
drawing a pencil, pen, or the like, across a surface; ... (t)o make by drawing
lines; to design,
delineate." "Drawing" is defined, inter alia, as "(t)he
formation of a line by
drawing
14 drawing some tracing instrument from point to point of a
surface; representation by lines; delineation, as dist. from painting;"
and
"(t)hat which is drawn; a delineation by pen, pencil or crayon." These
definitions do not suggest that the word "drawing" is
more properly used to
connote artistic than technical or any other works. I turn, therefore, tó
the context in which the word
is used in the British Act of 1911.
The
immediate neighbours of the expression "works of drawing" in the definition of
"artistic work" are "works of painting", "works
of sculpture", "works of
artistic crafts-manship", "architectural works of art", "engravings" and
"photographs". It is noteworthy
that in respect of two of these items, viz.,
works of artistic craftsmanship and archi-
tectural
15
tectural works of art, the legislature found it necessary to use the words "artistic" and "art" to indicate that an artis-tic element was necessary to bring the work in guestion with-in the definition of an artistic work. The expression "architectural work of art" is further expressly defined in sec. 35 of the Act to emphasize that the protection of the Act is confined to the "artistic character and design" of an architectural work, and does not extend to "processes or methods of construction". The other items mentioned in the definition of artistic work (namely, works of painting, works of drawing, works of sculpture, engravings and photographs) have, in their ordinary meanings, a greater or lesser affinity with the fine arts, but are not confined thereto. A painted
advertising
16
advertising sign would fall within the expression "work of painting" as naturally as would a work by Rembrandt. The ex-pression "work of sculpture" is defined in sec. 35 to include casts and models. The ordinary meaning of these words would encompass works made for aesthetic reasons as well as many others. "Engravings" is defined to include "etchings,litho-graphs, wood-cuts, prints, and other similar works, not being photographs." "Photograph" is defined to include "photo-lithograph and any work produced by any processes analogous to photography". There is nothing in the language relating to engravings andphotographs to suggest that only those specimens are covered which were made for artistic reasons.
It
17 It is apparent therefore that, save for works of craftsmanship and
architectural works, the items mentioned in the definition of
"artistic work" do
not in terms require any element of artistic endeavour. Indeed, the words used
suggest a wider meaning, and where
the legislature wanted to introduce some
specific artistic requirement for works of craftsmanship and architecture, it
did so in
express terms.
Moreover, when one looks at the nature of the
various items covered by the definition of "artistic work", it seems most
unlikely that
the legislature intended to in-clude only works made with an
artistic intent. This applies to all of them (save, of course, works
of
craftsmanship and architectural works) but to none as clearly as
photographs.
Can
18
Can it really be imagined that the Act impliedly distinguish-ed between photographs taken with artistic intent, which would be protected by copyright, and others which would not? What purpose would be served by such a distinction? One needs only to think of press photographs, whose claim to protection does not rest on their aesthetic appeal but is nevertheless very strong. It is difficult to imagine that such photographs, and indeed all the others without artistic pretensions, could be copied with impunity under the 1911 Act. And how would one distinguish in practice between a photograph which was taken with artistic intent and one which was not?
These considerations apply also to drawings. It must be ex-tremely difficult, and, indeed, often impossible, to determine
what
19 what the draughtsman's intent was when making a drawing. This
difficulty is increased when it is borne in mind that opinions can
legitimately
differ on what constitutes art. As stated by Laddie Prescott & Vitoria (The
Modern Law of Copyright at p. 104):
"There are those who think that the engineer
has not infre-quently produced undoubted works of art, not least because of his
insistence
on function." Moreover, when regard is had to the policy of the Act
to protect authors who, by their skill and labour, produced original
works,
there would not appear to be any reason to exclude drawings merely because they
were made for utilitarian rather than aesthetic
reasons.
I consider therefore that, if regard is had both to the wording and the practical effect of the definition of
"artistic
19 what the draughtsman's intent was when making a drawing.
This difficulty is increased when it is borne in mind that opinions can
legitimately differ on what constitutes art. As stated by Laddie Prescott &
Vitoria (The Modern Law of Copyright at p.104): "There
are those who think that
the engineer has not infre-quently produced undoubted works of art, not least
because of his insistence
on function." Moreover, when regard is had to the
policy of the Act to protect authors who, by their skill and labour,produced
original
works, there would not appear to be any reason to exclude drawings
merely because they were made for utilitarian rather than aesthetic
reasons. I
consider therefore that, if regard is had both to the wording and the practical
effect of the definition of
"artistic
20
"artistic work", it cannot be said to colour the
expression "work of drawing" in the manner suggested on behalf of the appellant.
The only feature which seems to me to provide some support for the appellant's
contention is the labelling of these works as "artistic".
Before giving further
con-sideration to this feature I propose examining whether there is anything in
the wider context of the Act
as a whole which casts light on this issue.
The
manner in which the Act deals with literary works is, I think, apposite.
"Literary work" is defined in sec. 35 as including "maps,
charts, plans, tables
and compilations". In the leading case of University of London
Press
21
Press, Ltd v University Tutorial Press Ltd (1916) 2
Ch.
601, PETERSO.N J, in holding that examination papers consti-
tuted
literary works under the British Act of 1911, said
the following (at p
608):
"It may be difficult to define 'literary work' as used in this Act, but it seems to be plain that it is not confined to 'literary work' in the sense in which that phrase is applied, for instance, to Meredith's novels and the writings of Robert Louis Stevenson.. In speaking of such writings as literary works one thinks of the quality, the style, and the literary finish which they exhibit. Under the Act of 1842, which protected 'books', many things which had no pre-tensions to literary style acquired copyright; for example, a list of registered bills of sale, a list of foxhounds and hunting days, and trade catalogues; and I see no ground for coming to the conclusion that the present Act was intended to curtail the rights of authors. In my view the words 'literary work' cover work which is expres-
sed
22
sed in print or writing, irrespective of the gues-tion whether the quality or style is high. The word 'literary' seems to be used in a sense some-what similar to the use of the word 'literature' in political or electioneering literature, and refers to written or printed matter."
This case has been consistently followed, inter alios by the House of Lords in Ladbroke (Football) Ltd v William Hill (Football) Ltd. (1964) 1 WLR 273 (HL) in which it was held that a football pool coupon constituted a literary work. See also Kalamazoo Division (Pty) Ltd v Gay & Others 1978(2) SA 184(C) p. 191; Copinger & Skone James on Copyright, 12th ed. pp. 59-60; Laddie Prescott & Vitoria, The Modern Law of Copyright, para. 2.10; and AJC Copeling, Copyright Law, pp. 30-32; Copyright and the Act of 1978,"pp. 8-9.
It is clear from the above that "literary works"
did
23
did not require any literary merit or pretension to be pro-tected under the 1911 Act. Consequently, "in a statute which frequently uses words in a special sense differing from their normally accepted meaning it should not be surprising to find that 'artistic works' includes things which neither are nor purport to be objects of beauty, however slight" (Laddie Prescott & Vitoria, op cit, at p. 106). I do not consider, therefore, that the use of the label "artistic work" is sufficient by itself to import a requirement of artistic intent which is not found in the language used to describe the relevant items covered by that label and which seems inconsistent with the practical needs served by the Act.
For
23 A
There seems to be no direct authority under
the
1916 Act or the British 1911 Act on the point in issue.
Copinger &
Skone James, op cit, at p. 68, state:
"It was generally considered under the Act of 1911 that the word 'artistic' was merely used as a generic term to include the different processes of creating works set out in the definition sec-tion and that, provided that a work was produced by
one
24
one of such processes, and that its creation in-volved some skill or labour on the part of the ar-tist, it was protected. The use of the word 'artistic' was thought to be akin to that of the word 'literary', which ... was held to refer only to the nature of the material being written or printed matter."
In Purefoy Engineering Coy Ld.. and Another v Sykes Boxall
&
Coy Ld and Others 01955) 72 RPC 89 (CA) copyright was
held to subsist in
a catalogue of mechanical parts. The
catalogue contained, inter alia,
photographs of the parts
and line drawings or diagrams indicating the
dimensions tabulated in the text. Although the photographs and the drawings were
held
to be protected by copyright, the Court reached this conclusion by
regarding the whole work, that
is
25
is, including text, photographs and drawings, as a literary work in terms of the Act. No attention was given to the question whether the photographs and drawings would have been covered by the definition of "artistic work". Although this case is therefore no direct authority for present pur-poses,it does underline the practical interrelationship be-tween literary works and artistic works. This interrelation-ship is also shown by the inclusion in the definition of "literary work" of maps, charts and plans. All this forti-fies the view thát the legislature was not likely to require an element of artistic intent for artistic works although no analogous requirement was laid down for literary works.
Mr. Kentridge referred us to several recent publica-
tions
26
tions in which it was contended, or suggested as a possibili-
ty, that technical drawings were not included in the
definition of "artistic work" in the 1911 British Act or
later Acts. I do not propose considering these views
separately since I have dealt above with the arguments on
which they were
based.
For the reasons I have stated I come to the con-
clusion that the respondent's engineering drawings are "ar-
tistic works" as defined in the 1911 British Act. Were the drawings "original"?
The next question is whether the respondent's
drawings qualified as "original" works for the purposes of
sec. 1 of the 1911 British Act. The principles relating
to originality in this context were not in dispute between
the
27
the parties and are conveniently set out by prof.
AJC
Copeling in the following passage (Copyright and the Act of
1978, p. 15):
"To be original a work need not be the vehicle for new or inventive thought. Nor is it neces-sary that such thoughts as the work may contain be expressed in a form which is novel or without precedent. 'Originality', for the purposes of copyright, refers not to originality of either thought or the expression of thought, but to original skill or labour in execution. All that is required is that the work should emanate from
the author himself and not be copied
The requirement that the work should emanate from the author himself and not be copied must not be interpreted as meaning that a work will be regarded as original only where it is made without reference to existing subject-matter. Indeed, were this so the great majority of works would be denied the benefit of copyright protection. It is perfectly possible for an author to make use of existing material and still achieve originality in respect
of
28
of the work which he produces. In that event, the work must be more than simply a slavish copy; it must in some measure be due to the application of the author's own skill or labour. Precisely how much skill or labour he need contribute is dif-ficult to say for much will depend upon the facts of each particular case."
These principles were applied in the unreported judgment of this Court in W.K. Topka t/a Topring Manufac-turing and Engineering v Ehrenberg Engineering (Pty) Ltd, delivered on 30 May 1983. See also Kalamazoo Division (Pty) Ltd v Gay and Others 1978 (2) SA 184 (C) at p. 190.
The evidence on behalf of the respondent disclosed
that nine of the eleven
drawings in issue had been made by
R Jarrett and one each by G. Pearson and
L. Burton. Pearson
and Jarrett are both deceased. Sec. 26 of the 1978 Act which deals with the onus of proof in copyright actions, provides
in
29
in sub-section "(4) that where it is proved or admitted that
the author
of a work is dead, "the work shall be presumed to be
an
original work unless the contrary is proved." It is common
cause that
this provision applies to the present case. The
third draughtsman, Burton,
filed an affidavit in which he
testified that the relevant drawing
"...is a drawing which I recognise as having been drawn by myself ... This drawing was drawn by my-
self on the instructions of Mr. Jarrett and was not copied from any other drawing or article. I expended skill and labour in executing such drawing. The drawing represented a significant change in the design of the diaphragm for the 2" type 'KB' valve ..."
On behalf of the appellant a twofold attack was
launched on the contention
that the drawings were original.
First it was pointed out that the
development and
the
30
the design of the valves which were represented in the drawings, resulted from team efforts involving a number of people in addition to the draughtsmen. How can it then be said, it was asked, that the drawings were the original work of the draughtsmen? Moreover it is common cause that the drawings now in issue represented developments of earlier valves. How do we know, the appellant asked, that the draughtsmen devoted sufficient of their skill and labour to the present drawings to render them original works in ac-cordance with the tests set out above? Or, to pose the question differently, how do we know that the present drawings are not mere copies of earlier ones, perhaps with insignifi-cant changes? To enable these questions to be answered, it
was
31
was submitted on behalf of the appellant, the matter should
have been referred for oral evidence, to give the parties a proper opportunity
of testing the witnesses in cross-examina-tion after having had full discovery.
The contention that oral evidence was necessary for
a proper determination of
the case was made also with reference to other issues to be considered in due
course, but can be conveniently
dealt with now in its present context. Should
oral evidence have been allowed?
It is apparent that the affidavits do
not contain a direct conflict of evidence relating to the originality of the
drawings: the appellant's
contention is that these are matters peculiarly within
the respondent's knowledge which the
appellant
32
appellant should have been given the opportunity
to probe
by discovery and cross-examination, particularly where
the
appellant was required to discharge the statutory onus.
This attitude
on the appellant's part seems to me to amount
to that expressed as follows in
Room Hire Co. (Pty) Ltd.
v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd 1949
(3) SA 1155 (T) at
1163:
"Or ... he (i.e. a respondent in motion proceedings) may state that he can lead no evidence himself or by others to dispute the truth of applicant's statements, which are peculiarly within applicant's knowledge, but he puts applicant to the proof there-of by oral evidence subject to cross-examination."
This attitude, MURRAY AJP points out in the Room Hire case, (loc cit), has been held in Peterson v Cuthbert &
Co Ltd
33
Co Ltd 1945 AD 420 not to give rise to a genuine or real dispute of fact. If the respondent in such a case requires oral evidence he can apply to cross-examine witnesses (in terms of what is to-day Rule of Court 6 (5) (g)) and such cross-examination is sufficient safeguard for him, without requiring the case to be sent to trial (Room Hire case at p. 1164). See also Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd [1984] ZASCA 51; 1984 (3) SA 623 (A) at 634 I to 635 B. I should add that a respondent who requires discovery can make application therefor under Rule of Court 35 (13).
To determine whether the Court a quo dealt with this issue correctly one must have regard to the manner in which the issue was raised. I deal first with the contention that
the
34
the appellant was prejudiced by the lack of discovery. In this regard it appears that, prior to the lodging of op-posing affidavits, the appellant issued two notices pursuant to Rule of Court 35 (12) calling for the production of docu-ments to which reference was made in the respondent's af-fidavits (including "all issue cards and drawings"). These notices were amplified by a letter from the appellant's at-torneys. In an affidavit filed on behalf of the respondent, its design manager, Mr. M I Pearce, explained which engi-neering drawings were in existence and he annexed to his af-fidavit those which he had been advised should be produced. Mr. R.M. Miles, the respondent's executive chairman, stated in a replying affidavit that he had "ensured that all the
drawings
35
drawings in the (respondent's) possession relevant to the
manufacture of the valves in the sizes in issue (had) been extracted from
the
records of the (respondent)." These drawings were available for inspection at
the offices of the respondent's attorneys.
It was not contended on behalf of
the appellant that the respondent had failed to produce all relevant drawings
-indeed, it is not
clear whether the appellant availed itself of the opportunity
to inspect the drawings tendered to it. In these circumstances the
appellant can
hardly be heard to say that it was deprived of the opportunity to obtain
dis-covery. On the face of it the appellant
was given every-thing it asked for,
which, in respect of the documents re-quested by it, seems to have been fully as
much as it would
have
36 have been entitled to on discovery. If anything had been
omitted, the appellant might have asked therefor. And, of course, formal
discovery might have been applied for if the appellant had so wished.
The
submission that oral evidence should be allowed was raised as follows in the
Court a guo. The ap-pellant as respondent in that Court contended in the
course of its argument that the evidence adduced by the respondent (applicant
in
that Court) did not show that the drawings upon which it relied were original.
The argument then proceeded as follows, according
to written heads of argument
handed in
to the Court a quo:
"Alternatively it is submitted that if this Court should deem fit that (sic) the matter should be referred to trial, alternatively to the hearing of oral evidence on this issue and that the Applicant should be obliged to make
37
a full discovery which will then enable both the Respondent and this Court to determine whether indeed any originality and therefore any copyright vests in the drawings relied on by the Applicant."
It is clear therefore that no substantive application in terms
of Rule of Court 6 (5) (g) was made by the appellant during
the hearing in
the court a quo. In De Beers Industrial
Diamond Division
(Pty) Ltd v Ishizuka 1980 (2) SA 191 (T) at
206 A a full bench of the Transvaal Provincial Division indi-
cated that
it is sound practice that an application for evi-
dence viva voce
should be made in limine. I agree with this
observation although this
does not of course mean that a court
may not in appropriate circumstances allow such an appli-
cation to be brought at some other stage of the proceedings.
I
38
I need not however pursue this matter since in the present
case no clear application was made at any stage. The Court a quo can in
my view not be faulted for declining an invita-tion to refer the matter for the
hearing of oral evidence in circumstance such
as the present, where there is no
conflict of evidence and the invitation was extended somewhat tentatively in the
course of the
respondent's argument as an alternative to a submission on the
merits. I consider therefore that the judge a quo acted correctly in
deciding the issue of originality on the papers before him.
On the record as
it stands the respondent has, I consider, shown that the drawings were original.
On behalf of the respondent Mr.
Pearce explained how engineering draw-
ings
39
ings are made in practice. His evidence in this regard was not contradicted. I need not repeat his explanation in detail. What it amounts to is that, although a draughtsman normally works in co-operation with a design engineer, he exercises a great deal of independent skill and labour when converting the ideas of the design engineer into de-tailed specifications for practical manufacture. Similar skill and labour are required to modify an existing design. The draughtsman is required to calculate the suitability of the components in a design (whether original or modified) and to plan the inter-relationship between the part as it will be manufactured with other inter-connecting parts. He has to have regard inter alia to the method of manufacture,
the
40 the materials to be used, the tolerances to be allowed, national
or international standards to be applied and the degree of rationalization
required by the manufacturer. In view of this evidence it can make no difference
per se that the drawings were team efforts in that the engineering
designs emanated mainly from others. Copyright subsists in the drawings
made by
the draughtsmen provided the drawings themselves were original in the sense
discussed above. Nor can it matter that earlier
drawings were followed provided
that the draughtsmen contributed sufficient skill or labour to the present
drawings. In the instant
case we not only have the assurance by the respondent's
witnesses that there are sub-stantial differences between the drawings in
issue
and earlier versions, but the appellant was given an opportunity to verify
this
41 this, as I have recounted above, and failed to dispute the
respondent's evidence. In these circumstances I agree with the court
a
quo that the drawings in question were shown to have been original within
the meaning of sec. 1 of the British Act of 1911.
Were sub-sections l(a) or (b) complied with?
The next question
which arises under sec 1 of the 1911 British Act is whether sub-sections l(a) or
(b) were complied with. These sub-sections
lay down different re-quirements for
published and unpublished works. Published works are protected if their first
publication took
place within "the parts of His Majesty's dominions to which
this Act extends", whereas unpublished works are protected if
their
42
their authors were at the date of the making of the works
British subjects or residents of "His Majesty's dominions". In the present
case
the respondent's drawings were not published in the ordinary sense of the word
and the Court a quo dealt with them as unpublished works. On this basis
the question presents no difficulty since the evidence is clear that the
draughtsmen
were British subjects resident in Britain when the drawings were
made.
It is only if the drawings were published works that some difficulties
arise. One would therefore have thought that the parties would
have debated the
question whether these drawings were "published works" or not. They did not
however do so. Mr. Kentridge contended
that the respondent's
case
42 A case in the affidavits was that the drawings were
published works whose first publication had been in Britain by way of
reproductions
in three-dimensional form (i.e. by the "publication" of valves
made in accordance with the draw-ings). This case, his contention
proceeded, was
not established. Mr. Plewman, on the other hand, submitted that the respondent
had proved its case on both of the
possible alternatives.
The facts upon
which the Court a quo held that the drawings, if unpublished, were
entitled to the protection of copyright were fully canvassed in the papers and
were
not in dispute. There could accordingly be no objection to the Court's
reaching a conclusion on the basis of such facts.
The
42 B
The only aspect of the Court's reasoning which may be open to attack is the finding that the drawings were unpublished. This finding was not, however, challenged. In the result the present issue may prpbably be resolved on the simple ground that the conclusion of the Court a quo has not been shown to be wrong. However, in view of the arguments presented, I consider it better to give some consideration to what was required for the "publication" of the drawings and how the subsistence of copyright would.lhave been affected thereby. The question whether or not the drawings were pu-blished turns on the meaning and effect of sec. 1(3) of the 1911 British Act. This reads: "For the purposes of this Act, publication, in relation to any work, means the issue of copies of the work to the public ...". If this provision
governs
43
governs the meaning of "published work", "first published" and
"unpublished work" in sec. 1(1) of the Act, the enquiry would be whether
copies
of the drawings were issued to the public, and, if so, whether this happened
first in Britain. For present purposes I assume
in favour of the appellant's
contention that the provision does apply (vide Francis,Day and Hunter v
Feldman & Company (1914) 2 Ch 728 (CA)), and _ that the issue to the
public of valves made in
accordance with the drawings would amount to the
issue of copies of the work to the public . The only remaihing ques-tion then
is:
what is meant by "issue to the public"? In this regard Mr. Kentridge
accepted the correctness of the following passage from British Northrop Ltd v
Texteam Black-burn Ltd (1974) RPC 57 at 67:
"... an
44
"... an artistic work is 'issued to the public', and so published, when reproductions of the work are put on offer to the public ... Passive availability suffices, without active offering."
Although the British Northrop case dealt with the
1956 British Act,
MEGARRY J, in coming to the above conclu-
sion, relied, inter alia, on
Francis,Day and Hunter v
Feldman & Company (supra) a
case decided under the 1911 Act,
and hisreasoning was in my view applicable
to the interpre-
tation of both Acts. It should, in my view, be followed.
The
45
The evidence in support of the respondent's case on this aspect was twofold. First there was evidence from its product evaluation: manager, Mr. D.A. Thomas. Mr. Thomas was not in the respondent's employ when the drawings were made and his evidence was based purely on records under his control. He stated that, according to these records, the drawings were not published in two-dimensional form. How-ever, in the ordinary course of production, valves incorporating the components shown on the drawings would have been manu-factured, offered for sale and sold, first in the United Kingdom and thereafter elsewhere in the world.
Then there was evidence from Mr. P.C.E. Rose, who joined the respondent's service in 1937 as a costing clerk
and
46 and retired in 1974 after having been appointed Managing Director
in 1971. Mr. Rose stated that "(a)ll of the components depicted
in the drawings
... were first published in the United Kingdom in three-dimensional form in the
sense that valves were produced incorporating
such components and were offered
for sale and sold in the United Kingdom to the general public". It seems clear
that Mr. Rose meant
to convey that first publication took place in Britain (in
the manner stated) and his evidence, if accepted, would therefore be decisive
of
this question. Mr. Rose's evidence was undisputed and accords with the
probabilities to which Mr. Thomas tes-tified. I can consequently
see no reason
for rejecting his evidence. I also do not think that the judge a quo
erred in
deciding
47
deciding this issue without the assistance of oral evidence,
as was suggested on behalf of the appellant.
To sum up: it has not been
suggested that the drawings were published in any other way than by the "issue"
to the public of components
depicted on the drawings. If such "issue" did in law
amount to publication of the drawings for the purpose of sec. 1(1) of the Act,
the evidence discloses that the publication first took place in Britain, thereby
rendering sec. 1(1)(a) applicable. If such "issue"
did not amount to
publication, the drawings were unpublished. Since the evidence discloses that
the authors were British subjects
resident in Britain when the drawings were
made, sec.l(l)(b) would then be applicable. In either event the relevant
reguirement for
the subsistence of copyright was satisfied.
The
48
The effect of legislation relating to designs.
The last obstácle to the subsistence of copyright in terms of the 1911 British Act is found in sub-section 22 (1) thereof. This sub-section reads as follows:
"This Act shall not apply to designs capable of being registered under the Patents and Designs Act, 1907, except designs which, though capable bf being so registered, are not used or intended
to be used as models or patterns to be multiplied by any industrial process."
In
49
In terms of sec. 144(c) of the 1916 Act, the reference
to the Patents and Designs Act, 1907, must
be construed as a
reference to the corresponding provisions of Chapter II
of
the 1916 Act, being the chapter dealing with designs. For
present
purposes the relevant provision is the definition of
"design" in sec. 76 which reads as follows:
"'design' shall mean any design applicable to any article whether for the pattern, for the shape or configuration, or for the ornament thereof or for any two or more of such purposes and by whatever means it is applicable whether by printing, painting, embroidering, weaving, sewing, modelling, casting, embossing, engraving, staining, or any other means whatever, manual, mechanical, or chemical, sepárate or combined, not being a design for sculpture;"
This definition is identical in all material re-
spects to the definition in the British Act of 1907 to which
reference
50
reference is made in the above-quoted sec. 22 of the
1911
Act, as well as to that in the British Patents, Designs and
Trade
Marks Act of 1883.
The only decision in our law in which the definition
of "design" in the
1916 Act was considered is Allen-Sherman-
Hoff Co. v Registrar of
Designs 1935 TPD 270. At pp. 273-4
of that case TINDALL J, with whom
BARRY J con-
curred, held that in deciding whether certain features con-
stituted a design
"...one has to see whether that which it is desired to register is something which can be treated as a design appealing to the eye, or whether the shape is obviously nothing more than part and parcel of the function without any appeal to the eye as a design, in which case there should be no registration".
The quoted words were an extract from
the
51 the iudgment in In the Matter of Wingate's Registered
Desiqn (1935) 52 RPC 126 at 131. In the present case the Court a quo,
applying the test approved in the Allen-Sherman-Hoff case (supra),
held that "valves which find their practical ap-plication on the mines are
strictly utilitarian in character, their features of
shape and configuration
being dictated sole-ly by the function which they are required to perform" (p.
650 H of the report).
On behalf of the appellant it was contended that both the Court in the Allen-Sherman-Hoff case and the Court a quo applied a wrong test, for, so it was contended, the definition in the 1916 Act did not exclude a design which was dictated solely by function or require that its features appeal to and be judged solely by the eye. These require-
ments
52 ments, so it was contended, were introduced into English Law by
statute between 1919 and 1949, and Wingate's case (supra) was
decided pursuant to the British Act of 1919.
I would be most reluctant to
overrule the Allen-Sherman-Hoff case, a full bench decision which
has stood since 1935 and which must have been applied many times in practice
before the 1916 Act
was repealed( in so far as it dealt with designs) by the
Designs Act, 57 of 1967. For-tunately I do not think it necessary to do
so. For,
while it is correct that the requirements set out in the passage from
Wingate's case (supra) were not explicitly stated in the
definitions in the British statutes of 1883 and 1907 but were introduced by
later legislation,
it is also clear that,
as
53
as stated in Homecraft Steel Industries (Pty) Ltd v S M
Hare
& Son (Pty) Ltd and Another [1984] ZASCA 36; 1984 (3) SA 681 (AD) at p.
692
E-F, this later legislation "incorporates principles which
had long
been accepted in the law relating to designs,
namely, that a feature which is
necessarily determined by the
function of the article in question is not
registrable as a
design and that registered designs must be judged by the
eye
alone ". See also ibid at p. 690 H-I. Thus, for
instance, in
In the Matter of Bayer's Design (1907) 24 RPC 65 (CA)
at p. 77
FLETCHER MOULTON L J said, referring to the defini-
tion of design in the Act
of 1883:
"It deals entirely with the shape, or confi-guration, or ornament or pattern: they are all things which the eye has the complete power of
learning
54
learning from representation. ... That such is the case is recognised in the classic decision of Lord Herschell in the Hecla Foundry case (Hecla Foundry Co. v Walker, Hunter & Co. (1889) 6 RPC 554 - also a case on the 1883 Act), where he points out that the eye is the judge of infringement; and, if the eye be the judge of infringement, it must be because the eye is the competent judge of that which is to be infringed. I am satisfied, there-fore, that nothing but that which can be for the eye to see can be a good subject of Design."
See also ibid. at pp. 74 and 80; Amp Incorporated
v Utilux Proprietary Limited (1972) RPC 103 (HL) at pp. 119 to
120 (LORD PEARSON).
I need not, however, labour this aspect because the
appellant did not contest in its argument that a design required "an
individuality
of appearance in comparison with others" (I quote from the written
heads of argument). This
seems
55 seems to recognize the importance of the eye in judging whether a
registrable design has been created. Cf. Homecraft case (supra) at
p. 691, Robinson v D Cooper Corporation of SA (Pty) Ltd [1984] ZASCA 58; 1984 (3) SA 699
(A) at p. 704 C-G. And the appel-lant accepted that purely functional features
were not entitled
to registration as designs, but contended:
"If it is shown that the respondent's valve is not required to be in its
particular shape, and in that shape only, in order to work,
in other words that
there are other actual or possible shapes for the article, then the artistic
works embodying that valve are capable
of design registration under the 1916
Act". (Quoted from the Heads of Argument).
A similar argument was addressed
to the Court in Amp Inc. v Utilux (Pty) Ltd (supra) where the
Court was dealing with the definition of "design" in the British Re-gistered
Designs Act of 1949. In that definition there
was
a
56
a specific exclusion of "features of shape or
configuration
which are dictated solely by the function which the
article
to be made ... has to perform" (the definition in the
South
African Act of 1967 has a similar provision). At p. 109
of the
Amp Incorporated case LORD REID said:
"The respondents' argument is that a shape is only dictated by function if it is necessary to use that precise shape and no other in order to perform the function. Admittedly if that is the meaning the scope of this provision would be reduced almost to vanishing point because it is difficult to imagine any actual case where one shape and one shape alone will work. A key was suggested. Its function is to turn a particular lock, and only one shape of key will do that. But that is not quite true. In most cases at least a skeleton key of different shape will also turn the lock. In the end no actual case was found where only one precise shape would do. It seems improbable that the framers of this defi-nition could have intended to insert a provision
which
57
which has virtually no practical effect, so I look to see whether any other meaning produces a more reasonable result.
Again I think that a clue can be found from a consideration of what must have been the object of the provision. If the purpose of the Act was to give protection to a designer where design has added something of value to the prior art then one would expect an exclusion from protection of those cases where nothing has been added because every feature of the shape sought to be protected originated from purely functional considerations."
His conclusion was (at p. 110):
"If the shape is not there to appeal to the eye but solely to make the article work then this provision excludes it from the statutory protection."
In the same vein LORD MORRIS of Borth-y-Gest said,
(at p. 113):
"It was argued on behalf of Amp that as there could be variations of shape in terminals that would
successfully
58
successfully do what was required of them then the 'features of shape' would not have been 'dictated solely' by the function which the terminals would have to perform. In my view, this contention is not sound. If there are alternative features of shape but if each one is 'dictated solely' by the function which is to be performed by the article then each one would be excluded from the expression 'design'".
See also at pp. 117-8 (VISCOUNT DILHORNE) and p., 122.
(LORD PEARSON). The fifth member of the Court
(LORD DONOVAN)
concurred in the judgment of LORD REID.
If it is accepted
that purely functional features are in general not entitled to design protection
(and, as I have indicated, the
appellant rightly does not dispute this) the
Amp Incorporated case demonstrates, I consider, that the appel-lant's
argument on this aspect cannot prevail. It does not
matter
59
matter therefore that that case was concerned
with a sta-tutory exclusion whereas we are dealing with a similar rule derived
from
the intrinsic nature of design protection.
In support of its contention
the appellant relied on certain Australian cases, namely Malleys Limited v J
W Tomlin Pty Limited [1961] HCA 77; (1961) 35 ALJR 352 and Ogden Industries (Pty) Ltd v
Kis (Australia) Limited 1983 FSR 691. In view of my conclusion that the
Allen-Sherman-Hoff case (supra) accords with the law in Great
Britain, upon which our legis-lation was based, I do not consider it helpful to
determine whether
the Australian law might be different.
Applying
60 Applying the principles I have discussed to the facts of the
case I am of the view that the drawings clearly do not qualify as
"designs". The
valves are functional articles, designed to operate with maximum efficiency over
long periods in adverse conditions
such as in the mines and in other industries.
Some of the components depicted on the drawings are inside the valves and would
not
ordinarily be visible. But even the general shape and other visible
features, we have been told on affidavit by Mr. Pearce, were
determined by
purely functional considerations. This was not disputed and seems overwhelmingly
probable. If it were to be correct
that the same functional purposes could have
been served by designing a valve wïth a somewhat different
shape
61
shape, as was contended on the papers by Prof. Duggan
on
behalf of the respondent, it would in my view make no dif-
ference in the light of the legal principles discussed
above.
To conclude, I consider that the drawings in ques-
tion were not designs capable of being registered under the
1916 Act and were accordingly not excluded from copyright
by sec. 22 of the 1911 British Act. The ownership of the copyright.
The next question to be considered is whether the
respondent has established that it owns the
copyright in all
the drawings on which it rélies. This question arises
as
follows. In September 1933 Mr. P K Saunders (the inventor of the
original Saunders valves) and Mr. A L Trump commenced business as
a
62
a partnership under the name of the Saunders Valve Company. In
February 1934 they registered a company known as the Saunders Valve
Company
Limited. This company carried on business until 1948. During the period between
1933 and 1948 five of the drawings on which
the respondent relies were executed.
These drawings were made in the course of their employment by employees of the
Saunders Valve
Company Limited. Consequently the ownership of the copyright
vested in the company pursuant to sec 5(1)(b) of the 1911 British Act.
On 12
February 1948 an agreement was entered into between, on the one hand, Saunders
Valve Company Limited and Cwmbran Engineering
Company Limited (together called
the
"vendor
63
"vendor companies" in the agreement) and, on the other, the
present respondent (then called Saunders Valve Company (Cwmbran) Limited).
The
respondent was called "the New Company" in the agreement. The effect of the
agreement was that the "New Company" bought the assets
and businesses of the
vendor companies, which were to go into liquidation thereafter. The guestion to
be determined now is whether
the agreement effected a valid transfer to the
respondent of the copyright in the drawings belonging to the earlier Saunders
Valve
Company Limited .
In terms of sec 5(2) of the 1911 British Act an owner
of copyright may assign it to another "but no such assignment ... shall be valid
unless it is in writing signed
by
64
by the owner of the right in respect of which the assignment
... is made, or by his duly authorized agent." Apart from
writing no
formalities were required. The question therefore
is purely one of
construction of the agreement. Although. the
agreement was executed in Great
Britain and related to a
transaction which was to be performed there, neither
counsel
suggested to us that any principles of English law which
differed
from our law should be applied in its interpretation.
The part of the agreement which is of most relevance
for present purposes reads as follows:
"1. EACH of the Vendor Companies shall sell and
the New Company shall purchase as at Thirtieth April One thousand nine hundred and forty seven FIRST: the goodwill of each of the businesses now carried on by the Vendor Companies respec-tively with the exclusive right to use the
name
65
name of each of the Vendor Companies and the right to represent the New
Company as carry-ing on such respective businesses in succession
to and in
continuation of the Vendor Compa-nies respectively and the trade marks owned by
or connected with the businesses of each
of the Vendor Companies.
SECONDLY:
all the freehold and leasehold pro-perties belonging to each of the Vendor
Com-panies in connection with their respective
businesses short particulars of
which are con-tained in the Schedule hereto.
THIRDLY: all the plant machinery
loose plant patterns and jigs motor cars and other vehicles and fixtures
fittings and office and
canteen equipment work in progress stock in trade
ma-terials and chattels patents patent rights and licences to which the Vendor
Companies are en-titled respectively in connection with their respective
businesses.
FOURTHLY: the full benefit of all pending con-tracts engagements
and orders of each of the Vendor Companies in connection with their
re-spective
businesses .... FIFTHLY: any post-war refund or releases of
Excess
66
Excess Profits Tax to which either of the Vendor Companies is or may be entitled sub-ject to the provisions of Clause 6 hereof SIXTHLY: all other property to which the Vendor Companies are respectively entitled in connection with their respective businesses
It should further be noted that in terms of clause 13 each of the vendor
companies undertook to take all necessary steps to procure
its voluntary
winding-up within three months.
The respondent relies on the words "all other
property to which the Vendor Companies are respectively entitled in connection
with
their businesses" in the sixth clause quoted above as establishing an
assignment of the rights in question. The appellant on the
other hand contends
that these
words
67
words do not disclose any intention to transfer
copyright,
which is not even mentioned in the clause. But, as stated
by
Laddie Prescott & Vitoria (op cit, at p. 334):
"There does not seem to be any requirement that the assignment should specifically mention copy-right. Thus the transfer of 'all assets' of one business to another, if in writing, would be effective to transfer any copyrights to the transferee."
I agree with this statement. The result consequently
is that the wording
pf the agreement was in. my view wide enough to cover copyright. And the
surrounding circumstances seem to support
this interpretation. It is almost
unthinkable that the parties would have intended to transfer the businesses of
the vendor companies,
including the engineering drawings them-
selves
68
selves, which were in use at the time and some of which have been in use up to the present, but would have intended the copyright to remain vested in the vendor companies which were due to be wound up within three months. But, the appellant contends, the respondent was not aware of the subsistence of copyright in the drawings, and for that reason, probably, made no specific provision for the transfer of copyright. The judge a quo found himself "unable to accept the validity of such a purely subjective approach to the interpretation of a written agreement, in terms of which the (respondent) acquired all the rights of its predecessor in title" (report at p. 649 C). I agree with this finding, but would add that the record provides no support for the factual statement that the respondent was not aware in 1948 that copyright subsisted in
the
69
the drawings. Those who were in charge of the respondent at the time did not testify in the present proceedings and are in all probability no longer available to testify. There is accordingly no direct evidence before us that the respondent was unaware of the existence of copyright in the drawings, and it would be idle to speculate about the probable state of its knowledge. What does appear from the record is that the persons who now control the respondent and its licensee were not aware until 1982 that the copyright in the drawings might be used to prevent the appellant from manufacturing the valve components which are depicted on the drawings. Even if it be supposed that in 1948 the respondent was also unaware of this possible incident of copyright it would not mean that the respondent was unaware of the existence of copyright as such.
My
70
My view is accordingly that the agreement of 1948,if
properly construed, covered the copyright in the drawings
existing at the
time. The appellant did not contend that if
copyright were comprehended by
the above guoted clause VI of
the agreement, any further document of transfer
would have
been required. This seems to me to be the correct approach.
It
has been held that if an artistic work is sold with its
copyright the natural
inference is that ownership .
of the work and of the copyright would pass at
the.
same time. As was stated by FRY L J in London Printing
and
Publishing Alliance Ltd v Cox (1891) 3 Ch 291 (CA) at p
304:
"... it seems to me extremely improbable that the picture should pass and the copyright remain in the vendor. That is a possible but an unnatural dissociation of two kinds of property, which I
think
71
think we ought not to infer and ought not to think probable."
I am in respectful agreement with this view.
It was also suggested on behalf of the appellant that
oral evidence should have been allowed in order to determine
the exact
ambit of the agreement of 1948. I have already
given my reasons for agreeing
in general with the refusal of
the judge a quo to refer the matter for
oral evidence. On the
specific question of the interpretation of the 1948
agreement
I would add that there is nothing on record to suggest that
oral evidence
would be of any assistance in interpreting the
agreement, particularly if one
bears in mind the limited role
assigned to parol evidence in this field. The infringement of the copyright
I turn now to the question whether the appellant has
infringed
72
infringed the respondent's copyright in the drawings. Sec 23(1) of the 1978 Act provides that "(c)opyright shall be infringed by any person, not being the owner of the copy-right, who, wïthout the licence of such owner, does or causes any other person to do, in the Republic, any act which the owner of the copyright may authorize." The enquiry is therefore directed towards what the owner of copyright is entitled to authorize. That depends on the ambit of his right. And, as I have already indicated, sec 43 of the 1978 Act disavows any intention of creating copyright which did not exist prior to the commencement of the 1965 Act. It follows that in the present case one must look at the 1916 Act (incorporating the 1911 British Act) to ascertain what
the
73
the ambit of the respondent's copyright was so that one can
determine whether the acts which the appellant did were acts which the
respondent might authorize.
In terms of sec 1(2) of the 1911 British Act
"copy-right" means "the sole right to produce or reproduce the work or any
substantial
part thereof in any material form whatsoever ... and shall include
the sole right ... to authorize any such acts as aforesaid."
The respondent's
complaint in the present case is that the appellant has manufactured and
distributed valve components which were
reproductions in three-dimensional form
of the components depicted on the respondent's drawings. For purposes of
argument it was
accepted that the appellant probably never saw the respondent's
drawings. However, it was
contended
74
contended that the copying of valves which were manufactured
in accordance with the drawings constituted a sufficient in-direct copying
of
the drawings to entitle the respondent to relief. This type of copyright
infringement by what has been called "reverse engineering"
has been considered
in a number of cases, here and in England. It will be convenient to sketch
briefly the origin and development
of this part of the law.
The principles on
which this type of infringement rests were authoritatively settled in a field
far removed from engineering. In the
case of King Features Syndicate Inc.
and Another v O and M Kleeman Ltd (1940) Ch 806 (CA); (1941) AC 417, the
facts were briefly as follows. One Segar, an American artist who died in October
1938, was the author of a large number of drawings
or cartoons depicting as the
central
figure
75 figure "a grotesque and fictitious character known as
'Popeye', or 'Popeye, the sailor'." (1940 Ch at 807). These cartoons had
appeared in the form of comic strips running to very large numbers in the United
States of America, Canada and Great Britain. The
copyright in these drawings or
cartoons was vested in Segar's personal representative, or in King Features
Incorporated, or both
of them (the plaintiffs). The figure and get-up of Popeye
having become very popular, the plaintiffs granted licences to certain
persons
and companies to manufacture and sell brooches and mechanical dolls simulating
the figure of Popeye. Large quantities of
these article were sold. The
defendant, without obtaining a licence, ordered from a Japanese company,and
sold,a large number of "Popeye
brooches" and celluloid mechanical figures
and
plaster
76
plaster dolls representing Popeye. The plaintiffs sued
for
infringement of the copyright in the cartoons. The trial
court found
that the defendant had
infringed copyright in the drawings even though its
brooches and dolls may have been copied, not from the
drawings, but from
the articles made by the plaintiffs'
licensees. This conclusion was upheld by
the Court of Appeal,
CLAUSON L J saying the following (at p 816 of 1940
Ch):
"There can be no doubt at all that a figure which in fact reproduces an original artistic work con-
sisting, in substance, of a sketch of that figure, is none the less a reproduction of the original artistic work, because the maker of it has copied it not directly from the original but from some representation derived directly or indirectly from the original work. It seems to have been suggested in the Court below that the fact that the alleged infringement was in three dimensions, whereas the
original
77
original was in two, prevented the plaintiffs making good their claim. I agree with the learned judge that while this circumstance may add to the difficulty of forming a conclusion on the degree of resemblance between the infringing article and the original, the plain words of the Act ('in any ma-terial form') get rid of any difficulty there might otherwise have been in treating a copy in three dimensions as an infringement of copyright in a sketch in two dimensions."
See also LUXMOORE L J at pp 826-828.
On further appeal to the House of Lords the defendant did not contest the above findings but, in respect of the point now in issue, confined itself to an argument on the facts. In considering this argument the House of Lords applied the law as laid down by the Court of Appeal.
The King Features case was decided under the 1911 British Act and is therefore of direct relevance for present
purposes
78 purposes. It was, however, not until the 1956 British Act
was already in force that the principles approved in the King Features
case were applied to articles manufactured in ac-cordance with engineering
drawings (I should add, however, that in my view nothing
turns on the changes
effected by the new Act). See, for instance, Dorling v Honnor Marine Ltd
(1965) Ch 1 (CA); British Northrop Limited v Texteam Balckburn
Limited (1974) RPC 57 (Ch); Solar Thomson Engineering Company Limited v
Barton (1977) RPC 537 (CA) and L.B.(Plastics)Limited v Swish Products
Limited (1979) RPC 551 (HL), the last mentioned case ending in the House of
Lords. These cases have been followed in South Africa. See Scaw Metals v Apex
Foundry (Pty) Ltd and Another 1982 (2) SA 377 (D&C) and Tolima (Pty)
Ltd v Cugacius Motor Accessories (Pty) Ltd 1983 (3) SA 504 (W).
Recently
79
Recently the House of Lords again considered this matter in British Leyland Motor Corporation Ltd and Another v Armstrong Patents Co Ltd and Another (1986) 2 WLR 400. The facts were briefly as follows. The plaintiffs were designers and manufacturers of motor cars and they also produced some of the spare parts for their cars. In addition, they licensed other manufacturers to copy and sell spare parts in consi-deration of a royalty payment. The defendants declined to obtain a licence from the plaintiffs, but produced replacement exhaust pipes for the plaintiffs' cars by copying the shape and dimensions of the original. The plaintiffs instituted action, alleging that the defendants had by indirect copying infringed the copyright in the plaintiffs' original drawings of the exhaust system. The trial court held
in
80
in favour of the plaintiffs. This decision was upheld by the
Court of Appeal and also by the Hoúse of Lords (LORD GRIFFITHS
dissenting).
The result of the British Leyland case therefore does not
support the appellant's contentions in the present case. Mr. Kentridge pointed
out, however, that several
of the Law Lords, although considering themselves
bound by the LB (Plastics) case, supra, nevertheless expressed
reservations about the correctness of the decision, while LORD GRIFFITHS
regarded it as clearly wrong. We
were accordingly urged to consider this matter
afresh.
It may be convenient first to discuss the reasons given by LORD
GRIFFITHS for disapproving of the LB (Plastïcs) case (supra).
They turn on the interpretation of sec. 3(5) of
the
81
the 1956 British Act which reads as follows:
"The acts restricted by the copyright in an artis-
tic work are -
(a) reproducing the work in any material form."
It is well settled that copyright may be infringed
by copying something which is itself a
copy of the plaintiff's
work (called indirect copying). If the original work
has been
reproduced it is no answer to say that it has been copied
from a
work which was itself a copy of the original. This is
accepted by LORD
GRIFFITHS at pp 436-9, with reference to
authority. However, while he
recognizes the correctness and
value of this principle when applied to works
of fine art, he
does not think that it should have been extended to
mecha-
nical drawings or blueprints of purely functional objects.
His ultimate conclusion is (at p 443):
I
82
"I would, therefore, hold that 'reproducing' in section 3(5) should not be given the extended meaning of 'indirect copying' in cases in which the mechanical drawing of blueprint is of a purely functional object. In such cases the scope of artistic copyright should be limited to the natural meaning of the words, namely direct copy-ing including using the drawing to make the object it depicts."
I cannot, with respect, agree with this view. The
word "reproducing" applies to all works which
are subject to
copyright, and, in particular, to all artistic works,
whether
they are functional or not. There does not seem to me to be
any
warrant for assigning a different meaning to the word
"reproducing" according to the nature of the artistic work
with which one
is dealing. No rule of interpretation of which
I am aware can lead to this result. I can understand that the
nature of a particular work may make it difficult to prove
that
83
that an alleged reproduction is in fact a copy of
the original (a matter to which I return later), but the difficulty in this
regard
would be a factual one and would neither require nor justify a different
interpretation of the Act.
Moreover, the result for which LORD GRIFFITHS
con-tends would appear to create as many problems as it attempts to solve. First
there
is of course the problem of distinguishing between drawings of purely
functional objects and others. I need not elaborate on that.
But even in regard
to drawings of What are clearly functional objects there would appear to be as
much need of protection against
indirect copying as in regard to any other work.
Can it be suggested, for instance, that it should be a good defence for the user
of a pirated
engineering
84
engineering drawing to show that he copied, not
the original
dráwing, but a photograph thereof?
On analysis it appears that what caused the learned
Law Lords disquiet was not the principle that drawings of
functional objects are protected against indirect copying
(which principle must be unobjectionable) but the particular
application
of this principle with which they were dealing.
This was stated as follows by
Christine Fellner in BL v
Armstrong in the House of Lords. Our
Souls Redeemed from
the Company Store, (1986) 4 EIPR 117:
"The argument which caught their Lordship's atten-tion was that the court should look at the nature of the original contribution which confers copy-right, and consider whether it is that which an alleged infringer has taken. In the case of a drawing of a functional object, the original con-
tribution
85
tribution which confers copyright is the draughts-man's graphic skill and his labour. If the draw-ing is traced or photographed, that skill and la-bour is directly taken. If the drawing is used as a guide to making the object, again that skill and labour is taken. But if it is the object which is copied, then what is taken is not the draughts-man's skill and labour, but that of the designer who designed the object; and no one suggests that this is entitled to copyright. Indirect produc-tion of functional design is therefore not infringe-ment."
The answer to this argument, I would suggest, is the
following. It is
accepted in copyright law, as I have tried to show above, that an original work
is protected even though the author
may have borrowed extensively from others.
Of course, if infringement is alleged the plaintiff must show that it is the
author's
work (and not that of somebody whose work he had borrowed) which was
copied. This is a matter of
fact
86
fact which might be difficult to establish in particular circumstances, and this difficulty may be increased where the copy not only reflects the work of more than one pro-genitor, but does so in a different form, such as where there is a three-dimensional reproduction of drawings. The latter difficulty was recognized as far back as in the King Features case (see the above quoted passage from the judgment of CLAUSON LJ). However, if it is established as a fact that the three-dimensional object is a copy (direct or indirect) of the original drawing (as distinct from a mere embodiment of the designer's idea) there would not appear to be any rule of copyright law whereby protection could be denied the aggrieved owner of the copyright in the drawing. If the
result
86 A
result is considered unsatisfactory, it is only the
legis-lature which can, in my view, alter it (as it has done in some respects
in
this country - a matter to which I advert later).
To sum up, I am in
respectful agreement with the cases which have held that indirect copying of the
sort with which we are here concerned
is in principle an infringe-ment of the
copyright in the original drawings. Concerning the
question
87
question whether there was in fact an
infringement in the
present case I agree with the following conclusion by the
judge
a quo (report, p 648):
"... it has been incontestably shown that the re-spondent has for the purpose of manufacture and sale copied valves made in accordance with the applicant's drawings. The respondent was requested to produce the engineering drawings which it used for the manufacture of its own valves, but has declined to do so. Indeed the clearest evidence of copying is to be found not only in a visual com-parison of the two products but in the answering affidavit deposed to by Mr Bell, the managing director of the respondent, in which he states: 'The respondent in 1977 starting manufacturing com-ponents which could be interchanged with the com-ponents used in the Saunders type diaphragm valves found on the mines. The measurements of the re-spondent's components were made in conformity with those requirements.'"
In argument Mr. Kentridge pointed to certain
differences between the parties' valves as indicating, so he
contended
88
contended, that the appellant's valves were more than mere
copies of the respondent's drawings. In my view these minor
differences
cannot detract from the conclusion that there has been a reproduction of at
least a "substantial part" of the respondent's
drawings within the meaning of
sec 1(2) of the 1911 British Act.
The appellant's final argument on this
aspect was that oral evidence should have been allowed to determine whether the
respondent's
drawings were copied or not. I have indicated in general why I do
not think the case should have been referred for oral evidence.
In regard to the
present issue I also do not think that oral evidence could have made any
difference.
I conclude therefore that the respondent has
established
89
established that copyright subsisted in its
drawings pursuant to the 1911 British Act as incorporated in our Act of 1916,
and that
the appellant has infringed its copyright.
It is interesting to note
in passing that some of the difficulties and anomalies in this branch of the law
have recently received
the attention of our legislature. Act 66 of 1983 has
amended the 1978 Act by including, within the definition of "drawing", "any
drawing of a technical nature". In future proceedings under that Act there will
accordingly be no doubt that such drawings are "artistic
works". "Repro-duction"
was defined in the original 1978 Act as including, in relation to artistic
works, "a version produced by
con-verting the work into a three-dimensional
form, or, if it is in three-dimensions, by converting it into a two-dimensional
form."
By
Act
90 Act 66 of 1983 the definition of "reproduction" was extended to include, in relation to any work, "a reproduction made from a reproduction of that work." Consequently the definition of reproduction now makes explicit provision for indirect reproduction and for reproduction of two-dimensional artistic works in three-dimensional form. These changes are not of any consequence: in both respects the Act merely repeats what was clear law before. What is of greater impor-tance was the introduction of sec. 15(3A) by Act 66 of 1983. The effect of this section is, broadly, to limit the duration of copyright protection to a period of ten years for the indus-trial reproduction of utilitarian articles which infringe the copy-right of artistic works - in other words, cases of reverse engineering like the present. This meets a major objection
to
91
to the pre-existing law, namely that the protection was
available for an anomalously long period. The respondent's locus standi.
Having concluded that the respondent is the owner of
copyright in the
drawings on which it relies and that the
appellant has infringed its
copyright, I have now to consider
whether the respondent had locus
standi to institute
proceedings in respect of such infringement. It
appears that
as from May 1978 a company called Valve Makers of
South
Africa (Pty) Ltd, which was then a subsidiary of the re-
spondent, was granted an exclusive licence in South Africa
in respect of the copyright in the respondent's aforesaid
engineering drawings. In June 1982 there was a rearrange-
ment of interests, the exclusive licence being granted to
Stewarts & Lloyds of South Africa Ltd with Valve Makers
becoming
92
becoming exclusive sub-licensee. The appellant contends
that
only the exclusive licensee or the exclusive sub-licensee had
locus standi to bring the present proceedings. A similar
argument
was rejected in the full bench decision of Video
Parktown North
(Pty) Ltd v Paramount Pictures Corporation
1986 (2) SA 623 (T). I agree with the conclusion reached by
the full bench
and propose doing no more than setting out
briefly my reasons for so
agreeing.
The appellant's argument is based on an interpretation
of certain
provisions of the 1978 Act. Sec. 1 provides inter
alia that
"'exclusive licence' means a licence authorizing a licensee, to the exclusion of all other persons, including the grantor of the licence, to exercise a right which by virtue of this Act would, apart from the licence, be exercisable exclusively by the
owner
93
owner of the copyright; and 'exclusive licensee' shall be construed accordingly."
Sec. 24 provides that, subject to the provisions of the Act,
"infringements of copyright shall be actionable at the suit of the owner of the copyright."
Sec. 25 then lays down that
"(t)he exclusive licensee shall have the same rights of action and be entitled to the same remedies as if the licence had been an assignment."
If one reads sections 24 and 25 together their effect
is reasonably clear.
Whereas the owner is, in terms of sec.
24, the party who is primarily
entitled to institute action
against infringers, sec. 25 grants to the
licensee the rights
of action and remedies of an assignee (which in
effect
are the same as the owner's). The section does not however
say
94 say that the grant of rights to the exclusive licensee
is to be accompanied by a corresponding diminution of the owner's rights,
nor
does it say that the exclusive licensee is to be regarded as in all respects
equivalent to an assignee, which might have implied
such a diminution. Purely as
a matter of interpretation it would accordingly seem that the owner has not been
deprived of locus standi in favour of the exclusive licensee.
This
view is fortified if one has regard to the respective rights of the owner and
the exclusive licensee. By granting an exclusive
licence, even in the widest
possible terms, the owner does not lose his ownership. The practical value of
his ownership might vary,
but in most
cases
95 cases it would remain important since both his right to receive
royalties from the licensee and his right of reversion if the licence
were to
terminate for any reason, would depend on it. It seems unthinkable therefore
that the legislature would have intended to
deprive the owner of the locus
standi which he might need to protect the rights which he has retained
despite the grant of an exclusive licence.
We were referred to the
legislative history of these provisions. In view of the relative clarity of the
wording of the relevant sections
I do not think that there is really any need to
consider this history, but in any event I do not think that it leads to a
different
conclusion. As was pointed out in Video Parktown North (Pty) Ltd v
Paramount Pictures Corporation (supra) at p 632, a licence was
historically
96
historically only an authority enabling the licensee to do
lawfully what he could not do without the licence, and
granted no
proprietary interest in the copyright. Under the
1911 British Act it was uncertain whether an exclusive
licensee was entitled to sue in his own name for infringement of copyright.
See Copinger & Skone James, supra, para 431, for the English cases.
In Kinekor Films (Pty) Ltd v Movie Time 1976 (1) SA 649 (D & C) at
pp. 658-9 it was held that the exclusive licensee did not have locus
standi. See also Clifford Harris (Pty) Ltd v S.G.B.Building Equipment
(Pty) Ltd 1980 (2) SA 141 (T) at pp. 143-149 and cases there quoted.
This
uncertainty was set at rest in the 1965 Act. The 1965 Act set out in detail the
rights and remedies of the owner against infringers
(secs 18 and 19). Sec 20
then explicitly granted those rights and remedies to an exclusive licensee "as
if the licence had been an
assignment", but
specified
97 specified that some of "those rights and remedies shall be concurrent with the rights and remedies of the owner of the copyright" (sec 20(2)(a); whereas in respect of others the
exclusive licensee supplanted the owner in the exercise of
the rights in guestion (sec 20(2)(c)). Sec 20 also contained
elaborate provisions governing the manner in which proceedings
were to be instituted and conducted by owners and exclusive
licensees and how the Oourt should decide cases involving both owners and exclusive licensees..
For present purposes it seems to me that the only
significant feature of the 1965 Act is that, when the
legislature
expressly granted an exclusive licensee locus
standi as if the licence
were an assignment, it did not
regard the licensee's locus. standi as inconsistent in
principle with that of the owner.
in
98
In the 1978 Act the legislature obviously decided to simplify the whole system by providing merely that both the owner and the exclusive licensee would have locus standi to institute action against infringers, leaving it to the courts to resolve any competition between them. This the courts could do by applying ordinary legal principles.
It appears however that this solution was not con-
sidered completely
satisfactory, for sec. 25 was replaced
by Act 39 of 1986 with the
following:
"An exclusive licensee and an exclusive sub-licensee shall have the same rights of action and be entitled to the same remedies as if the licence were an as-signment, and those rights and remedies shall be concurrent with the rights and remedies of the owner of the copyright under which the licence and sub-licence were granted."
I
99
I do not consider it necessary to analyse the new section or to determine whether or to what extent it has changed the law. Presumably the amendment was prompted by the view that, under the unamended section, the owner's rights and remedies were not concurrent with those of the ex-clusive licensee, or that it was uncertain whether they were. Whatever may be the true reason, it does seem clear to me that this new provision, which expressly lays down that the owner's locus standi is to be concurrent with that of the exclusive licensee, does not thereby imply that, in the legislature's view, the owner previously had no locus standi whatever, not even to protect his undoubted rights and in-terests.
For the reasons I have stated I consider that, despite
the
100 the grant of an exclusive licence, the respondent in the present case retained its locus standi to act against in-fringers.
Joinder of the exclusive licensee and the exclusive
sub-licensee.
During the course of argument the Court raised the
question whether the exclusive licensee and the exclusive sub-licensee should
not
have been joined as parties to these pro-ceedings. The appellant and the
respondent both indicated that they did not desire the joinder
of the licensee
or the sub-licensee. Of course, the desire of the parties cannot be conclusive
in this matter. As was pointed out
in Amal-gamated Engineering Union v
Minister of Labour 1949 (3) SA 637 (A) at p 649, the fact that the two
parties before the
Court
101 Court desire the case to proceed in the absence of a third party cannot
relieve the Court from inquiring into the question
whether the order it is
asked to make may affect the third party. Consequently, after judgment was
reserved on all issues, the Court
intimated to the parties by letter that a
decision on the joinder issue might be necessary unless there were to be filed a
written
consent by each of the licensee and sub-licensee agreeing to be bound by
the Court's judgment, notwithstanding that it has not been
cited as a party to
the proceedings. Such consents have now been filed, and it has accordingly
become unnecessary to determine whether,
in the absence of such consents, the
non-joinder of these persons would have precluded the Court from deciding some
or all of she
issues in this appeal.
The
102
The relief granted to the
respondent.
As I indicated in the introductory part of this judg-ment,
the respondent's main prayers in the court a quo were for interdicts
restraining the appellant from infringing the respondent's copyright in the
drawings and its trade mark "Saunders".
The respondent also prayed for, and was
granted, relief ancillary to these main prayers. On appeal the appel-lant
contended that
the Court's ruling on one ancillary praýer, viz the prayer
for an account of profits in respect of the copyright infringement,
was wrong
and should be set aside. No ob-jection was taken to any other form of relief
granted by the Court a quo and I express no view on the correctness of
any order in this regard.
The
103
The matter of an account of profits was treated
very
tersely in the proceedings before the Court a quo. In
its
notice of motion the respondent prayed in bare terms for
"an account of profits". No substantive averment was made
in the founding
affidavits to support this prayer. It is
not clear what argument, if any, was
presented to the Court
a quo in support of, or in opposition to,an
order for an
account of profits. The judgment does not deal with
any
argument in this regard: in fact, the only reference in the
judgment to this issue is in the order, which contains the
following:
"The prayer for an account ... is referred as a separate issue for the hearing of oral evidence. Leave is granted to the parties to apply for amplification of this latter
order ....
104
order, if necessary." The parties did not make use of the leave to apply for amplification of the order, and it is accordingly not clear what precisely the issue was which, in the view of the trial Court, called for the hearing of oral evidence. What is clear, however, is that the Court has not granted or re-fused any order for the giving of an account of profits, nor has the Court expressed any view on the circumstances which would justify such an order, or the effect which such an order would have. All these matters would appear to be still open to the court a quo at the resumed hearing which is en-visaged by the direction which I have quoted above. In these circumstances the question arises whether this direction is appealable at all.
Sec
105 Sec. 20 of the Supreme Court Act, no 59 of
1959,
makes provision for an appeal to this Court against "a judgment or
order" of the court of a provincial or local division. See particularly
sub-sections (1) and (4). It has often been held that "judgment" here relates to
a decision given upon relief claimed in an action
and "order" to a decision
given upon relief claimed on application or on summons for provisional sentence.
See Desai v Engar and Engar 1966 (4) SA 647 (A) at 653 B-C, Constantia
Insurance Co Ltd v Nohamba 1986 (3) SA 27 (A) at 42 H to 43 G, and the
earlier authorities cited in these two judgments.
The guestion then is
whether the direction referring the preseht issue for the hearing of oral
evidence amounts to an "order". The
judgment in Union Government
(Minister
of
106
of the Interior) and Registrar of Asiatics v Naidoo 1916 AD 50 appears to be direct authority on this point. In that case the respondent had applied to a judge in chambers to set aside a deportation warrant, to interdict his deportation and for other specified relief. The application was opposed on the ground, inter alia, that the court had no authority to hear the matter. The judge expressed himself in favour of the view that the court had authority to go into the question, but found himself unable to settle it upon the affidavits before him. He therefore directed that oral testimony should be adduced, and adjourned the case for that purpose. The Government applied to the Appellate Division for special leave to appeal. INNES CJ, who delivered the judgment of the Court, said the following (at pp. 51-2):
"Is
107
"Is there under these circumstances any decree in existence against which we should be justified in granting leave to appeal? In Dickenson's case (1914, A.D. 424) a ruling upon evidence was held not to be an order against which leave to appeal could be granted, because it did not con-stitute a decision upon an application for specific relief. This is a converse case. There has been an application for relief, but ho decision upon it. The prayer of the petition falls under nine separate heads, and in regard to none of them has any order been made. The application has merely been postponed for further evidence. When the enquiry is resumed the judge may de-cide in favour of the present applicants on the facts; or he may possibly, though very improbably, revise his view of the law upon further argument. But if he does neither; if he finds against the applicants on the law and the facts, and grants the relief prayed for, it will then be compe-tent for them to appeal and to raise every point upon which they now wish to rely. The fact is that the present applica-tion is for leave to appeal not against the
order
108
order of the learned judge - for he has made none - but against his reasons."
The judgment in Naidoo's case has consistently been followed in this
Court. See, for instance, Tropical (Com-mercial and Industrial) Ltd v
Plywoods Products Ltd 1956 (1) SA 339 (A) at 343 C-E, Heyman v Yorkshire
Insurance Co Ltd 1964 (1) SA 487 (A) at 491 B, Desai's case
(supra) at 653 D-E and Nohamba's case (supra) at 43
E-F.
The present case is clearly indistinguishable from Naidoo's case.
It follows that the direction given by the
judge a quo in the present matter, was not an order and was consequently
the not appealable. The fact that leave to appeal granted by the
included this direction judge a quo obviously cannot affect this conclusion. Leave
to appeal is a pre-requisite for an appeal against a "judgment
or
109 or order" (see sec. 20(4) of the Supreme Court Act) and
can consequently have no effect unless there is a "judg-ment or order"
to appeal
against.
In the result the appellant's attack upon the judge's direction
relating to an account of profits cannot be sus-tained. Trade Mark
infringement.
The last substantive point in this appeal relates to trade
marks. The respondent is the proprietor of the trade mark SAUNDERS which
is
registered in various classes. In the introductory part of this judgment I
quoted an extract from borchures issued by the appellant.
It will be recalled
that these brochures contained the words "All KLEP DIAPHRAGM VALVE parts ... are
interchangeable with 'Saunders'
diaphragm
valves"
110 valves". The respondent contended that this represented an
infringement of its trade mark pursuant to sec 44(1)(b) of the Trade
Marks Act,
No 62 of 1963, as being "unauthorized use in the course of trade, otherwise than
as a trade mark, of a mark so nearly
resembling it as to be likely to deceive or
cause confusion ... in relation to or in connection with goods ... for which the
trade
mark is registered ... likely to cause injury or prejudice to the
proprietor of the trade mark". The court a quo agreed with the respondent
and granted an order restraining the infringement of the trade mark.
On appeal the appellant does not contest that its conduct falls within the terms of sec 44 (1) (b). Its sole point is that the trade mark is not entitled to protection and is liable to expungement from the register. Since this
contention
111
contention places the validity of the trade mark in
issue,
the appellant has petitioned the Court to join the Registrar
of
Trade Marks as a party to this appeal. It was held by
this Court in
Esquire Electronics Limited v Executive Video
1986 (2) SA 576 (A) that such joinder is necessary in a case
like the present. Neither the Registrar nor the respondent
opposes the
petition and it will be granted subject to pay-
ment by the appellant of all
costs occasioned thereby.
The appellant relies for its contention on sec 41
of the Trade Mark Act.
Sec 41(1) lays down:
"(1) If a trade marks consists of a word which has become generally recognized by the public as the only practicable name or description for any article ... for which it is registered and has commonly been so used by persons carrying on business in relation to such article ... (not being use in relation to goods ... connected in the course of
trade
111 A
trade with the proprietor ... of the trade mark ...), the registration of such trade mark shall ... be deemed to be an entry wrongly remaining on the register for the article ... in question".
This sub-section lays down two reguirements, viz.,
(a)
112
(a) That the trade mark should consist of a word which has become generally recognized by the public as the only practicable name or descrip-tion for an article; and (b) That the word should have been commonly so used, with reference to goods unconnected with the trade of the proprietor of the trade mark, by persons carrying on business in relation to such article.
In my view the appellant has not established either of these requirements. The evidence on which it relies is mainly that of Prof. T.O. Duggan, who is an associate profes-sor of Engineering at the University of the Witwatersrand. He states the following:
"Ever
113
"Ever since I came into the field of Mechanical Engineering in the late 1940's, diaphragm valves of this type have been known to me as "Saunders valves". It is a term which has been in general use in this field to describe them. In my view, the use of the term "Saunders valve" is common in industry to describe this type of valve. I am supported in this view by what is stated in "Engineering" dated 18 September 1931 being annexure TD25 which refers to these valves as Saunders valves."
The extract from "Engineering" does not seem per-
tinent. The references
to "Saunders valves" in the article seem to be only to valves manufactured by
the respondent's predecessor
or its licensee.
In the passage quoted above prof. Duggan refers to "diaphragm valves of this type". He does not, however, indicate what type of diaphragm valve is appropriately described as a "Saunders valve". Mr. T.P. Bell, the
appellant's
114 appellant's managing director, is equally vague. He
states that he has been aware of Saunders valves for many years "and I consider
it as being a particular type of diaphragm valve". This evidence can hardly be
said to indicate that there is any article, other
than a valve made by the
respondent, which is commonly called a Saunders valve, and still less that this
name is the only practicable
name or description for such article, if it exists.
Expungement of a trade mark can have serious con-sequences for its proprietor
and should not be authorized except on clear evidence.
But the matter does
not end there. The appellant itself describes its valves in the aforesaid
brochures as "Klep type A Diaphragm
Valve" and "Klep type KB Diaphragm Valve".
Obviously these descriptions were considered sufficient to identify the valves.
Also,
as
already ....
115
already stated, the brochures indicate that the
parts of the appellant's valves are interchangeable with "'Saunders' diaphragm
valves".
The reference to "Saunders" valves is clearly to the respondent's
valves, and not to articles of a particular type which may have
been
manufactured by somebody else. These brochures seem to negative any suggestion
that the term "Saunders valve" has become the
only practicable name or
description for the article.
On the evidence as a whole it seems clear that
the appellant has not established the requirements of sec 41(1) of the Trade
Marks
Act.
In the alternative the appellant relied on sec 41(3)
of the Act. This section lays down inter alia that the provisions of sub-section (1) would apply to trade marks consisting of a word which is the "only practicable name or description of an article ... for which such trade mark was
registered
116 registered, if such article ... was the subject of
Letters Patent in the Republic which have expired or lapsed." As I have
indicated,
however, I do not think that the appellant has established that
Saunders is the onlypracticable: name or description of any article.
It
follows, therefore, that in my view the appeal on this aspect should also fail.
The order.
In the result the appellant's attack on the order of the
trial court fails in all respects. The order of this Court is accordingly
as
follows: 1. Prayer 1 of the appellant's petition for joinder is
granted, the appellant to pay all costs occasioned
thereby;
2
117
2. The appeal is dismissed with costs; 3. The orders for costs are to include costs occasioned by the employment of two counsel.
E M GROSSKOPF, JA
CORBETT, JA)
JOUBERT, JA) Concur
GALGUT, JA)
NICHOLAS, AJA)