Law in Quebec

News about Quebec legal developments


Copyright Act

  • Popular works should enjoy narrower copyright protection, argue legal experts

    When Australian Federal Court judge Peter Jacobsen ruled that a famous flute riff from the hit Down Under by the pop group Men At Work plagiarized a popular nursery rhyme from the Girl Guides, it once again underscored divisions over the implicit and explicit role that popularity should play in the copyright debate.

    In a ruling that marked the end of a three-year legal battle, Judge Jacobsen held that the riff in the song, which topped the charts in the United Kingdom and America in early 1982, infringed on the copyright of Kookaburra “because it replicates a substantial part of the song” written by written by teacher Marion Sinclair.

    While the ruling held strong to the unstated position that popularity sometimes can and does actually increase the protection a work is afforded, not everyone is swayed that such views should be hold true in the digital age. (more…)

  • Montreal animator awarded $5.2 million after a 13-year copyright battle

    When Florence Lucas received the hefty brown envelope on a weekday morning in late August, she resisted the temptation to open it immediately even though she knew that a 13-year long legal battle pitting a determined and resolute Montreal animator against a major studio production company was possibly about to reach its denouement.

    The Montreal lawyer with Gowling Lafleur Henderson LLP instead called her client, Claude Robinson, whose “tenacity, energy and determination was indispensable to face the legal guerilla,” and waited for him. “We both jumped to the conclusion right away, and then leapt with joy,” said Lucas, who specializes in intellectual property, media and entertainment law.

    Robinson, who launched in July 1996 a $2.53-million copyright-infringement lawsuit against the Cinar Corp. and other defendants claiming they stole a cartoon character he created, was awarded more than $5.2 million, including $400,000 for psychological distress, $1-million in punitive damages, and $1.5-million to cover legal fees. (more…)

Law in Quebec
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