In a real-world fairytale story this week, the discovery was announced of a previously unpublished work by beloved mycologist (also children's author) Beatrix Potter, 150 years after her birth.
Would Beatrix have thought of Merpel as a well-behaved cat? |
Happily for Kat enthusiasts, there is an interesting IP story, which was first raised in our office when we wondered: Who owns the copyright, and why has it not expired?
A very lucky find
In fact the luck of this find in 2015 is quite striking. Readers with appropriate pocket change, will already know that Beatrix Potter died in 1943 – meaning copyright in her works expired at the end of 2013, and they came into the public domain (at least in Europe) just a couple of years ago on 1 January 2014. So while the archive at Project Gutenberg gives free access to all her other publications, why will Kitty remain protected, for the benefit of the publisher?The answer lies in a (nearly forgotten) schedule to the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. Schedule 1 to that 1988 Act provides as follows (we can ignore the specific provisions about printed paper hangings and machine-made lace):
3. The new copyright provisions apply in relation to things existing at commencement as they apply in relation to things coming into existence after commencement, subject to any express provision to the contrary. [•••]
12.(1) The following provisions have effect with respect to the duration of copyright in existing works.
[•••]
(4) Copyright in the following descriptions of work continues to subsist until the end of the period of 50 years from the end of the calendar year in which the new copyright provisions come into force—
(a) literary, dramatic and musical works of which the author has died and in relation to which none of the acts mentioned in paragraphs (a) to (e) of the proviso to section 2(3) of the 1956 Act has been done;[•••]
2.(3)Subject to the last preceding subsection, copyright subsisting in a work by virtue of this section shall continue to subsist until the end of the period of fifty years from the end of the calendar year in which the author died, and shall then expire:
Provided that if before the death of the author none of the following acts had been done, that is to say,—
(a)the publication of the work,the copyright shall continue to subsist until the end of the period of fifty years from the end of the calendar year which includes the earliest occasion on which one of those acts is done.
(b)the performance of the work in public,
(c)the offer for sale to the public of records of the work, and
(d)the broadcasting of the work,
A 26 year bonus
Kitty-in-Boots fulfils all the criteria for extended copyright protection: It existed at the date of commencement of the 1988 Act; it is a literary work; was unpublished before the death of the author; and the author died in the right timeframe for the work to be eligible (before the 1988 Act came into force).The copyright will therefore expire at the end of 50 years from 1989 (being the date at which the 1988 Act came into force) – so copyright will not expire until the end of 2039.
But if it was previously unknown, who owns it? Well, Wikipedia tells us that copyright in Potter’s stories was left to her publisher, and ended up with the Penguin Group. The 1956 Act provides (§38) that such a bequest would be deemed to include unpublished works; so Penguin would appear to be the copyright owner.
Mixed work
As Warner-Chappell was reminded to its cost recently, one should not lose sight of the fact that the words may be dealt with differently to other elements that make up a work of mixed copyright. The publication itself will be a work of mixed authorship – while Beatrix Potter's famous illustrations are (were?) her own, the new publication will be illustrated by Quentin Blake and of course the typesetting arrangements will attract their own rights. So copyright in this book itself will continue long after the 2039 cut-off period. Speculating, the following factors may also complicate matters:Beatrix Potter's Kitty-in-Boots illustration |
- Beatrix Potter did complete at least one illustration for Kitty-in-Boots;
- A second, incomplete sketch of the villain (Mr Tod) was found with the papers; and
- She also began to lay out the manuscript, which might influence or be incorporated into the final typographical arrangement.
Of course, a document being available in library archives would, in patent matters, be considered to have been published. Does copyright have a different approach?
ReplyDeleteThe use of the word "publish" in patent law is not the same as in copyright. See the definition in Art. 3(3) of the 1971 Paris Act of the Berne Convention (and before that Art. 4(4) of the 1948 Brussels Act) which both require that copies of the work have been issued in a certain quantity. None of them includes a single copy in a library archive.
ReplyDeleteI am glad to say that neither this story nor the date 2039 are unfamiliar to archivists, who all know very well that all the unpublished literary, dramatic and musical works in their record offices are protected by copyright until the end of 2039 at the earliest. I say at the earliest because if life plus 70 gives a later terminal date, that term applies: see SI 1995/3297 paras 15(1) and 16(c). You might recall too that the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013 gave the Government the power to do away with most of the 2039 terms, notably this one, but that it has decided not to act. Archivists are therefore left having to advise their users that copyright applies even to works hundreds of years old. Luckily, they have an exception that helps in many cases. CDPA sch 1 para 16 preserves parts of s7 of the 1956 Act which permit the copying with a view to publication of an unpublished work that is at least 100 years old, whose author has been dead for at least 50 years and that is available to the public in a library or similar institution, and the work may be published so long as the copyright owner is unknown to the publisher. It would not apply in this case of course, since the copyright owner is known. Welcome to our world.
ReplyDeleteHad the transitional provisions not existed, the discoverer would have been entitled to the publication right for 25 years (essentially copyright) under regulation 16 of the 1996 Regulations. And in other EU countries where no strange transitional provisions it will still apply as it is based on article 4 of the Term Directive. It just becomes more complicated...
ReplyDelete