The Newspaper Licensing Agency Limited v Marks and Spencer Plc: PatC 19 Jan 1999

The daily circulation within a large company of press cuttings was outside the scope of the reporting of current events defences to copyright infringement. Ownership of the typographical arrangement of a newspaper article sufficed to found a claim. An edition meant a ‘version’ of a literary work and ‘In the case of a newspaper made up of a number of different articles, each separate article is in my view a literary work and the typographical arrangement of each separate article is accordingly a copyright work.’

Judges:

Lightman J

Citations:

Times 26-Jan-1999, Gazette 24-Feb-1999, [1999] EWHC Patents 266, [1999] RPC 536

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 30(2)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appealed toNewspaper Licensing Agency Ltd v Marks and Spencer Plc CA 26-May-2000
The defendant had a cuttings service, and distributed selected articles amongst its staff. The Agency complained that this amounted to copying a substantial part of the editions from which the cuttings were taken. There was no typographical . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromNewspaper Licensing Agency Ltd v Marks and Spencer Plc CA 26-May-2000
The defendant had a cuttings service, and distributed selected articles amongst its staff. The Agency complained that this amounted to copying a substantial part of the editions from which the cuttings were taken. There was no typographical . .
CitedHyde Park Residence Ltd v Yelland, News Group Newspapers Ltd, News International Ltd, Murrell CA 10-Feb-2000
The court considered a dispute about ownership and confidence in and copyright of of video tapes taken by Princess Diana before her death.
Held: The courts have an inherent discretion to refuse to enforce of copyright. When assessing whether . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Intellectual Property

Updated: 23 May 2022; Ref: scu.135861