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Bulletins Story:
FRENCH COURT GIVES PROTECTION TO TV FORMAT: SARANGA PRODUCTION
v CANAL PLUS
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Date:
18.11.2005
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The Paris High Court has given protection for a television
programme format under the law of passing off.
The claimants, Saranga Production, produced a format for a
political docu-drama show entitled Crise en direct. The
broadcaster, Canal Plus, one of the defendants, sought proposals
from production companies for a new politically themed programme.
The claimants met with the defendants and presented their ideas.
Canal Plus then commissioned a different production company to
produce programmes using themes and characteristics in the
claimants’ format. The defendants, Canal Plus, a production company
and two journalists involved in production, were then responsible
for producing and broadcasting a programme entitled C’est déjà
demain.
The claimants brought an action for passing off in respect of
the programme C’est déjà demain. In order to establish
passing off under French law, the claimants had to show that the
defendants had intentionally taken characteristic features of their
format, that such formats were of economic value and that this had
caused them loss.
The defendants argued that they had independently developed
their programme before they met with the claimants. They also
argued that the claimants’ format had no independent economic value
because it lacked originality and merely used themes and
characteristics which were commonplace within the public
domain.
The court found that there was no evidence that the defendants
had already developed their programme before meeting the claimants.
The issue of originality of the format was not relevant to
establishing passing off, unlike in the law of copyright. The court
also held that formats are “commercial products” with inherent
economic value.
The court held that the broadcast of the defendants’ programme
had caused the claimants loss in that it had deprived them of the
opportunity of marketing their format to another broadcaster.
The defendants were ordered to pay damages of 150,000 Euros and
other relief was granted.
Although this decision does not provide any indication of
whether the French court might afford copyright protection to
television formats, it demonstrates that the court is willing to
grant them protection via other forms of legal action. This is
consistent with a general trend worldwide to give protection to
this valuable species of intellectual property.
Jonathan Coad and
Eleanor Adams
Film & TV
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