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Being in the Strand area this afternoon I popped into the High Court again to see how things were progressing in Lucasfilm v Ainsworth, aka the Stormtrooper Armour Copyright Case.

Slowly, it turned out. The case is now in its twelfth day and looks set to run into early next week. The claimants are summing up, which given the amount of evidence that must have been led in such a long trial is clearly going to take a while. When I entered court Michael Bloch QC, lead counsel for Lucasfilm, was addressing Mr Justice Mann on the question of the extent to which the High Court could enforce the judgment that Lucasfilm had obtained in the USA against Mr Ainsworth. This being a US judgment, Lucasfilm seemingly thought of an insanely optimistic estimate of how much business they might have lost, and the court had then multiplied it up as punishment for being naughty in the way US courts are wont to do. That isn't how it's done over here, and it turns out that there's even an Act of Parliament to limit the extent to which such (by our standards) ludicrously inflated awards of damages can be enforced in the UK. Not the most riveting of stuff, although considering the eye-watering sums involved - even with the weak dollar, Lucasfilm think Mr Ainsworth owes them something north of five million quid - I imagine it rather occupies the mind if one is the defendant.

But then Mr Bloch announced that he would be parking that particular point for now and moving on to COPYRIGHT. Cue a sudden perking up of interest from the public seats (sole occupant by now: me); at last, some substantive discussion of the core legal issues!

The next forty minutes or so involved a voyage around sections 51 and 52 of the Copyright, Designs and Patent Act. This was rather a choppy trip, as CDPA 1988 is not one of the Law's most elegantly drafted pieces of legislation. Especially when read in conjunction with associated statutory instruments, what you in effect have is law that says that certain sorts of work are protected by copyright:

-- Except when they look more like industrial designs
---- BUT, this doesn't apply to some particular types of work
------- EXCEPT when some obscure SI says that it does

Oh, and the boundaries of these successively nested sub-sets of artistic or creative work are not very clear and subject to rampantly speculative interpretation. Mr Bloch at one point submitted that were one to read the law literally, Henry Moore would have had a greater or lesser period of copyright in his sculptures depending on whether or not he'd made a preliminary sketch. I'm not quite sure I agree with this interpretation of the law and by the looks of Mann J I rather doubt he did. On the other hand, Mr Ainsworth's submission that the helmet props made for A New Hope were industrial products will have to contend with the proviso in the Act that this only applies for stuff you're planning to put on the market at the outset, when clearly at the time all anyone was intending to do was make a few dozen props.

However, this line of discussion did lead to a rather stretched argument on behalf of Lucasfilm, to wit that the helmets produced for the film were in fact one set and thus a single artistic creation; Mr Bloch sought to pre-emptively rebut any argument that in many scenes only two or three were used at a time by observing that a set of cutlery is no less a set just because you only use a couple of place settings at a time... Moving swiftly on, he informed the Judge that, depending on how the law was to be interpreted, we might have to move beyond the main parts of the 1998 Act and look at (shudder) the Transitional Provisions...

"I can't wait" retorted Mann J, with only the slightest hint of judicial sarcasm. And then declared that actually he and the rest of us could, as it was now twenty past four and if he had to hear about 'transitional provisions' he could do so the next day. Court rose.
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Simon Bradshaw

January 2022

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