http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/edinburgh_and_east/7029892.stm


A car repair firm has been taken to court accused of infringing 
musical copyright because its employees listen to radios at work.
The action against the Kwik-Fit Group has been brought by the 
Performing Rights Society which collects royalties for songwriters and 
performers.

At a procedural hearing at the Court of Session in Edinburgh a judge 
refused to dismiss the £200,000 damages claim.

Kwik-Fit wanted the case brought against it thrown out.

Lord Emslie ruled that the action can go ahead with evidence being 
heard.

The PRS claimed that Kwik-Fit mechanics routinely use personal radios 
while working at service centres across the UK and that music, 
protected by copyright, could be heard by colleagues and customers.

It is maintained that amounts to the "playing" or "performance" of the 
music in public and renders the firm guilty of infringing copyright.

The Edinburgh-based firm, founded by Sir Tom Farmer, is contesting the 
action and said it has a 10 year policy banning the use of personal 
radios in the workplace.

Playing music

The PRS lodged details of countrywide inspection data over the audible 
playing of music at Kwik-Fit on more than 250 occasions in and after 
2005.

It claimed that its pleadings in the action were more than enough to 
allow a hearing of evidence in the case at which they would expect to 
establish everything allegedly found and recorded at inspection 
visits.

Lord Emslie said: "The key point to note, it was said, was that the 
findings on each occasion were the same with music audibly 'blaring' 
from employee's radios in such circumstances that the defenders' 
[Kwik-Fit] local and central management could not have failed to be 
aware of what was going on."

The judge said: "The allegations are of a widespread and consistent 
picture emerging over many years whereby routine copyright 
infringement in the workplace was, or inferentially must have been, 
known to and 'authorised' or 'permitted' by local and central 
management."

He said that if that was established after evidence it was "at least 
possible" that liability for copyright infringement would be brought 
home against Kwik-Fit.

But Lord Emslie said he should not be taken as accepting that the PRS 
would necessarily succeed in their claims.


xponent

Quit Buying Music Maru

rob


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