T-2963-89 
CTV Television Network Ltd. (Applicant) 
v. 
Copyright Board and Performing Rights Organi
zation of Canada Limited, and Composers, 
Authors and Publishers Association of Canada 
Limited (Respondents) 
INDEXED AS: CTV TELEVISION NETWORK LTD. V. CANADA 
(COPYRIGHT BOARD) (T.D.) 
Trial Division, Cullen J.—Toronto, February 14, 
15, 16; Ottawa, April 12, 1990. 
Copyright — Application to prohibit Copyright Board from 
considering network tariff of royalties for TV performances of 
dramatico-musical or musical works — Whether Board 
exceeding jurisdiction — Such tariff denied in 1968 S.C.C. 
case — Recent statutory amendments cosmetic, not expanding 
Board's role — Neither s. 49 nor 50.1 availing respondents. 
This was an application for a writ of prohibition to prohibit 
the Copyright Board from taking any further proceedings 
leading to consideration, adoption or publication of tariff 2.A.2 
in connection with commercial television network transmission 
pursuant to respondent performing societies' statements of 
proposed royalties, on the ground that the Board lacked juris
diction. While individual stations pay royalties based on their 
advertising revenues, it was estimated that millions of dollars of 
advertising revenues received by the network are not taken into 
account for royalty purposes by CTV. In seeking a network 
tariff to provide compensation for performances or communica
tion by telecommunications of dramatico-musical or musical 
works in which they owned performance rights, the Societies 
argued that legislative changes had given an expanded jurisdic
tion to the Copyright Board and that a 1968 Supreme Court of 
Canada case no longer supported denial of the proposed tariff. 
Held, the application should be granted. 
Recent amendments to the Act in relation to the Copyright 
Board were cosmetic and would not lead to a different conclu
sion than that in Composers, Authors and Publishers Assoc. of 
Canada Limited v. CTV Television Network Limited et al., 
[1968] S.C.R. 676 ("CAPAC'). The amendments merely 
streamlined the procedure, increased staff and made the pro
cess more administratively efficient in dealing with an 
increased workload. 
The Copyright Act established the Board as a regulatory 
agency with power only to set rates and Parliamentary inten
tion had not expanded that role. Posen v. Minister of Consumer 
and Corporate Affairs Canada, [1980] 2 F.C. 259 (C.A.) is 
still good law. The purpose and function of the Copyright 
Board is different from bodies such as the Canadian Human 
Rights Commission or the Canadian Labour Relations Board 
which have statutory power to decide their own jurisdiction. 
The respondent societies could not file the proposed tariff 
under section 49 of the Act as it does not deal with a perform
ing right. In CAPAC, the Supreme Court of Canada noted that 
what was communicated by the CTV Network to its affiliated 
stations was not "the musical works" but "a performance of the 
works". Inserting the word "telecommunication" into the Act 
did not change that decision. 
Section 50.1 was not available to the respondent Societies as 
existing performing societies are specifically excluded there-
under as not being "licensing bodies". Even if the respondent 
societies were licensing bodies within the meaning of section 
50.1, they had not met all necessary pre-conditions in the Act 
for filing the tariff as they had not attempted to reach a 
negotiated settlement regarding royalties as implied by section 
50.2. 
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY 
CONSIDERED 
An Act to amend the Copyright Act and to amend other 
Acts in consequence thereof, S.C. 1988, c. 15. 
Canada Human Rights Act, S.C. 1976-77, c. 33. 
Canada Labour Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. L-2, ss. 15, 16. 
Canada—United States Free Trade Agreement Imple
mentation Act, S.C. 1988, c. 65, ss. 61-65. 
Canadian Human Rights Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. H-6, s. 41. 
Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-30, ss. 3(1)(f) (as am. 
by S.C. 1988, c. 65, s. 62(1)), 3(1.4) (as added idem s. 
62(2)), 49 (as am. by S.C. 1988, c. 15, s. 12), 50 (as 
am. idem, s. 13), 50.1 (as added idem, s. 14), 50.2 (as 
added idem). 
Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, s. 28. 
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED 
FOLLOWED: 
Posen v. Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs 
Canada, [1980] 2 F.C. 259 (C.A.). 
CONSIDERED: 
Composers, Authors and Publishers Assoc. of Canada 
Limited v. CTV, [1968] S.C.R. 676. 
REFERRED TO: 
Canadian Football League v. Canadian Human Rights 
Commission, [1980] 2 F.C. 329 (T.D.). 
COUNSEL: 
Gordon J. Zimmerman and Gayle Pinheiro 
for applicant. 
T. Gregory Kane and C. Craig Parks for 
respondent Copyright Board. 
Y A. George Hynna, C. Paul Spurgeon and 
Andrea F. Rush for respondents Performing 
Rights Organization of Canada and Compos
ers, Authors and Publishers Association of 
Canada Ltd. 
SOLICITORS: 
Borden & Elliott, Toronto, for applicant. 
Stikeman, Elliott, Ottawa, for respondent 
Copyright Board. 
Gowling, Strathy & Henderson, Ottawa, for 
respondents Performing Rights Organization 
of Canada and Composers, Authors and Pub
lishers Association of Canada Ltd. 
The following are the reasons for order ren
dered in English by 
CULLEN J.: This is an application for a writ of 
prohibition against the respondent Copyright 
Board to prohibit the Copyright Board from 
taking any further proceedings which might lead 
to the consideration, adoption or publication of 
Tariff 2.A.2. 
On February 21, 1990 an order was granted by 
this Court to stay the Copyright Board from any 
consideration or publication of any proposed tariff 
for the collection of fees or royalties by the Per
forming Rights Organization of Canada Limited 
and Composers, Authors and Publishers Associa
tion of Canada Limited filed pursuant to the provi
sions of section 50 (s. 70) ' of the Copyright Act 
[R.S.C. 1970, c. C-30 (as am. by S.C. 1988, c. 15, 
ss. 13, 14)] until a final decision of this Court, 
' The section numbers appearing in brackets refer to the 
numbering sequence used in the proposed amendments, and 
were referred to by counsel during the course of the hearing of 
the motion. 
including the Federal Court of Appeal. 
The applicant, CTV Television Network Ltd. 
(hereinafter referred to as "cTv") is a privately 
owned broadcasting network involved in the de
velopment, distribution, and communication of 
entertainment programming to its affiliated sta
tions across Canada. The respondent Copyright 
Board (hereinafter referred to as the "Board") is a 
regulatory tribunal established pursuant to the 
Copyright Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. C.-42 (hereinafter 
referred to as the "Act"). The respondents, Per
forming Rights Organization of Canada Limited 
("PROCAN") and Composers, Authors and Pub
lishers Association of Canada Limited ("CAPAC") 
(CAPAC and PROCAN hereinafter referred to col
lectively as the "Societies") are performing right 
societies which own the performance rights to a 
wide variety of musical works in Canada. These 
two bodies are currently in the process of merging, 
and carry on the business of collective administra
tion of performing rights on behalf of composers, 
authors, and publishers of musical or dramatico-
musical works. 
On September 1, 1989 the Societies filed with 
the Board statements of proposed royalties to col
lect compensation for the performance or the com
munication by telecommunication in Canada of 
dramatico-musical or musical works in which the 
Societies owned the performance rights. Included 
in the proposed statements were Tariff 2.A.1 
which applied to television stations, and Tariff No. 
2.A.2 which applied to commercial television net
works. It is Tariff 2.A.2 which is the cause for 
concern in this case. 
To best understand the issue at hand, it is 
necessary to look at the existing relationship be
tween networks and performing societies. The CTV 
network provides programming to affiliated televi
sion broadcasting stations. The programming 
which CTV provides to its affiliated stations is 
either produced by CTV, acquired from Canadian 
and foreign producers, or acquired from their 
affiliate stations for distribution throughout the 
network. CTV then distributes it to its affiliate 
stations using the facilities of telecommunications 
carriers (i.e. Bell Canada or Telesat Canada), over 
scrambled satellite signals. The receiving stations 
communicate the works to the public by telecom
munication via broadcasting transmitters. 
The reason that this sequence of transmission is 
so important is its relationship to the payment of 
royalties for the use of musical works. Individual 
stations pay royalties to performing societies cal
culated as a percentage of the gross advertising 
revenues of each station. However, a substantial 
amount of advertising revenue received by televi
sion networks are not subject to royalties. Michael 
Rock, General Manager of CAPAC estimated that 
cry's advertising revenues are many millions of 
dollars per year, and that much of this revenue is 
never taken into account for royalty purposes. 
This is in no way a new occurrence. These very 
performing societies were denied a similar network 
tariff by the Supreme Court of Canada in the case 
of Composers, Authors and Publishers Assoc. of 
Canada Limited v. CTV (Television Network 
Limited et al., [1968] S.C.R. 676 (CAPAC v. 
CTV). When recent amendments were made to the 
Act, the Societies again applied to fix a tariff to 
collect royalties pertaining to networks (the pro
posed Tariff 2.A.2). The Societies asked the Board 
to certify its approval of the tariff for network 
transmissions. The applicant has challenged this 
request, contending that the Copyright Board does 
not have jurisdiction under the Act to consider 
Tariff 2.A.2. 
Upon an application for prohibition, the sole 
issue to be determined is whether the inferior 
tribunal had the power to do that which it purport
ed to do. By the arguments presented by all the 
parties involved, it does not appear to be in dispute 
that this Court can issue an order of prohibition, if 
the Copyright Board has in fact exceeded its juris
diction. Therefore the Court must determine if this 
Board has exceeded its jurisdiction. 
The applicant has argued that the Board should 
be prohibited from proceeding with any further 
proceedings on proposed Tariff 2.A.2. as it has 
been granted no power by Parliament under the 
Act which would give it the authority to determine 
its own jurisdiction. This Board is only empowered 
with a broad jurisdiction to establish a fee, rate, or 
royalty. When the Board purports to consider any 
matter incidental to the performance of that func
tion and outside of the rate fixing function, the 
powers of the Board must be construed narrowly 
by the courts. 
The cases which speak to the jurisdiction of the 
Copyright Appeal Board (a predecessor to the 
Copyright Board) are most notably CAPAC v. 
CTV supra and Posen v. Minister of Consumer 
and Corporate Affairs Canada, [1980] 2 F.C. 259 
(C.A.). In Posen, supra the Court stated that the 
only matter entrusted to the Board under the Act 
[R.S.C. 1970, c. C-30] was the establishment of 
the quantum of rates to be imposed on users of 
copyright works. I quote Heald J. in Posen, supra 
who stated at page 261: 
In my view, the sole function of the Board is to fix the rates 
which the performing rights societies can charge. [Emphasis 
added.] 
Now in citing these cases, I am well aware of 
the respondents' argument that such cases are of 
limited use in light of the recent amendments to 
the Act. The respondents assert that the jurisdic
tion of the Board is not the same as its predeces
sor, the Copyright Appeal Board. The recent legis
lation of An Act to amend the Copyright Act and 
to amend other Acts in consequence thereof, S.C. 
1988, c. 15 and of the Canada—United States Free 
Trade Agreement Implementation Act, S.C. 1988, 
c. 65 [ss. 61-65] have been cited as evidence of a 
significantly expanded jurisdiction for the present 
Board. 
I have conducted a very careful review and 
comparison of the amendments made to the Act, 
and conclude that any changes to this Act in 
relation to the Copyright Board are merely cos
metic. There is nothing in the Act that goes so far 
as to expand the Board's jurisdiction. The amend
ments merely streamline the procedure, increase 
staff, and make the process more administratively 
efficient to deal with an increasingly heavy work
load. The Board itself stated in its 1989 annual 
Report that it cannot rule on tariff's legality 
(though I recognize that the Board prepared the 
Report before the amendments were passed). The 
respondent acquiesced that in isolation the changes 
may not seem like much, but argued in their 
entirety they have the effect of giving the Board a 
pro-active role. Unfortunately, the respondents 
have not demonstrated anything significant or con
crete in the amendments to prove the jurisdiction 
of the Board has been broadened or expanded. I 
conclude that there are no substantive changes to 
the Act which would lead to a different conclusion 
than that reached by the Supreme Court of 
Canada in CAPAC v. CTV, supra. 
Parliament is presumed to know the law and to 
be legislating with regard to the state of the law as 
it exists at the time the legislation is adopted. In 
drafting the amendments to the Act, Parliament 
was in a position to be very well informed on the 
subject. If it was Parliament's intention to widen 
the Board's jurisdiction, it would have clearly 
stated such a change. It is not for this Court to 
amend what Parliament has chosen not to do. 
It was suggested by the respondent Board that 
the Court should decline to consider the appli
cant's request for prohibition, and leave it to the 
Board to consider Tariff 2.A.2 as part of its role 
under the Act. Then the final decision on the tariff 
would be open to review under section 28 of the 
Federal Court Act [R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7]. To 
support non-intervention by the Court, the 
respondents have relied on cases involving bodies 
like the Canadian Human Rights Commission and 
the Canadian Labour Relations Board. However, 
in submitting such cases, the respondents ignore 
that the functions and powers granted to each of 
these bodies is very, very different. For example, 
the Canadian Human Rights Commission is 
specifically directed in the Canadian Human 
Rights Act [R.S.C., 1985, c. H-6] to look at and 
decide its own jurisdiction. Section 41 states: 
41. Subject to section 40, the Commission shall deal with 
any complaint filed with it unless in respect of that complaint it 
appears to the Commission that 
(a) the alleged victim of the discriminatory practice to which 
the complaint relates ought to exhaust grievance or review 
procedures otherwise reasonably available; 
(b) the complaint is one that could more appropriately be 
dealt with, initially or completely, according to a procedure 
provided for under an Act of Parliament other than this Act; 
(c) the complaint is beyond the jurisdiction of the 
Commission; 
(d) the complaint is trivial, frivolous, vexatious or made in 
bad faith; or 
(e) the complaint is based on acts or omissions the last of 
which occurred more than one year, or such longer period of 
time as the Commission considers appropriate in the circum
stances, before receipt of the complaint. [Emphasis added.] 
At one time the Human Rights Commission had 
no express powers of jurisdiction. After the deci
sion in Canadian Football League v. Canadian 
Human Rights Commission, [1980] 2 F.C. 329 
(T.D.), the Canadian Human Rights Act [S.C. 
1976-77, c. 33] was amended to rectify that situa
tion. Similarly, the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C., 
1985, c. L-2, ss. 15 and 16 detail extensively the 
powers and duties of the Canada Labour Relations 
Board. In the Copyright Act the Board has been 
given no equivalent list detailing its powers and 
duties. A board is limited to the powers conferred 
upon it by statute. The Act is clear that Parlia
ment never intended the Board to adjudicate ques
tions of law, but rather set it up as a regulatory 
agency to set rates. 
The question of the Board's jurisdiction was 
decided in CAPAC v. CTV, supra, and nothing has 
changed with regard to the powers granted by 
Parliament to suggest the Board's jurisdiction has 
been expanded. Therefore this Board lacks juris
diction to determine whether Tariff 2.A.2 is valid. 
This brings us to the applicant's request for 
prohibition. It is open to this Court to issue a writ 
of prohibition against an administrative tribunal to 
prevent it from exceeding its jurisdiction. The 
applicant may apply for a writ of prohibition 
against the Board as soon as the absence of juris- 
diction becomes apparent. Here the applicant has 
brought this motion as a preemptive strike to 
prevent the waste of time and money on a matter 
which has already been decided by the Supreme 
Court of Canada. 
There is no reason to drag the applicant through 
the whole process when it can be settled at this 
point in time as a clear issue of law before the 
Court. Here prohibition will provide a quick and 
effective remedy and prevent a costly and lengthy 
hearing of many months, followed by a lengthy 
and expensive trial procedure, that would ulti
mately come back to the courts on the question of 
jurisdiction. 
However, in the event that I am incorrect on the 
determination of jurisdiction, there are two other 
questions to be addressed concerning Tariff 2.A.2. 
The first is whether the proposed Tariff 2.A.2. is 
the proper subject matter of section 49 [as am. by 
S.C. 1988, c. 15, s. 12] (s. 67) of the Act. The 
second question is whether the Societies can 
attempt to obtain the benefit of section 50 (s. 70) 
under the Act. 
In response to the first question, an examination 
of the amendments to the Act is in order. The 
respondents have pointed to changes in paragraph 
3(1)(f) [as am. by S.C. 1988, c. 65, s. 62(1)], and 
the addition of "jointly and severally liable" in 
subsection 3(1.4) [as added by S.C. 1988, c. 65, s. 
62(2)] as changes that allow them to fix a royalty 
on programming transmission by the network. The 
respondent Societies argued that network trans
missions constitute "a single communication to the 
public" under "the new" paragraph 3(1)(f), and 
combined with the words of subsection 3(1.4) 
"transmits by telecommunication" and "communi-
cation to the public" the Act now covers the 
communication of the performance of a work by 
telecommunication. 
When amending the Act, the legislators had the 
opportunity, if they so wished, to remedy and 
overcome the CAPAC v. CTV, supra, result by 
inserting the necessary wording. They chose not to, 
and now the respondents are left trying to stretch 
the existing words to say that which was not 
indicated or intended. Also, in CAPAC v. CTV 
supra, the Supreme Court noted that what was 
communicated by the CTV Network to its affiliated 
stations was not "the musical works" as defined in 
the Act, but "a performance of the works". The 
respondents have failed to deal with the term 
"musical works". Inserting the word "telecom-
munication" into the Act does not change that 
decision that network transmissions are not "musi-
cal works" for the purpose of copyright infringe
ment. Therefore, the performing societies cannot 
properly file Tariff 2.A.2. under section 49 as it 
does not deal with a performing right under the 
Act. 
In answer to the second question, whether the 
Societies may utilize section 50 (s. 70) for their 
benefit, I think it is obvious that they cannot. 
Under section 50.1 [as added by S.C. 1988, c. 15, 
s. 14] (s. 70.1) the party filing a tariff must be a 
"licensing body" under the Act. But can the per
forming societies be considered "licensing bodies"? 
Section 50.1 (s. 70.1) clearly states that "licensing 
body" means "a society, association or corpora
tion, other than a society, association orcorpora-
tion" [underlining added]. Section 50.1 allows for 
new collectives to submit for royalties, and the 
existing performing societies are specifically 
excluded in this section because they have section 
49 to cover their collective administration of per
forming rights. 
Even if the Societies were to be considered 
"licensing bodies", reliance on this section by the 
respondent Societies would still fail, because they 
have not met all the necessary pre-conditions 
enunciated in the Act. An attempt to reach a 
negotiated settlement on the royalties is implied by 
the Act. Section 50.2 [as added by S.C. 1988, c. 
15, s. 14] (s. 70.2) refers to the situation where a 
licensing body files the tariff with the Board when 
the parties are "unable to agree on the royalties to 
be paid". This implies some sort of effort between 
the two parties must be made to negotiate an 
agreement. In this instance the applicant was 
never approached to discuss the subject nor was an 
attempt made to negotiate an agreement on the 
royalties. Instead this was a unilateral action by 
the performing societies. 
In light of all the reasons articulated above, 
especially in consideration of the absence of juris
diction of the Copyright Board to deal with the 
matter, a writ of prohibition shall be granted 
against the respondent Copyright Board to prohib
it it from taking any further proceedings on Tariff 
2.A.2. 
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