R. Nelson Godfrey
Partner
Patent Agent, Trademark Agent; National Practice Group Leader - Trademarks
Article
This is our fourth international article featuring our trademark expert teams from across the firm in Canada, China, France, Germany, Russia, Singapore, the UK and the UAE.
In this article, we will address the topic of employee created rights or commissioned works in the field of trademarks, such as logos, stylised marks, or non-traditional marks such as packaging, get-up, icons, user interfaces, etc.
In such a situation, the trademark owner will need to consider the position under the relevant country law, in order to determine whether the copyright work is automatically owned by the trademark owner, or whether the ownership of the underlying copyrights or design rights have to be transferred to it through a more formal mechanism, such as a written assignment. Where rights are not automatically transferred, then steps should be taken to regularise the ownership as soon as possible and before trademark applications are made so as not to compromise the company's ability to take action (such as opposition or enforcement action against a third party) and to also avoid the right holder being held to ransom by the other rights holder.
This article looks at the rules which relate to the initial ownership of copyrights and transfer of copyrights in employee created rights and in commissioned works in the countries in which we have offices. The table below provides a snapshot.
Who automatically owns? | Employee created work | Commissioned works |
---|---|---|
Canada | Employer | Commissionee |
China | Employee (the employer having a priority right to exploit the work within the scope of its professional activities). There exists opaque exceptions under which the employer is the initial owner of copyrights in employee created works. | Commissionee |
France | Employee | Commissionee |
Germany | Employee (but limited implied license granted to the employer) | Commissionee (but limited implied license granted to the commissioner) |
Russia | Employee | Commissionee |
Singapore | Employer | Commissionee (but there exists an exception for photographs, portraits and engravings, in which case the first owner of the rights is the commissioning party) |
United Arab Emirates | Employee | Commissionee |
United Kingdom | Employer | Commissionee |
It is therefore important for brand owners to know how they can ensure that they capture and own the underlying copyrights, before filing a trademark.
As in most jurisdictions, subject to exceptions, the author of a work is considered to be the first owner of copyright in the work under Canada's Copyright Act. An exception exists where a work is created for an employer by an employee in the course of employment, in which case the employer is deemed to be the first owner of copyright in the work, absent an agreement to the contrary. By contrast, if an author is self-employed, or did not create the work in the course of employment, the author would typically be the first owner of copyright in that work. In this regard, the case law draws a distinction between a contract of service (i.e., an employment contract) and a contract for services (i.e., a consultancy agreement).
Where a work is made outside the employment context and the author remains the first owner of copyright, the Copyright Act provides that copyright may be assigned by the author in whole or in part. To be effective, the assignment must be in writing, and signed by the owner of copyright in the work. Such an assignment must be specifically addressed: The mere transfer of physical possession of a work is insufficient to constitute an assignment of copyright therein. A retroactive assignment is not effective unless it confirms an earlier assignment that actually occurred, so written assignments should be obtained proactively, wherever possible.
The Copyright Act also provides for the subsistence of intangible, non-economic rights in copyrighted works. These "moral rights" include the right to be associated with the work as its author and the right to the integrity of the author's work. Moral rights remain with the author and ownership of such rights may not be assigned or otherwise transferred.
The author can seek remedies including injunctive relief against activities that infringe upon its moral rights. Accordingly, absent a waiver of such rights, an author may be able to restrain the copyright owner or others from infringing the author's moral rights, for example by reproducing the work without attributing it to the author or modifying the work in a manner considered prejudicial to the author.
The Copyright Act expressly provides that such moral rights may, however, be waived in whole or in part. Such a waiver should be expressly addressed in writing. An assignment of copyright in a work, without more, does not constitute a waiver of moral rights and there is no waiver implied by virtue of an author's employment. Where waived in favour of an owner or licensee of the copyright, such a waiver may be invoked by any person using the work under authority of the owner or licensee of the copyright.
Therefore, where a trademark consists of a copyrighted work, it is important for the company to obtain a waiver of the author's moral rights in order to be able, for instance, to modify the copyrighted works as it deems fit, without the risk of the author enforcing his moral right of integrity in such work.
Particular considerations apply where an owner purports to assign copyright in a work that does not exist as of the date of the assignment, for example, where an author prospectively assigns copyright in a work later created in the course of his/her consultancy. Because the work and the copyright therein do not exist as of the date of assignment, case law suggest that the assignment cannot be effectuated at law, but rather the assignment takes place at equity and vests equitable title in the assignee.
As with any assignment at equity, the assignee's equitable title is subject to the equities, and may be vulnerable to an assignment by the author to a bona fide purchaser that does not have notice of the assignee's prior equitable title. A confirmatory assignment executed after the creation of such a work may protect against a subsequent assignment defeating an owner's equitable title to a work.
Canadian law also provides for a reversionary interest in favour of an author's estate, where the author was the first owner of copyright (i.e., where the author created the work independently or otherwise outside of the employment context). In such a case, the Copyright Act provides that no assignment or grant of interest (other than by will) is effective to grant any rights in the work beyond the expiration of twenty-five years from the death of the author. Any Canadian rights granted by the author then revert to the author's estate. This reversion occurs automatically.
Copyright owners and assignees should be aware that the reversionary interest may serve to limit their title to copyright in works where the author was the first owner of copyright. The reversion cannot be varied by agreement, as the Copyright Act provides that any agreement entered into by the author as to the disposition of such reversionary interest is void. It may be possible to subsequently contract with the author's estate for an assignment of or license to copyright in the work for the remaining term, where appropriate.
There are many occasions where there is a cross-over between trademarks and copyright, where in ensuring the copyright ownership issues are sorted, it could strengthen your position in what may be seen as a trademark dispute.
Often in sending a letter of demand against a lookalike product for example, you may find that copyright in the artistic works on pack, or another design element, provide a stronger basis than your registered trademarks, as often the brand name differs for a lookalike.
In countries where it is well known that the costs of trademark protection are very high, such as the UAE, you could help to manage protection costs by securing registration for word marks, then relying on copyright for logo elements.
This article also shows the importance of ensuring you obtain underlying IP rights when you are "localising" your trademarks. For example, you may have a trademark which is an English word in a logo format, but in expanding across the globe, you may need to obtain adapted versions of your logo so that it contains the local language branding, such as the Arabic, Cyrillic or Chinese versions of your branding. Each such adaption may give rise to new copyrights. So it is important to ensure that you not only own the initial copyright, but that you secure ownership of any local language adaptations of the copyright works.
By ensuring that your stable of IP rights are in order and owned by your company, it gives you the greatest chance to take successful action against infringements and lookalike products, or in opposing potentially conflicting marks.
Footnotes
[1] Article L.111-1 of the Intellectual Property Code (IPC)
[2] Paris Court of First Instance, July 6 2017, n°16/00670
[3] Under French law, rights in a collective work i.e. "a work created at the initiative of a natural or legal person who edits it, publishes it and discloses it under his direction and name and in which the personal contributions of the various authors who participated in its production are merged in the overall work for which they were conceived" are vested in the natural or legal person under whose name the work has been disclosed (Articles L.113-2 and L.113-5 of the IPC)
[4] Paris Court of Appeal, February 14, 2017, n°15/09758
[5] Paris Court of First Instance, November 20, 2014, n°13/10238
See also: Aix-en-Provence Court of Appeal, April 13, 2018, n° RG 16/10122 ; Supreme Court, September 22, 2015 n°13-18.803
[6] Paris Court of First Instance, November 19, 2015, n°14/11106
[7] Paris Court of Appeal, March 10, 2017, n°15/09974
[8] The IPC only provides with little exceptions under which ownership in programs created by employees and journalistic works is automatically assigned to the employer (Articles L.113-9 and 132-36 of the IPC)
[9] Article L.7111-4 of the IPC
[10] This first requirement was extended to all contracts by law on July 7, 2016.
[11] Article L.131-1 of the IPC
[12] the right to authorize the communication of the work to the public by any means or process
[13] the right to authorize or the fixation of the work by any means or process to allow its communication to the public in an indirect way
[14] Article L.122-1 to L.122-12 of the IPC
[15] Article L.122-7 of the IPC
[16] the right of disclosure i.e. the right to divulge the work created, the right of paternity i.e. the right to have his name mentioned as the author of the work; the right of integrity i.e. the right to oppose to any modification or alteration of the work; the right of withdrawal i.e. the right to request that the work be returned provided that the assignee is duly indemnified.
[17] Supreme Court, February 16, 2010, n°09-12.262
[18] The Civil Code of the Russian Federation
[19] E. P. Gavrilov, Legal Protection of Trademarks and Copyright: Problems of Delimitation
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