CHAPTER V
COMMON LAW RIGHTS
SECTION I.--PUBLISHED WORK.
After a work has been published it has no protection in the nature of copyright except under an Act of Congress.[1630] If either from the nature of the work, or from the want of conforming with the formalities of the Act, there is no statutory protection, then there can be no exclusive right of copying the work. After a drama or musical piece has been published as a book, not only the copyright in it but also the performing right depends entirely on statutory protection.[1631] Performance on the stage not being a publication, affects neither the right of copy nor the performing right.
Although there is no right of copy in a published work except under statute, there are certain common-law rights based on fraud or implied contract which are incident thereto, and which neither depend on nor are affected by statutory protection.
=Passing off.=--One man is not entitled so to produce his book as to lead the public to believe it is the work of another.[1632] The same or a similar title is the most usual method of passing off. One cannot monopolise a purely descriptive title such as "Latin Grammar" or "Guide to the Alps;" but it was held a passing off to take the title, "The _Fram_ Expedition--Nansen in the Frozen World;"[1633] so the title "Social Register" to a select list of residents in a certain district was infringed by a similar list bearing the title "Howard's Social Register."[1634] It is immaterial in a question of passing off that the book itself is unprotected from copying. Thus an English magazine called "Chatterbox" was largely sold in the United States, but was not copyright. Although it would have been quite legal to have copied the English magazine and sold such copies under its own title, it was not permissible to publish another magazine under the title of "Chatterbox."[1635] In another case it was held that one might not adopt the title of another's operetta for his own, even although the songs and vocal scores of the operetta had been published under the title without securing copyright.[1636]
It is not a passing off to reprint another man's book and sell it in his own name, and if the copyright has expired he has no redress.[1637] He has no property in his own name as such. After the copyright had expired in "Webster's Dictionary," Webster's assignee was held to have no ground for restraining any one from reprinting and selling "Webster's Dictionary" under that title.[1638] Even where the name was a pseudonym, "Mark Twain," the author was not entitled to prevent others from printing and selling some non-copyright work of his as "Sketches by Mark Twain."[1639]
A man may prevent the publication under his name of a book of which he is not the author or which has been mutilated without his authority.[1640] Henry Drummond, the evangelist, delivered a series of lectures at Boston, Massachusetts, on "The Evolution of Man." Eight out of twelve lectures were partially printed with the author's consent in the British Weekly, and no copyright was secured in America. It was held that Professor Drummond was entitled to restrain a reprint of these published lectures reproduced with material alterations, and represented as being the complete series of lectures.[1641] An author who has parted with or lost his copyright has no right to regulate the manner in which his work may be published, provided that there is no misrepresentation causing injury to the author's name.[1642]
In one case,[1643] however, the defendants were restrained from a similar proceeding on the ground of unfair trading. They bought second-hand school books published by the plaintiff, and rebound them so as to have the exact appearance of the plaintiff's books when new. It was held that they were entitled to do this without infringing any right of the plaintiff in their copyright book; but it was also held that it was not fair trading to sell the rebound books without sufficient notice that they were rebound.
If there have been several editions of a book, the copyright in the first of which only has expired, the author may restrain a publisher from reprinting and publishing the first edition so as to lead the public to believe that it is a later edition still copyright.[1644] The owner of a series of novels, published in two editions, cannot prevent a third person buying a large quantity of the sixth edition and binding them so as to somewhat resemble the dearer edition.[1645] When the "Encyclopædia Britannica" was published, only a few of the articles were copyright in America. It was held that it was permissible for an American publisher to reprint the whole work so far as not copyright, and to substitute new articles for the copyright articles, and so long as there was no attempt to defraud the public to publish it as the "Encyclopædia Britannica" so revised.[1646]
SECTION II.--UNPUBLISHED WORK.
Unpublished work is protected from interference by the common law of England, which was brought to and adopted by the United States.[1647] When the common law is asserted one must look to the law of the State in which the controversy originated,[1648] since although the common law of England was adopted, it was adopted only so far as its principles were suited to the conditions of the colonies at the time, and some States have incorporated with their laws more and some less. The rights at common law in unpublished work were not abrogated by Acts of Congress establishing copyright in published work.
The author of an unfinished work has the right at common law to prevent any one from making any unauthorised use of his work.[1649] The author may without publishing make a communication of the contents of his work to a limited number,[1650] and he may prescribe to them what conditions he pleases.[1651] A play or song is not published by performance nor a lecture by delivery.[1652] A work of art is probably published by public exhibition,[1653] but not by a private view. A spectator of an unpublished play is not entitled to reproduce substantial parts of it even from memory.[1654] Similarly with a musical work or lecture.
An alien author has an equal right with a citizen of the United States to sue at common law for interference with his manuscript.[1655] A statutory remedy is given for the unauthorised printing or publishing of any manuscript. The offender is liable "for all damages occasioned by such injury."[1656] This statutory remedy neither destroys nor limits the common law right.[1657] No new right is secured.[1658] The practical result is that an alternative remedy in the Federal tribunals is provided where the parties are subjects of the same State. The plaintiff may proceed either in the State Court or the Federal Court.[1659] Manuscript under this section is limited to the meaning of a written document. It does not include a picture.[1660]
APPENDIX
BRITISH STATUTES
THE ENGRAVING COPYRIGHT ACT, 1734.
8 GEO. II. c. 13.
An Act for the Encouragement of the Arts of Designing, Engraving, and Etching historical and other Prints, by vesting the Properties thereof in the Inventors and Engravers, during the Time therein mentioned.
[Sidenote: Preamble.]
I. WHEREAS divers Persons have by their own Genius, Industry, Pains, and Expense, invented and engraved, or worked in Mezzotinto or Chiaro Oscuro, Sets of historical and other Prints, in hopes to have reaped the sole Benefit of their Labours:
And whereas Printsellers, and other Persons, have of late, without the Consent of the Inventors, Designers, and Proprietors of such Prints, frequently taken the Liberty of copying, engraving, and publishing, or causing to be copied, engraved, and published, base Copies of such Works, Designs, and Prints, to the very great Prejudice and Detriment of the Inventors, Designers, and Proprietors thereof:
[Sidenote: After 24th June, 1735, the property of historical and other prints vested in the Inventor for 14 Years.]
[Sidenote: Proprietor's Name to be affixed to each Print.]
[Sidenote: Penalty on Printsellers or others pirating same.]
For Remedy thereof, and for preventing such Practices for the future, be it enacted, That from and after the Twenty-fourth Day of June, which shall be in the Year of our Lord One thousand seven hundred and thirty-five, every Person who shall invent and design, engrave, etch, or work in Mezzotinto or Chiaro Oscuro, or, from his own Works and Invention, shall cause to be designed and engraved, etched, or worked in Mezzotinto or Chiaro Oscuro, any historical or other Print or Prints,[1661] shall have the sole Right and Liberty of printing and reprinting the same for the Term of Fourteen Years, to commence from the Day of the first Publishing thereof, which shall be truly engraved with the Name of the Proprietor on each Plate, and printed on every such Print or Prints; and that if any Printseller, or other Person whatsoever, from and after the said Twenty-fourth Day of June, One thousand seven hundred and thirty-five, within the Time limited by this Act, shall engrave, etch, or work, as aforesaid, or in any other Manner copy and sell, or cause to be engraved, etched, or copied and sold, in the Whole or in Part, by varying, adding to, or diminishing from the main Design, or shall print, reprint, or import for Sale, or cause to be printed, reprinted, or imported for Sale, any such Print or Prints, or any Parts thereof, without the Consent of the Proprietor or Proprietors thereof first had and obtained in Writing, signed by him or them respectively, in the Presence of Two or more credible Witnesses, or knowing the same to be so printed or reprinted without the Consent of the Proprietor or Proprietors, shall publish, sell, or expose to Sale, or otherwise, or in any other Manner dispose of, or cause to be published, sold, or exposed to Sale, or otherwise, or in any other Manner disposed of, any such Print or Prints without such Consent first had and obtained as aforesaid, then such Offender or Offenders shall forfeit the Plate or Plates on which such Print or Prints are or shall be copied, and all and every Sheet or Sheets (being part of or whereon such Print or Prints are or shall be so copied or printed) to the Proprietor or Proprietors of such original Print or Prints, who shall forthwith destroy and damask the same; and further, that every such Offender or Offenders shall forfeit Five Shillings for every Print which shall be found in his, her, or their Custody, either printed or published, and exposed to Sale, or otherwise disposed of contrary to the true Intent and Meaning of this Act, the One Moiety thereof to the King's most Excellent Majesty, His Heirs and Successors, and the other Moiety thereof to any Person or Persons that shall sue for the same, to be recovered in any of His Majesty's Courts of Record at Westminster, by Action of Debt, Bill, Plaint, or Information, in which no Wager of Law, Essoign, Privilege, or Protection, or more than One Imparlance, shall be allowed:
[Sidenote: Not to extend to Purchasers of Plates from the original Proprietors.]
II. Provided nevertheless, That it shall and may be lawful for any Person or Persons, who shall hereafter purchase any Plate or Plates for printing, from the Original Proprietors thereof, to print and reprint from the said Plates, without incurring any of the Penalties in this Act mentioned.
[Sidenote: Limitation of Actions.]
[Sidenote: General Issue.]
III. _And if any Action or Suit shall be commenced or brought against any Person or Persons whatsoever, for doing or causing to be done any Thing in pursuance of this Act, the same shall be brought within the Space of Three Months after so doing; and the Defendant and Defendants, in such Action or Suit, shall or may plead the General Issue, and give the special Matter in Evidence; and if upon such Action or Suit a Verdict shall be given for the Defendant or Defendants, or if the Plaintiff or Plaintiffs become nonsuited, or discontinue his, her, or their Action or Actions, then the Defendant or Defendants shall have and recover full Costs, for the Recovery whereof he shall have the same Remedy, as any other Defendant or Defendants in any other Case hath or have by Law:_[1662]
IV. Provided always, That if any Action or Suit shall be commenced or brought against any Person or Persons, for any Offence committed against this Act, the same shall be brought within the Space of Three Months after the Discovery of every such Offence, and not afterwards; any Thing in this Act contained to the contrary notwithstanding.
[Sidenote: Clause relating to J. Pine.]
V. _And whereas John Pine of London, Engraver, doth propose to engrave and publish a Set of Prints copied from several Pieces of Tapestry in the House of Lords, and His Majesty's Wardrobe, and other Drawings relating to the Spanish Invasion, in the Year of our Lord One thousand five hundred and eighty-eight; be it further enacted by the Authority aforesaid, That the said John Pine shall be entitled to the Benefit of this Act, to all Intents and Purposes whatsoever, in the same Manner as if the said John Pine had been the Inventor and Designer of the said Prints._[1663]
[Sidenote: Public Act.]
VI. _And be it further enacted, by the Authority aforesaid, That this Act shall be deemed, adjudged, and taken to be a Public Act, and be judicially taken notice of as such by all Judges, Justices, and other Persons whatsoever, without specially pleading the same_.[1664]
THE ENGRAVING COPYRIGHT ACT, 1766.
7 GEO. III. C. 38.
[Sidenote: Preamble reciting Act 8, G 2.]
An Act to amend and render more effectual an Act made in the Eighth Year of the Reign of King George the Second for Encouragement of the Arts of Designing, Engraving, and Etching Historical and other Preamble Prints; _and for vesting in, and securing to, Jane Hogarth, Widow, the Property in certain Prints_.[1665]
[Sidenote: The original Inventors, Designers, or Engravers, &c., of Historical and other Prints, and such who shall cause Prints to be done from Works, &c., of their own Invention, and also such as shall engrave, &c., any Print taken from any Picture, Drawing, Model, or Sculpture, are entitled to the Benefit and Protection of the recited and present Act; and those who shall engrave or import for Sale Copies of such Prints are liable to Penalties.]
I. WHEREAS an Act of Parliament passed in the Eighth Year of the Reign of His late Majesty King George the Second, intituled An Act for the Encouragement of the Arts of Designing, Engraving, and Etching Historical and other Prints, by vesting the Properties thereof in the Inventors and Engravers, during the time therein mentioned, has been found ineffectual for the Purposes thereby intended: Be it enacted, That from and after the First Day of January One thousand seven hundred and sixty-seven, all and every Person and Persons who shall invent or design, engrave, etch, or work in Mezzotinto or Chiaro Oscuro, or, from his own Work, Design, or Invention, shall cause or procure to be designed, engraved, etched, or worked in Mezzotinto or Chiaro Oscuro, any Historical Print or Prints, or any Print or Prints of any Portrait, Conversation, Landscape, or Architecture, Map, Chart, or Plan, or any other Print or Prints whatsoever, shall have, and are hereby declared to have, the Benefit and Protection of the said Act, and this Act, under the Restrictions and Limitations hereinafter mentioned.
II. And from and after the said First Day of January One thousand seven hundred and sixty-seven, all and every Person and Persons who shall engrave, etch, or work in Mezzotinto or Chiaro Oscuro, or cause to be engraved, etched, or worked, any Print taken from any Picture, Drawing, Model, or Sculpture, either ancient or modern, shall have, and are hereby declared to have, the Benefit and Protection of the said Act, and this Act, for the Term hereinafter mentioned, in like Manner as if such Print had been graved or drawn from the Original Design of such Graver, Etcher, or Draughtsman; and if any Person shall engrave, print and publish, or import for Sale, any Copy of any such Print, contrary to the true Intent and Meaning of this and the said former Act, every such Person shall be liable to the Penalties contained in the said Act, to be recovered as therein and hereinafter is mentioned.
[Sidenote: The sole Right of printing and reprinting the late W. Hogarth's Prints,]
[Sidenote: vested in his Widow and Executrix for the Term of 20 years.]
[Sidenote: Penalty of copying, &c., of any of them, before the Expiration of the said Term; such Copies excepted as were made and exposed to Sale after the Term of 14 Years, for which the said Works were first licensed, &c.]
III. _And whereas William Hogarth, late of the City of Westminster, Painter and Graver, did etch and engrave, and cause to be etched and engraved, several Prints from his own Invention and Design, the Property and sole Right of vending all such Prints being secured to him the said William Hogarth for the Term of Fourteen Years from their first Publication, by the said former Act of Parliament; which said Property, by his last Will, became vested in his Widow and Executrix: And whereas since the first Publication of several of the said Prints, the Term of Fourteen Years is expired, and several base Copies of the same have been since printed and published, whereby the Sale of the Originals has been considerably lessened, to the great Detriment of the said Widow and Executrix: And whereas since the Publication of others of the said Prints, the Term of Fourteen Years is now near expiring: Be it enacted by the Authority aforesaid, That Jane Hogarth, Widow and Executrix of the said William Hogarth, shall have the sole Right and Liberty of printing and reprinting all the said Prints, Etchings, and Engravings, of the Design and Invention of the said William Hogarth, for and during the Term of Twenty Years, to commence from the said First Day of January One thousand seven hundred and sixty-seven; and that all and every Person and Persons who shall at any Time hereafter, before the Expiration of the said Term of Twenty Years, engrave, etch, or work in Mezzotinto or Chiaro Oscuro, or otherwise copy, sell, or expose to Sale, or cause or procure to be etched, engraved, or worked in Mezzotinto or Chiaro Oscuro, any of the said Works of the said William Hogarth, shall be liable to the Penalties and Forfeitures contained in this and the said former Act of Parliament; to be recovered in like Manner as in and by this and the said former Act are given, directed, and appointed._[1666]
IV. _Provided nevertheless, That the Proprietor or Proprietors of such of the Copies of the said William Hogarth's Works, which have been copied and printed, and exposed to Sale, after the Expiration of the Term of Fourteen Years from the Time of their first Publication by the said William Hogarth, and before the said First Day of January, shall not be liable or subject to any of the Penalties contained in this Act; anything hereinbefore contained to the contrary thereof in anywise notwithstanding._[1667]
[Sidenote: Penalties may be sued for as by the recited Act is directed; and be recovered with full Costs; provided the Prosecution be commenced within 6 months after the Fact.]
V. And all and every the Penalties and Penalty inflicted by the said Act, and extended, and meant to be extended, to the several Cases comprised in this Act, shall and may be sued for and recovered in like Manner, and under the like Restrictions and Limitations, as in and by the said Act is declared and appointed; and the Plaintiff or common Informer in every such Action (in case such Plaintiff or common Informer shall recover any of the Penalties incurred by this or the said former Act) shall recover the same, together with his full Costs of Suit.
VI. Provided also, That the Party prosecuting shall commence his Prosecution within the Space of Six Calendar Months after the Offence committed.
[Sidenote: The Right intended to be secured by this and the former Act, vested in the Proprietors for the Term of 28 Years from the first Publication.]
[Sidenote: Limitation of Actions.]
[Sidenote: General Issue.]
[Sidenote: Full Costs.]
VII. And the sole Right and Liberty of printing and reprinting intended to be secured and protected by the said former Act and this Act, shall be extended, continued, and be vested in the respective Proprietors, for the Space of Twenty-eight Years, to commence from the Day of the first Publishing of any of the Works respectively hereinbefore and in the said former Act mentioned.
VIII. _And if any Action or Suit shall be commenced or brought against any Person or Persons whatsoever for doing, or causing to be done, anything in pursuance of this Act, the same shall be brought within the Space of Six Calendar Months after the Fact committed; and the Defendant or Defendants in any such Action or Suit shall or may plead the General Issue, and give the Special Matter in Evidence; and if, upon such Action or Suit, a Verdict shall be given for the Defendant or Defendants, or if the Plaintiff or Plaintiffs become nonsuited, or discontinue his, her, or their Action or Actions, then the Defendant or Defendants shall ham and recover full Costs; for the Recovery whereof he shall have the same Remedy as any other Defendant or Defendants, in any other Case, hath or have by Law._[1668]
THE COPYRIGHT ACT, 1775.[1669]
(UNIVERSITY COPYRIGHT), 15 GEO. III. C. 53.
An Act for enabling the two Universities in England, the four Universities in Scotland, and the several Colleges of Eton, Westminster, and Winchester, to hold in Perpetuity their Copyright in Books, given or bequeathed to the said Universities and Colleges for the Advancement of useful Learning and other Purposes of Education:
[Sidenote: Preamble]
[Sidenote: Universities, &c., in England and Scotland to have for ever the sole Right of printing, &c., such Books as have been, or shall be, bequeathed to them, unless the same have been, or shall be given for a limited Time.]
I. Whereas Authors have heretofore bequeathed or given, and may hereafter bequeath or give the Copies of Books composed by them to or in Trust for one of the two Universities in that Part of Great Britain called England, or to or in Trust for some of the Colleges or Houses of Learning within the same, or to or in trust for the four Universities in Scotland, or to or in trust for the several Colleges of Eton, Westminster, and Winchester,[1670] and in or by their several Wills or other instruments of Donation, have directed or may direct that the Profits arising from the printing and reprinting such Books shall be applied and appropriated as a Fund for the Advancement of Learning and other beneficial Purposes of Education within the said Universities and Colleges aforesaid: And whereas such useful Purposes will frequently be frustrated unless the sole printing and reprinting of such Books the Copies of which have been or shall be so bequeathed or given as aforesaid, be preserved and secured to the said Universities, Colleges, and Houses of Learning respectively in Perpetuity: Be it enacted, That the said Universities and Colleges respectively shall, at their respective Presses, have, for ever, the sole liberty of printing and reprinting all such Books, as shall at any time heretofore have been, or (having not been heretofore published[1671] or assigned) shall at any time hereafter be bequeathed, or otherwise given by the Author or Authors of the same respectively or the Representatives of such Author or Authors, to or in Trust for the said Universities or to or in Trust for any College or House of Learning within the same, or to or in Trust for the said four Universities in Scotland, or to or in Trust for the said Colleges of Eton, Westminster, and Winchester, or any of them, for the Purposes aforesaid, unless the same shall have been bequeathed or given, or shall after be bequeathed or given, for any Term of Years or other limited Term: any Law or Usage to the contrary hereof in anywise notwithstanding.
[Sidenote: After 24th June, 1775, Persons printing or selling such Books shall forfeit the same, and also id. for every sheet;]
[Sidenote: one Moiety to His Majesty, and the other to the Prosecutor.]
II. And if any Bookseller, Printer, or other Person whatsoever, from and after June 24, 1775, shall print, reprint, or import, or cause to be printed, reprinted, or imported, any such Book or Books; or, knowing the same to be so printed or reprinted, shall sell, publish, or expose to Sale, or cause to be sold, published, or exposed to Sale, any such Book or Books; then such Offender or Offenders shall forfeit such Book or Books, and all and every Sheet or Sheets, being Part of such Book or Books, to the University, College, or House of Learning respectively, to whom the Copy of such Book or Books shall have been bequeathed or given as aforesaid, who shall forthwith damask and make waste Paper of them; and further, that every such Offender or Offenders shall forfeit One Penny for every Sheet which shall be found in his, her, or their Custody, either printed or printing, published or exposed to Sale, contrary to the true Intent and Meaning of this Act; the one Moiety thereof to the King's Most Excellent Majesty, His Heirs and Successors, and the other Moiety thereof to any Person or Persons who shall sue for the same; to be recovered in any of His Majesty's Courts of Record at Westminster, or in the Court of Session in Scotland, by Action of Debt, Bill, Plaint, or Information, in which no Wager of Law, Essoign, Privilege, or Protection, or more than One Imparlance, shall be allowed.
[Sidenote: Nothing in this Act to grant any exclusive Right longer than such Books are printed at the presses of the Universities. Universities may sell Copy Rights in like manner as any Author.]
III. Provided nevertheless, That nothing in this Act shall extend to grant any exclusive Right otherwise than so long as the Books or Copies belonging to the said Universities or Colleges are printed only at their own Printing Presses within the said Universities or Colleges respectively, and for their sole Benefit and Advantage; and that if any University or College shall delegate, grant, lease, or sell their Copy Rights, or exclusive Rights of printing the Books hereby granted, or any Part thereof, or shall allow, permit, or authorise any Person or Persons, or Bodies Corporate, to print or reprint the same, that then the Privileges hereby granted are to become void and of no Effect, in the same Manner as if this Act had not been made[1672]; but the said Universities and Colleges, as aforesaid, shall nevertheless have a Right to Sell such Copies so bequeathed or given as aforesaid, in like Manner as any Author or Authors now may do under the Provisions of the Statute of 8 Anne.
[Sidenote: No person subject to Penalties for printing, &c., Books already bequeathed, unless they be entered before 24th June, 1775. All Books that may hereafter be bequeathed must be entered within]
[Sidenote: two months after such Bequest shall be known. 6d. to be paid for each entry in the Register Book, which may be inspected without Fee. Clerk to give a Certificate, being paid 6d.]
IV. And Whereas many Persons may through Ignorance offend against this Act, unless some Provision be made whereby the Property of every such Book as is intended by this Act to be secured to the said Universities, Colleges, and Houses of Learning within the same, and to the said Universities in Scotland, and to the respective Colleges of Eton, Westminster, and Winchester, may be ascertained and known; be it therefore enacted that nothing in this Act contained shall be construed to extend to subject any Bookseller, Printer, or other Person whatsoever, to the Forfeitures or Penalties herein mentioned, for or by reason of the printing or reprinting, importing or exposing to Sale any Book or Books, unless the Title to the Copy of such Book or Books, which has or have been already bequeathed or given to any of the said Universities or Colleges aforesaid, be entered in the Register Book of the Company of Stationers kept for that Purpose, in such Manner as hath been usual, on or before June 24, 1775; and of all and every such Book or Books as may or shall hereafter be bequeathed or given as aforesaid, be entered in such Register within the space of two Months after any such Bequest or Gift shall have come to the knowledge of the Vice-Chancellors of the said Universities, or Heads of Houses and Colleges of Learning, or of the Principal of any of the said four Universities respectively; for every of which Entries so to be made as aforesaid the Sum of Sixpence shall be paid, and no more; which said Register Book shall and may, at all seasonable and Convenient Times, be referred to and inspected by any Bookseller, Printer, or other Person without any Fee or Reward; and the Clerk of the said Company of Stationers shall, when and as often as thereunto required, give a Certificate under his Hand of such Entry or Entries, and for every such Certificate may take a Fee not exceeding Sixpence.
[Sidenote: If Clerk refuse or neglect to make Entry, &c., Proprietor of such Copy Right to have like Benefit as if such Entry had been made, and the Clerk shall forfeit £20.]
V. And if the Clerk of the said Company of Stationers for the Time being shall refuse or neglect to register or make such Entry or Entries, or to give such Certificate, being thereunto required by the Agent of either of the said Universities or Colleges aforesaid, lawfully authorised for that Purpose, then either of the said Universities or Colleges aforesaid, being the Proprietor of such Copy Right or Copy Rights as aforesaid (Notice being first given of such Refusal by Advertisement in the Gazette) shall have the like Benefit as if such Entry or Entries, Certificate or Certificates, had been duly made and given; and the Clerk so refusing shall, for every such Offence, forfeit £20 to the Proprietor or Proprietors of every such Copy Right; to be recovered in any of His Majesty's Courts of Record at Westminster, or in the Court of Session in Scotland, by Action of Debt, Bill, Plaint, or Information, in which no Wages of Law, Essoign, Privilege, Protection, or more than One Imparlance, shall be allowed.
[Sidenote: 8 Anne. Delivery of Copies.]
VI. [_Clause enacting that no person shall be entitled to penalties under_ 8 _Anne unless the Title to the copy of the whole book be entered at Stationer? Hall and_ 9 _copies delivered for the use of the several libraries_: Repealed Stat. Law Rev. Act, 1861.]
[Sidenote: Limitation of Actions.]
VII. _And if any Action or Suit shall be commenced or brought against any Person or Persons whatsoever, for doing or causing to be done, any thing in pursuance of this Act, the Defendants in such Action may plead the General Issue, and give the Special Matter in Evidence; and if upon such Action a Verdict, or if the same shall be brought in the Court of Session in Scotland, a Judgment be given for the Defendant, or the Plaintiff become nonsuited and discontinue his
## Action, then the Defendant shall have and recover his full Costs, for
which he shall have the same Remedy as a Defendant in any Case by Law hath._[1673]
[Sidenote: Public Act.]
VIII. [_Clause providing that the Act shall be deemed a Public Act:_ Repealed Stat. Law Rev. Act, 1887.]
THE PRINTS COPYRIGHT ACT, 1777.
17 GEO. III. C. 57.
An Act for more effectually securing the Property of Prints to Inventors and Engravers, by enabling them to sue for and recover Penalties in certain cases.
[Sidenote: Recital of Acts 8 G. 2,]
[Sidenote: and 7 G. 3.]
[Sidenote: After 24th June, 1777, if any Engraver, &c., shall, within the Time limited by the aforesaid Acts, engrave or etch, &c., any Print, without the Consent of the Proprietor, he shall be liable to Damages, and Double Costs].
Whereas an Act of Parliament passed in the Eighth Year of the Reign of His late Majesty King George the Second, intituled, An Act for the Encouragement of the Arts of designing, engraving, and etching Historical and other Prints, by vesting the Properties thereof in the Inventors and Engravers, during the Time therein mentioned: And whereas by an Act of Parliament, passed in the Seventh Year of the Reign of His present Majesty, for amending and rendering more effectual the aforesaid Act, and for other Purposes therein mentioned, it was (among other Things) enacted, that, from and after the First Day of January One thousand seven hundred and sixty-seven, all and every Person or Persons who should engrave, etch, or work in Mezzotinto or Chiaro Oscuro, or cause to be engraved, etched, or worked, any Print taken from any Picture, Drawing, Model, or Sculpture, either ancient or modern, should have, and were thereby declared to have, the Benefit and Protection of the said former Act, and that Act, for the Term thereinafter mentioned, in like Manner as if such Print had been graved or drawn from the Original Design of such Graver, Etcher, or Draughtsman: And whereas the said Acts have not effectually answered the Purposes for which they were intended, and it is necessary, for the Encouragement of Artists, and for securing to them the Property of and in their Works, and for the Advancement and Improvement of the aforesaid Arts, that such further Provisions should be made as are hereinafter mentioned and contained; be it enacted that, from and after the Twenty-fourth Day of June One thousand seven hundred and seventy-seven, if any Engraver, Etcher, Printseller, or other Person, shall, within the Time limited by the aforesaid Acts, or either of them, engrave, etch, or work, or cause or procure to be engraved, etched, or worked, in Mezzotinto or Chiaro Oscuro, or otherwise, or in any other Manner copy in the Whole, or in Part, by varying, adding to, or diminishing from, the main Design, or shall print, reprint, or import for Sale, or cause or procure to be printed,-reprinted, or imported for Sale, or shall publish, sell, or otherwise dispose of, or cause or procure to be published, sold, or otherwise disposed of, any Copy or Copies of any historical Print or Prints, or any Print or Prints of any Portrait, Conversation, Landscape, or Architecture, Map, Chart, or Plan, or any other Print or Prints whatsoever, which hath or have been, or shall be, engraved, etched, drawn, or designed, in any Part of Great Britain, without the express Consent of the Proprietor or Proprietors thereof first had and obtained in Writing, signed by him, her, or them respectively, with his, her, or their own Hand or Hands, in the Presence of and attested by Two or More credible Witnesses, then every such Proprietor or Proprietors shall and may by and in a special Action upon the Case, to be brought against the Person or Persons so offending recover such damages as a Jury on the Trial of such Action, or on the Execution of a Writ of Inquiry thereon, shall give or assess, _together with Double Costs of Suit_.[1674]
THE SCULPTURE COPYRIGHT ACT, 1814.
54 GEO. III. C. 56.
An Act to amend and render more effectual an Act of His present Majesty, for encouraging the Art of making new Models and Casts of Busts, and other Things therein mentioned; and for giving further Encouragement to such Arts.
[18th May 1814.]
[Sidenote: 38 G. 3 c. 71.]
[Sidenote: The sole Right and Property of all new and original Sculpture Models, Copies, and Casts, vested in the Proprietors, for 14 Years.]
I. Whereas by an Act, passed in the Thirty-eighth Year of the Reign of His present Majesty, intituled An Act for encouraging the Art of making new Models and Casts of Busts, and other Things therein mentioned; the sole Right and Property thereof were vested in the original Proprietors, for a Time therein specified: And whereas the Provisions of the said Act having been found ineffectual for the Purposes thereby intended, it is expedient to amend the same, and to make other Provisions and Regulations for the Encouragement of Artists, and to secure to them the Profits of and in their Works, and for the Advancement of the said Arts: Be it enacted That from and after the passing of this Act, every Person or Persons who shall make or cause to be made any new and original Sculpture,[1675] or Model, or Copy, or Cast, of the Human Figure or Human Figures, or of any Bust or Busts, or of any Part or Parts of the Human Figure, clothed in Drapery or otherwise, or of any Animal or Animals, or of any Part or Parts of any Animal combined with the Human Figure or otherwise, or of any Subject being Matter of Invention in Sculpture or of any Alto or Basso-Relievo representing any of the Matters or Things hereinbefore mentioned, or any Cast from Nature of the Human Figure, or of any Part or Parts of the Human Figure, or of any Cast from Nature of any Animal, or of any Part or Parts of any Animal, or of any such Subject containing or representing any of the Matters and Things hereinbefore mentioned, whether separate or combined, shall have the sole Right and Property of all and in every such new and original Sculpture, Model, Copy and Cast of the Human Figure or Human Figures, and of all and in every such Bust or Busts, and of all and in every such Part or Parts of the Human Figure, clothed in Drapery or otherwise, and of all and in every such new and original Sculpture, Model, Copy and Cast, representing any Animal or Animals, and of all and in every such Work representing any Part or Parts of any Animal combined with the Human Figure or otherwise, and of all and in every such new and original Sculpture, Model, Copy and Cast of any Subject, being Matter of Invention in Sculpture, and of all and in every such new and original Sculpture, Model, Copy and Cast in Alto or Basso-Relievo, representing any of the Matters or Things hereinbefore mentioned, and of every such Cast from Nature, for the Term of Fourteen Years from first putting forth or publishing[1676] the same; provided, in all and in every Case, the Proprietor or Proprietors do cause his, her, or their Name or Names, with the Date, to be put on all and every such new and original Sculpture, Model, Copy, or Cast, and on every such Cast from Nature, before the same shall be put forth or published.
[Sidenote: Works published under the recited Act, vested in the Proprietors for 14 Years.]
II. And the sole Right and Property of all Works, which have been put forth or published under the Protection of the said recited Act, shall be extended, continued to and vested in the respective Proprietors thereof, for the Term of Fourteen Years, to commence from the Date when such last-mentioned Works respectively were put forth or published.
[Sidenote: Persons putting forth pirated Copies or pirated Casts, may be prosecuted.]
[Sidenote: Damages and Double Costs.]
III. And if any Person or Persons shall, within such Term of Fourteen Years, make or import, or cause to be made or imported, or exposed to Sale, or otherwise disposed of, any pirated Copy or pirated Cast of any such new and original Sculpture, or Model or Copy, or Cast of the Human Figure or Human Figures, or of any such Bust or Busts, or of any such Part or Parts of the Human Figure clothed in Drapery or otherwise, or of any such Work of any Animal or Animals, or of any such Part or Parts of any Animal or Animals combined with the Human Figure or otherwise, or of any such Subject being Matter of Invention in Sculpture, or of any such Alto or Basso-Relievo representing any of the Matters or Things hereinbefore mentioned, or of any such Cast from Nature as aforesaid, whether such pirated Copy or pirated Cast be produced by moulding or copying from, or imitating in any way, any of the Matters or Things put forth or published under the Protection of this Act, or of any Works which have been put forth or published under the Protection of the said recited Act, the Right and Property whereof is and are secured, extended and protected by this Act, in any of the Cases as aforesaid, to the Detriment, Damage, or Loss of the original or respective Proprietor or Proprietors of any such Works so pirated; then and in all such Cases the said Proprietor or Proprietors, or their Assignee or Assignees, shall and may, by and in a Special
## Action upon the Case to be brought against the Person or Persons so
offending, receive such Damages as a Jury on a Trial of such Action shall give or assess, _together with Double Costs of Suit_.[1677]
[Sidenote: Purchasers of Copy Right secured in the same.]
IV. Provided nevertheless, That no Person or Persons who shall or may hereafter purchase the Right or Property of any new and original Sculpture or Model, or Copy or Cast, or of any Cast from Nature, or of any of the Matters and Things published under or protected by virtue of this Act, of the Proprietor or Proprietors, expressed in a Deed in Writing signed by him, her, or them respectively, with his, her, or their own Hand or Hands, in the Presence of and attested by Two or more credible Witnesses, shall be subject to any Action for copying or casting, or vending the same, any Thing contained in this Act to the contrary notwithstanding.
[Sidenote: Limitation of Actions.]
V. Provided always, That all Actions to be brought as aforesaid, against any Person or Persons for any Offence committed against this Act, shall be commenced within Six Calendar Months next after the Discovery of every such Offence, and not afterwards.
[Sidenote: An additional Term of 14 Years, in case the Maker of the original Sculpture, &c., shall be living.]
VI. Provided always, That from and immediately after the Expiration of the said Term of Fourteen Years, the sole Right of making and disposing of such new and original Sculpture, or Model, or Copy, or Cast of any of the Matters or Things hereinbefore mentioned, shall return to the Person or Persons who originally made or caused to be made the same, if he or they shall be then living, for the further Term of Fourteen Years, _excepting in the Case or Cases where such Person or Persons shall by Sale or otherwise have divested himself, herself or themselves, of such Right of making or disposing of any new and original Sculpture, or Model, or Copy, or Cast of any of the Matters or Things hereinbefore mentioned, previous to the passing of this Act_.[1678]
THE DRAMATIC COPYRIGHT ACT, 1833.
3 & 4 WILL. IV.
An Act to amend the Laws relating to Dramatic Literary Property.
[10th June 1833.]
[Sidenote: 54 G. 3 c. 156.]
[Sidenote: The Author of any Dramatic Piece shall have as his Property the sole Liberty of representing it or causing it to be represented at any Place of Dramatic Entertainment.]
I. _Whereas by an Act passed in the Fifty-fourth year of the Reign of His late Majesty King George the Third, intituled An Act to amend the several Acts for the Encouragement of Learning, by securing the Copies and Copyright of printed Books to the Authors of such Books, or their Assigns, it was amongst other things provided and enacted, that from and after the passing of the said Act the Author of any Book or Books composed, and not printed or published, or which should thereafter be composed and printed and published, and his Assignee or Assigns, should have the sole Liberty of printing and reprinting such Books or Books for the full Term of Twenty-eight Years, to commence from the Day of first publishing the same, and also, if the Author should be living at the End of that Period, for the Residue of his natural Life: And whereas it is expedient to extend the Provisions of the said Act:[1679] Be it therefore enacted_, That the Author of any Tragedy, Comedy, Play, Opera, Farce, or any other Dramatic Piece[1680] or Entertainment, composed, and not printed and published by the Author thereof or his Assignee, or which hereafter shall be composed, and not printed or published by the Author thereof or his Assignee, or the Assignee of such Author, shall have as his own Property the sole Liberty of representing, or causing[1681] to be represented, at any Place or Places of Dramatic Entertainment[1682] whatsoever, in any Part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, in the Isles of Man, Jersey, and Guernsey, or in any Part of the British Dominions, any such Production as aforesaid, not printed and published by the Author thereof or his Assignee, and shall be deemed and taken to be the Proprietor thereof; and the Author of any such Production, printed and published within Ten Years before the passing of this Act by the Author thereof or his Assignee, or which shall hereafter be so printed and published, or the Assignee of such Author, shall, from the Time of passing this Act, or from the Time of such Publication respectively, until the End of Twenty-eight Years from the Day of such first Publication of the same, and also, if the Author or Authors, or the Survivor of the Authors, shall be living at the End of that period, during the Residue of his natural Life,[1683] have as his own Property the sole Liberty of representing, or causing to be represented, the same at any such Place of Dramatic Entertainment as aforesaid, and shall be deemed and taken to be the Proprietor thereof: Provided nevertheless, that nothing in this Act contained shall prejudice, alter, or affect the Right or Authority of any Person to represent or cause to be represented, at any Place or Places of Dramatic Entertainment whatsoever, any such Production as aforesaid, in all Cases in which the Author thereof or his Assignee shall, previously to the passing of this Act, have given his Consent to or authorised such Representation, but that such sole Liberty of the Author or his Assignee shall be subject to such Right or Authority.
[Sidenote: Proviso as to Cases where, previous to the passing of this Act, a Consent has been given.]
[Sidenote: Penalty on Persons performing Pieces contrary to this Act.]
II. If any Person shall, during the Continuance of such sole Liberty as aforesaid, contrary to the Intent of this Act, or Right of the Author or his Assignee, represent, or cause to be represented, without the Consent in Writing[1684] of the Author or other Proprietor first had and obtained, at any Place of Dramatic Entertainment within the Limits aforesaid, any such Production as aforesaid, or any Part thereof, every such Offender shall be liable for each and every such Representation to the Payment of an Amount not less than Forty Shillings, or to the full Amount of the Benefit or Advantage arising from such Representation, or the Injury or Loss sustained by the Plaintiff therefrom, whichever shall be the greater Damages, to the Author or other Proprietor of such Production so represented contrary to the true Intent and Meaning of this Act, to be recovered, _together with Double Costs of Suit_,[1685] by such Author or other Proprietors, in any Court having Jurisdiction in such Cases in that Part of the said United Kingdom or of the British Dominions in which the Offence shall be committed; and in every such Proceeding where the sole Liberty of such Author or his Assignee as aforesaid shall be subject to such Right or Authority as aforesaid it shall be sufficient for the Plaintiff to state that he has such sole Liberty, without stating the same to be subject to such Right or Authority, or otherwise mentioning the same.
[Sidenote: Limitation of Actions.]
III. Provided nevertheless. That all Actions or Proceedings for any Offence or Injury that shall be committed against this Act shall be brought, sued, and commenced within Twelve Calendar Months next after such Offence committed, or else the same shall be void and of no effect.
[Sidenote: Explanation of Words.]
IV. Whenever Authors, Persons, Offenders, or others are spoken of in this Act in the singular Number or in the Masculine Gender, the same shall extend to any Number of Persons and to either Sex.
THE LECTURES COPYRIGHT ACT, 1835.[1686]
5 & 6 WILL. IV. C. 65.
An Act for preventing the Publication of Lectures without Consent.
[9th September 1835.]
[Sidenote: Authors of Lectures, or their Assigns, to have the sole Right of publishing them.]
[Sidenote: Penalty on other persons publishing, &c., Lectures without Leave.]
I. _Whereas Printers, Publishers, and other Persons have frequently taken the Liberty of printing and publishing Lectures delivered upon divers Subjects, without the Consent of the Authors of such Lectures, or the Persons delivering the same in Public, to the great Detriment of such Authors and Lecturers: Be it enacted by the King's most Excellent Majesty, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the Authority of the same, That from and after the First Day of September One thousand eight hundred and thirty-five_[1687] the Author of any Lecture or Lectures, or the Person to whom he hath sold or otherwise conveyed the Copy thereof, in order to deliver the same in any School, Seminary, Institution, or other Place, or for any other Purpose, shall have the sole Right and Liberty of printing and publishing such Lecture or Lectures; and if any Person shall, by taking down the same in Short Hand or otherwise in Writing, or in any other Way, obtain or make a Copy of such Lecture or Lectures, and shall print or lithograph or otherwise copy and publish the same, or cause the same to be printed, lithographed, or otherwise copied and published, without Leave of the Author thereof, or of the Person to whom the Author thereof hath sold or otherwise conveyed the same, and every Person who, knowing the same to have been printed or copied and published without such Consent, shall sell, publish, or expose to sale, or cause to be sold, published, or exposed to sale, any such Lecture or Lectures, shall forfeit such printed or otherwise copied Lecture or Lectures, or Parts thereof, together with One Penny for every Sheet thereof which shall be found in his Custody, either printed, lithographed, or copied, or printing, lithographing, or copying, published or exposed to sale, contrary to the true Intent and Meaning of this Act, the one Moiety thereof to His Majesty, and the other Moiety thereof to any Person who shall sue for the same, to be recovered in any of His Majesty's Courts of Record in Westminster, _by Action of Debt, Bill, Plaint, or Information, in which no Wager of Law, Essoign, Privilege, or Protection, or more than One Imparlance, shall be allowed_.[1688]
[Sidenote: Penalty on Printers or Publishers of Newspapers publishing Lectures without Leave.]
II. Any Printer or Publisher of any Newspaper who shall, without such Leave as aforesaid, print and publish in such Newspaper any Lecture or Lectures, shall be deemed and taken to be a Person printing and publishing without Leave within the Provisions of this Act, and liable to the aforesaid Forfeitures and Penalties in respect of such printing and publishing.
[Sidenote: Persons having Leave to attend Lectures not on that Account licensed to publish them.]
III. No Person allowed for certain Fee and Reward, or otherwise, to attend and be present at any Lecture delivered in any Place, shall be deemed and taken to be licensed or to have Leave to print, copy, and publish such Lectures only because of having Leave to attend such Lecture or Lectures.
[Sidenote: Act not to prohibit the publishing of Lectures after Expiration of the Copyright.]
[Sidenote: 8 Anne, c. 19.]
[Sidenote: 54 G. 3 c. 156.]
IV. Provided always, That nothing in this Act shall extend to prohibit any Person from printing, copying, and publishing any Lecture or Lectures which have or shall have been printed and published with Leave of the Authors thereof or their Assignees, and whereof the Time hath or shall have expired within which the sole Right to print and publish the same is given by an Act passed in the Eighth Year of the Reign of Queen Anne, intituled An Act for the Encouragement of Learning, by vesting the Copies of printed Books in the Authors or Purchasers of such Copies during the Times therein mentioned, and by another Act passed in the Fifty-fourth Year of the Reign of King George the Third, intituled An Act to amend the several Acts for the Encouragement of Learning, by securing the Copies and Copyright of printed Books to the Authors of such Books, or their Assigns, or to any Lectures which have been printed or published before the passing of this Act.
[Sidenote: Act not to extend to Lectures delivered in unlicensed Places, &c.]
V. Provided further, That nothing in this Act shall extend to any Lecture or Lectures, or the printing, copying, or publishing any Lecture or Lectures, or Parts thereof, of the delivering of which Notice in Writing shall not have been given to Two Justices living within Five Miles from the Place where such Lecture or Lectures shall be delivered Two Days at the least before delivering the same, or to any Lecture or Lectures delivered in any University or public School or College, or on any public Foundation, or by any individual in virtue of or according to any Gift, Endowment, or Foundation; and that the Law relating thereto shall remain the same as if this Act had not been passed.
THE PRINTS AND ENGRAVINGS COPYRIGHT ACT, 1836.
6 & 7 WILL. IV. c. 59.
An Act to extend the Protection of Copyright in Prints and Engravings to Ireland.
[13th August 1836.]
[Sidenote: 17 G. 3 c. 57.]
[Sidenote: Provisions of Recited Act extended to Ireland.]
I. WHEREAS an Act was passed (17 G. III. c. 57): And whereas it is desirable to extend the Provisions of the said Act to Ireland: Be it therefore enacted, That from and after the Passing of this Act all the Provisions contained in the said recited Act and of all other Acts therein recited, shall be and the same are hereby extended to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
[Sidenote: Penalty on engraving or publishing any Print without Consent of Proprietor.]
II. From and after the Passing of this Act, if any Engraver, Etcher, Printseller, or other Person shall, within the Time limited by the aforesaid recited Acts, engrave, etch, or publish, or cause to be engraved, etched, or published, any Engraving or Print of any Description whatever, either in whole or in part, which may have been or which shall hereafter be published in any Part of Great Britain or Ireland without the express Consent of the Proprietor or Proprietors thereof first had and obtained in Writing, signed by him, her, or them respectively, with his, her, or their own Hand or Hands in the Presence of and attested by Two or more credible Witnesses, then every such Proprietor shall and may, by and in a separate Action upon the Case, to be brought against the Person so offending in any Court of Law in Great Britain or Ireland, recover such Damages as a Jury on the Trial of such Action or on the execution of a Writ of Inquiry thereon shall give or assess, _together with Double Costs of Suit_.[1689]
THE COPYRIGHT ACT, 1836.
6 & 7 WILL. IV. C. 110.
An Act to repeal so much of 54 Geo. III. c. 156 as requires the delivery of a Copy of every published Book to the Libraries of Sion College, the Four Universities of Scotland and of the King's Inns in Dublin.
[20th August 1836.]
I. [Clause repealing 54 Geo. III. c. 156 in so far as it requires the delivery of books to the above libraries: Repealed Stat. Law Rev. Act, 1874.]
II. It shall be lawful for the Treasury from time to time to issue and pay out of the consolidated fund of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland to the person or persons or body politic or corporate, proprietors or managers of each of the aforesaid libraries, such an annual sum as may be equal in value to and compensation for the loss which any such library may sustain by reason of the said Act being repealed so far as relates to such library; such annual compensation to be ascertained and determined according to the value of the books which may have been actually received by each such library in such manner as the Treasury shall direct upon an average of the three years ending June 30, 1836.
III. The person or persons or body politic or corporate, proprietors or managers of the library for the use whereof any such book would have been delivered, shall and they are hereby required to apply the annual compensation hereby authorised to be made in the purchase of books of literature, science and the arts, for the use of and to be kept and preserved in such library. Provided always that it shall not be lawful for the Treasury to direct the issue of any sum of money for such annual compensation until sufficient proof shall have been adduced before them of the application of the money last issued to the purpose aforesaid.
THE COPYRIGHT ACT, 1842.
5 & 6 VICT. C. 45.
An Act to amend the Law of Copyright. [1st July 1842.]
I. _Whereas it is expedient to amend the Law relating to Copyright, and to afford greater Encouragement to the Production of literary Works of lasting Benefit to the World[1690]: Be it enacted, That from the passing of this Act an Act passed in the Eighth Year of the Reign of Her Majesty Queen Anne, intituled An Act for the Encouragement of Learning, by vesting the Copies of Printed Books in the Authors or Purchasers of such Copies during the Times therein mentioned; and also an Act passed in the Forty-first Year of the Reign of His Majesty King George the Third, intituled An Act for the further Encouragement of Learning in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, by securing the Copies and Copyright of Printed Books to the Authors of such Books, or their Assigns, for the Time therein mentioned; and also an Act passed in the Fifty-fourth Year of the Reign of His Majesty King George the Third, intituled An Act to amend the several Acts for the Encouragement of Learning, by securing the Copies and Copyright of printed Books to the Authors of such Books, or their Assigns, be and the same are hereby repealed, except so far as the Continuance of either of them may be necessary for carrying on or giving effect to any Proceedings at Lain or in Equity pending at the Time of passing this Act, or for enforcing any Cause of Action or Suit, or any Right or Contract, then subsisting._[1691]
[Sidenote: Repeal of former Acts;]
[Sidenote: 8 Anne, c. 19.]
[Sidenote: 41 G. 3 c. 107.]
[Sidenote: 54 G. 3 c. 156.]
[Sidenote: Interpretation of Act.]
II. In the Construction of this Act the Word "Book"[1692] shall be construed to mean and include every volume, Part or Division of a Volume, Pamphlet, Sheet of Letterpress, Sheet of Music, Map,[1693] Chart, or Plan separately published[1694]; the Words "Dramatic Piece"[1695] shall be construed to mean and include every Tragedy, Comedy, Play, Opera, Farce, or other scenic, musical, or dramatic Entertainment; the Word "Copyright" shall be construed to mean the sole and exclusive Liberty of printing or otherwise multiplying Copies of any Subject to which the said Word is herein applied; the Words "personal Representative" shall be construed to mean and include every Executor, Administrator, and next of Kin entitled to Administration; the Word "Assigns" shall be construed to mean and include every Person in whom the Interest of an Author in Copyright shall be vested, whether derived from such Author before or after the Publication of any Book, and whether acquired by Sale, Gift, Bequest, or by Operation of Law, or otherwise[1696]; the Words "British Dominions" shall be construed to mean and include all Parts of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the Islands of Jersey and Guernsey, all Parts of the East and West Indies, and all the Colonies, Settlements, and Possessions of the Crown which now are or hereafter may be acquired; and whenever in this Act, in describing any Person, Matter, or Thing, the Word importing the Singular Number or the Masculine Gender only is used, the same shall be understood to include and to be applied to several Persons as well as one Person, and Females as well as Males, and several Matters or Things as well as one Matter or Thing, respectively, unless there shall be something in the Subject or Context repugnant to such Construction.
[Sidenote: Endurance of Term of Copyright in any Book hereafter to be published in the Lifetime of the Author;]
[Sidenote: if published after the Author's Death.]
III. The Copyright in every Book which shall after the passing of this Act be published[1697] in the Lifetime of its Author[1698] shall endure for the natural Life of such Author, and for the further Term of Seven Years, commencing at the Time of his Death, and shall be the Property of such Author and his Assigns: Provided always, that if the said Term of Seven Years shall expire before the End of Forty-two Years from the first Publication of such Book, the Copyright shall in that Case endure for such Period of Forty-two Years; and the Copyright in every Book which shall be published after the Death of its Author shall endure for the Term of Forty-two Years from the first Publication thereof, and shall be the Property of the Proprietor of the Author's Manuscript from which such Book shall be first published, and his Assigns.
[Sidenote: In cases of subsisting Copyright, the Term to be extended, except when it shall belong to an Assignee for other Consideration than natural Love and Affection; in which Case it shall cease at the Expiration of the present Term, unless its Extension be agreed to between the Proprietor and the Author.]
IV. _And whereas it is just to extend the Benefits of this Act to Authors of Books published before the passing thereof, and in which Copyright still subsists_,[1699] the Copyright which at the Time of passing this Act shall subsist in any Book theretofore published (except as hereinafter mentioned) shall be extended and endure for the full Term provided by this Act in Cases of Books thereafter published, and shall be the Property of the Person who at the Time of passing of this Act shall be the Proprietor of such Copyright: Provided always, that in all Cases in which such Copyright shall belong in whole or in part to a Publisher or other Person who shall have acquired it for other Consideration than that of natural Love and Affection, such Copyright shall not be extended by this Act, but shall endure for the Term which shall subsist therein at the Time of passing of this Act, and no longer unless the Author of such Book, if he shall be living, or the personal Representative of such Author, if he shall be dead, and the Proprietor of such Copyright shall, before the Expiration of such term, consent and agree to accept the Benefits of this Act in respect of such Book, and shall cause a Minute of such Consent in the Form in that Behalf given in the Schedule to this Act annexed to be entered in the Book of Registry hereinafter directed to be kept, in which Case such Copyright shall endure for the full Term by this Act provided in Cases of Books to be published after the passing of this Act, and shall be the Property of such Person or Persons as in such Minute shall be expressed.
[Sidenote: Judicial Committee of the Privy Council may license the Republication of Books which the Proprietor refuses to republish after Death of the Author.]
V.[1700] _And whereas it is expedient to provide against the Suppression of Books of Importance to the Public_,[1701] it shall be lawful for the Judicial Committee of Her Majesty's Privy Council, on Complaint made to them that the Proprietor of the Copyright in any Book after the Death of its Author has refused to republish or to allow the Republication of the same, and that by reason of such Refusal such Book may be withheld from the Public, to grant a Licence to such Complainant to publish such Book in such Manner and subject to such Conditions as they may think fit, and it shall be lawful for such Complainant to publish such Book according to such Licence.
[Sidenote: Copies of Books published after the passing of this Act, and of all subsequent Editions, to be delivered within certain Times at the British Museum.]
VI.[1702] A printed Copy of the whole of every Book which shall be published after the passing of this Act, together with all Maps, Prints, or other Engravings belonging thereto, finished and coloured in the same Manner as the best Copies of the same shall be published, and also of any second or subsequent Edition which shall be so published with any Additions or Alterations, whether the same shall be in Letterpress, or in the Maps, Prints, or other Engravings belonging thereto, and whether the first Edition of such Book shall have been published before or after the passing of this Act, and also of any second or subsequent Edition of every Book of which the first or some preceding Edition shall not have been delivered for the Use of the British Museum, bound, sewed, or stitched together, and upon the best Paper on which the same shall be printed, shall, within One Calendar Month after the Day on which any such Book shall first be sold, published, or offered for Sale within the Bills of Mortality, or within Three Calendar Months if the same shall first be sold, published, or offered for Sale in any other Part of the United Kingdom, or within Twelve Calendar Months after the same shall first be sold, published, or offered for Sale in any other Part of the British Dominions, be delivered, on behalf of the Publisher thereof, at the British Museum.
[Sidenote: Mode of delivering at the British Museum.]
VII. Every Copy of any Book which under the Provisions of this Act ought to be delivered as aforesaid shall be delivered at the British Museum between the Hours of Ten in the Forenoon and Four in the Afternoon on any Day except Sunday, Ash Wednesday, Good Friday, and Christmas Day, to one of the Officers of the said Museum, or to some Person authorised by the Trustees of the said Museum to receive the same, and such Officer or other Person receiving such Copy is hereby required to give a Receipt in Writing for the same, and such Delivery shall to all Intents and Purposes be deemed to be good and sufficient Delivery under the Provisions of this Act.
[Sidenote: A Copy of every Book to be delivered within a Month after Demand to the Officer of the Stationers Company, for the following Libraries: the Bodleian at Oxford, the Public Library at Cambridge, the Faculty of Advocates at Edinburgh, and that of Trinity College, Dublin.]
VIII.[1703] A Copy of the whole of every Book, and of any second or subsequent Edition of every Book containing Additions and Alterations, together with all Maps and Prints belonging thereto, which after the passing of this Act shall be published, shall, on Demand thereof in Writing, left at the Place of Abode of the Publisher thereof at any Time within Twelve Months next after the Publication thereof, under the Hand of the Officer of the Company of Stationers who shall from Time to Time be appointed by the said Company for the Purposes of this Act, or under the Hand of any other Person thereto authorised by the Persons or Bodies Politic and Corporate, Proprietors and Managers of the Libraries following, (_videlicet_), the Bodleian Library at Oxford, the Public Library at Cambridge, the Library of the Faculty of Advocates at Edinburgh, the Library of the College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity of Queen Elizabeth near Dublin, be delivered, upon the Paper of which the largest Number of Copies of such Book or Edition shall be printed for Sale, in the like Condition as the Copies prepared for Sale by the Publisher thereof respectively, within One Month after Demand made thereof in Writing as aforesaid, to the said Officer of the said Company of Stationers for the Time being, which Copies the said Officer shall and he is hereby required to receive at the Hall of the said Company, for the Use of the Library for which such Demand shall be made within such Twelve Months as aforesaid; and the said Officer is hereby required to give a Receipt in Writing for the same, and within One Month after any such Book shall be so delivered to him as aforesaid to deliver the same for the Use of such Library.
[Sidenote: Publishers may deliver the Copies to the Libraries, instead of at the Stationers' Company.]
IX. Provided also, That if any Publisher shall be desirous of delivering the Copy of such Book as shall be demanded on behalf of any of the said Libraries at such Library, it shall be lawful for him to deliver the same at such Library, free of Expense, to such Librarian or other Person authorised to receive the same (who is hereby required in such Case to receive and give a Receipt in Writing for the same), and such Delivery shall to all Intents and Purposes of this Act be held as equivalent to a Delivery to the said Officer of the Stationers' Company.
[Sidenote: Penalty for Default in delivering Copies for the Use of the Libraries.]
X. If any Publisher of any such Book, or of any second or subsequent Edition of any such Book, shall neglect to deliver the same, pursuant to this Act, he shall for every such Default forfeit, besides the Value of such Copy of such Book or Edition which he ought to have delivered, a Sum not exceeding Five Pounds, to be recovered by the Librarian or other Officer (properly authorised) of the Library for the Use whereof such Copy should have been delivered, in a summary Way, on Conviction before Two Justices of the Peace for the County or Place where the Publisher making default shall reside, or by Action of Debt or other Proceeding of the like Nature, at the Suit of such Librarian or other Officer, in any Court of Record in the United Kingdom, in which Action, if the Plaintiff shall obtain a Verdict, he shall recover his Costs reasonably incurred, to be taxed as between Attorney and Client.
[Sidenote: Book of Registry to be kept at Stationers' Hall.]
XI.[1704] A Book of Registry, wherein may be registered, as hereinafter enacted, the Proprietorship in the Copyright of Books, and Assignments thereof, and in Dramatic and Musical Pieces, whether in Manuscript or otherwise, and Licences affecting such Copyright, shall be kept at the Hall of the Stationers' Company, by the Officer appointed by the said Company for the Purposes of this Act, and shall at all convenient Times be open to the Inspection of any Person, on Payment of One Shilling for every Entry which shall be searched for or inspected in the said Book; and that such Officer shall, whenever thereunto reasonably required, give a Copy of any Entry in such Book, certified under his Hand, and impressed with the Stamp of the said Company, to be provided by them for that Purpose, and which they are hereby required to provide, to any Person requiring the same, on Payment to him of the Sum of Five Shillings; and such Copies so certified and impressed shall be received in Evidence in all Courts, and in all summary Proceedings, and shall be _primâ facie_ Proof[1705] of the Proprietorship or Assignment of Copyright or Licence as therein expressed, but subject to be rebutted by other Evidence, and in the Case of Dramatic or Musical Pieces shall be _primâ facie_ Proof of the Right of Representation or Performance, subject to be rebutted as aforesaid.
[Sidenote: Making a false Entry in the Book of Registry a Misdemeanour.]
XII. If any Person shall wilfully make or cause to be made any false Entry in the Registry Book of the Stationers' Company, or shall wilfully produce or cause to be tendered in Evidence any Paper falsely purporting to be a Copy of any Entry in the said Book, he shall be guilty of an indictable Misdemeanour, and shall be punished accordingly.
[Sidenote: Entries of Copyright may be made in the Book of Registry.]
XIII.[1706] It shall be lawful for the Proprietor of Copyright in any Book heretofore published, or in any Book hereafter to be published, to make Entry in the Registry Book of the Stationers' Company of the Title of such Book, the Time of the first Publication thereof, the Name and Place of Abode of the Publisher thereof, and the Name and Place of Abode of the Proprietor of the Copyright of the said Book, or of any Portion of such Copyright, in the Form in that Behalf given in the Schedule to this Act annexed, upon Payment of the Sum of Five Shillings to the Officer of the said Company; and it shall be lawful for every such registered Proprietor to assign his Interest,[1707] or any Portion of his Interest therein, by making Entry in the said Book of Registry of such Assignment, and of the Name and Place of Abode of the Assignee thereof, in the Form given in that Behalf in the said Schedule, on Payment of the like Sum; and such Assignment so entered shall be effectual in Law to all Intents and Purposes whatsoever, without being subject to any Stamp or Duty, and shall be of the same Force and Effect as if such Assignment had been made by Deed.
[Sidenote: Persons aggrieved by any Entry in the Book of Registry may apply to a Court of Law in Term, or Judge in Vacation, who may order such Entry to be varied or expunged.]
XIV.[1708] If any Person shall deem himself aggrieved by any Entry made under colour of this Act in the said Book of Registry, it shall be lawful for such Person to apply by Motion to the Court of Queen's Bench, _Court of Common Pleas, or Court of Exchequer, in Term Time, or to apply by Summons to any Judge of either of such Courts in Vacation_,[1709] for an Order that such Entry may be expunged or varied; and upon any such Application _by Motion or Summons to either of the said Courts, or to a Judge as aforesaid_,[1710] such Court _or Judge_[1711] shall make such Order for expunging, varying, or confirming such Entry, either with or without Costs, as to such Court _or Judge_[1712] shall seem just; and the Officer appointed by the Stationers Company for the Purposes of this Act shall, on the Production to him of any such Order for expunging or varying any such Entry, expunge or vary the same according to the Requisitions of such Order.
[Sidenote: Remedy for the Piracy of Books by Action on the Case.]
XV. If any Person shall, in any Part of the British Dominions, print or cause to be printed,[1713] either for Sale or Exportation, any Book in which there shall be subsisting Copyright, without the Consent in Writing[1714] of the Proprietor thereof, or shall import for Sale or Hire any such Book so having been unlawfully printed from Parts beyond the Sea, or, knowing such Book to have been so unlawfully printed or imported, shall sell, publish, or expose to Sale or Hire, or cause to be sold, published, or exposed to Sale or Hire, or shall have in his Possession, for Sale or Hire, any such Book so unlawfully printed or imported, without such Consent as aforesaid, such Offender shall be liable to a special Action on the Case at the Suit of the Proprietor of such Copyright, to be brought in any Court of Record in that Part of the British Dominions in which the Offence shall be committed: Provided always, that in Scotland such Offender shall be liable to an
## Action in the Court of Session in Scotland, which shall and may be
brought and prosecuted in the same Manner in which any other Action of Damages to the like Amount may be brought and prosecuted there.
[Sidenote: In Actions for Piracy the Defendant to give Notice of the Objections to the Plaintiff's Title on which he means to rely.]
XVI. In any Action brought within the British Dominions against any Person for printing any such Book for Sale, Hire, or Exportation, or for importing, selling, publishing, or exposing to Sale or Hire, or causing to be imported, sold, published, or exposed to Sale or Hire, any such Book, the Defendant, on pleading thereto, shall give to the Plaintiff a Notice in Writing of any Objections on which he means to rely on the Trial of such Action[1715]; and if the Nature of his Defence be, that the Plaintiff in such Action was not the Author or first Publisher of the Book in which he shall by such Action claim Copyright, or is not the Proprietor of the Copyright therein, or that some other Person than the Plaintiff was the Author or first Publisher of such Book, or is the Proprietor of the Copyright therein, then the Defendant shall specify in such Notice the Name of the Person who he alleges to have been the Author or first Publisher of such Book, or the Proprietor of the Copyright therein, together with the Title of such Book, and the Time when and the Place where such Book was first published, otherwise the Defendant in such Action shall not at the Trial or Hearing of such Action be allowed to give any Evidence that the Plaintiff in such Action was not the Author or first Publisher of the Book in which he claims such Copyright as aforesaid, or that he was not the Proprietor of the Copyright therein; and at such Trial or Hearing no other Objection shall be allowed to be made on behalf of such Defendant than the Objections stated in such Notice, or that any other Person was the Author or first Publisher of such Book, or the Proprietor of the Copyright therein, than the Person specified in such Notice, or give in Evidence in support of his Defence any other Book than one substantially corresponding in Title, Time, and Place of Publication with the Title, Time, and Place specified in such Notice.
[Sidenote: No Person, except the Proprietor, &c., shall import into the British Dominions for Sale or Hire any Book first composed, &c., within the United Kingdom, and reprinted elsewhere, under Penalty of Forfeiture thereof, and also of £10 and Double the Value.]
[Sidenote: Books may be seized by Officers of Customs or Excise.]
XVII.[1716] It shall not be lawful for any Person, not being the Proprietor of the Copyright, or some Person authorised by him, to import into any Part of the United Kingdom, or into any other Part of the British Dominions, for Sale or Hire, any printed Book first composed or written or printed and published in any Part of the said United Kingdom, wherein there shall be Copyright, and reprinted in any Country or Place whatsoever out of the British Dominions; and if any Person, not being such Proprietor or Person authorised as aforesaid, shall import or bring, or cause to be imported or brought, for Sale or Hire, any such printed Book, into any Part of the British Dominions, contrary to the true Intent and Meaning of this Act, or shall knowingly sell, publish, or expose to Sale or let to Hire, or have in his Possession for Sale or Hire, any such Book, then every such Book shall be forfeited, and shall be seized by any Officer of Customs or Excise, and the same shall be destroyed by such Officer, and every Person so offending, being duly convicted thereof before Two Justices of the Peace for the County or Place in which such Book shall be found, shall also for every such Offence[1717] forfeit the Sum of Ten Pounds, and Double the Value of every Copy of such Book which he shall so import or cause to be imported into any Part of the British Dominions, or shall knowingly sell, publish, or expose to Sale or let to Hire, or shall cause to be sold, published, or exposed to Sale or let to Hire, or shall have in his Possession for Sale or Hire, contrary to the true Intent and Meaning of this Act, Five Pounds to the Use of such Officer of Customs or Excise, and the Remainder of the Penalty to the Use of the Proprietor of the Copyright in such Book.
[Sidenote: As to the Copyright in Encyclopædias, Periodicals, and Works published in a Series, Reviews, or Magazines.]
[Sidenote: Proviso for Authors who have reserved the Right of publishing their Articles in a separate Form.]
XVIII.[1718] When any Publisher or other Person shall, before or at the Time of the passing of this Act, have projected, conducted, and carried on, or shall hereafter project, conduct, and carry on, or be the Proprietor of any Encyclopædia, Review, Magazine, Periodical Work, or Work published in a Series of Books or Parts, or any Book whatsoever,[1719] and shall have employed or shall employ any Persons to compose the same, or any Volumes, Parts, Essays, Articles, or Portions thereof, for Publication in or as Part of the same, and such Work, Volumes, Parts, Essays, Articles, or Portions shall have been or shall hereafter be composed under such Employment,[1720] on the Terms[1721] that the Copyright therein shall belong to such Proprietor,[1722] Projector, Publisher, or Conductor, and paid[1723] for by such Proprietor, Projector, Publisher, or Conductor, the Copyright in every such Encyclopædia, Review, Magazine, Periodical Work, and Work published in a Series of Books or Parts, and in every Volume, Part, Essay, Article, and Portion so composed and paid for, shall be the Property of such Proprietor, Projector, Publisher, or other Conductor, who shall enjoy the same Rights as if he were the actual Author thereof, and shall have such Term of Copyright therein as is given to the Authors of Books by this Act; except only that in the Case of Essays, Articles, or Portions forming Part of and first published in Reviews, Magazines, or other Periodical Works of a like Nature, after the Term of Twenty-eight Years from the first Publication thereof respectively the Right of publishing the same in a separate Form[1724] shall revert to the Author for the Remainder of the Term given by this Act: Provided always, that during the Term of Twenty-eight Years the said Proprietor, Projector, Publisher, or Conductor shall not publish any such Essay, Article, or Portion separately or singly without the Consent previously obtained of the Author thereof, or his Assigns: Provided also, that nothing herein contained shall alter or affect the Right of any Person who shall have been or who shall be so employed as aforesaid to publish any such his Composition in a separate Form, who by any Contract, express or implied, may have reserved or may hereafter reserve to himself such Right; but every Author reserving, retaining, or having such Right shall be entitled to the Copyright in such Composition when published in a separate Form, according to this Act, without Prejudice to the Right of such Proprietor, Projector, Publisher, or Conductor as aforesaid.
[Sidenote: Proprietors of Encyclopædias, Periodicals, and Works published in a Series, may enter at once at Stationers' Hall, and thereon have the Benefit of the Registration of the Whole.]
XIX.[1725] The Proprietor of the Copyright in any Encyclopædia, Review, Magazine, Periodical Work, or other Work published in a Series of Books or Parts, shall be entitled to all the Benefits of the Registration at Stationers' Hall under this Act, on entering in the said Book of Registry the Title of such Encyclopædia, Review, Periodical Work, or other Work published in a Series of Books or Parts, the Time of the first Publication of the First Volume, Number, or Part thereof, or of the First Number or Volume first published after the passing of this Act in any such Work which shall have been published heretofore, and the Name and Place of Abode of the Proprietor thereof, and of the Publisher thereof, when such Publisher shall not also be the Proprietor thereof.
[Sidenote: The Provisions of 3 & 4 W 4. c. 15, extended to Musical Compositions, and the Term of Copyright, as provided by this Act, applied to the Liberty of representing Dramatic Pieces and Musical Compositions.]
XX. _And whereas an Act was passed in the Third Year of the Reign of His late Majesty, to amend the Law relating to Dramatic Literary Property, and it is expedient to extend the Term of the sole Liberty of representing Dramatic Pieces given by that Act to the full Time by this Act provided for the Continuance of Copyright: And whereas it is expedient to extend to Musical Compositions the Benefits of that Act, and also of this Act_;[1726] the Provisions of the said Act of His late Majesty, and of this Act, shall apply to Musical Compositions,[1727] and the sole Liberty of representing or performing, or causing or permitting to be represented or performed, any Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition, shall endure and be the Property of the Author thereof, and his Assigns,[1728] for the Term in this Act provided for the Duration of Copyright in Books; and the Provisions hereinbefore enacted in respect of the Property of such Copyright, and of registering[1729] the same, shall apply to the Liberty of representing or performing any Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition, as if the same were herein expressly re-enacted and applied thereto, save and except that the first public Representation or Performance of any Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition shall be deemed equivalent, in the Construction of this Act, to the first Publication of any Book: Provided always, that in case of any Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition in Manuscript, it shall be sufficient for the Person having the sole Liberty of representing or performing, or causing to be represented or performed the same, to register only the Title thereof, the Name and Place of Abode of the Author or Composer thereof, the Name and Place of Abode of the Proprietor thereof, and the Time and Place of its first Representation or Performance.
[Sidenote: Proprietors of Right of Dramatic Representations shall have all the Remedies given by 3 & 4 W. 4 c. 15]
XXI. The Person who shall at any time have the sole Liberty of representing such Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition shall have and enjoy the Remedies given and provided in the said Act of the Third and Fourth Years of the Reign of His late Majesty King William the Fourth, passed to amend the Laws relating to Dramatic Literary Property, during the whole of his Interest therein, as fully as if the same were re-enacted in this Act.
[Sidenote: Assignment of Copyright of a Dramatic Piece not to convey the Right of Representation.]
XXII. No Assignment of the Copyright of any Book consisting of or containing a Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition shall be holden to convey to the Assignee the Right of representing or performing such Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition, unless an Entry in the said Registry Book shall be made of such Assignment,[1730] wherein shall be expressed the Intention of the Parties that such Right should pass by such Assignment.
[Sidenote: Books pirated shall become the Property of the Proprietor of the Copyright, and may be Recovered by Action.]
XXIII.[1731] All Copies of any Book wherein there shall be Copyright, and of which Entry shall have been made in the said Registry Book, and which shall have been unlawfully printed or imported without the Consent of the registered Proprietor of such Copyright, in Writing under his Hand first obtained, shall be deemed to be the Property of the Proprietor of such Copyright, and who shall be registered as such, and such registered Proprietor shall, after Demand thereof in Writing, be entitled to sue for and recover the same, or Damages for the Detention thereof, in an Action of Detinue, from any Party who shall detain the same, or to sue for and recover Damages for the Conversion thereof in an Action of Trover.
[Sidenote: No Proprietor of Copyright commencing after this Act shall sue or proceed for any Infringement before making Entry in the Book of Registry.]
[Sidenote: Proviso for Dramatic Pieces.]
XXIV.[1732] No Proprietor of Copyright in any Book which shall be first published after the passing of this Act shall maintain any
## Action or Suit, at Law or in Equity, or any summary Proceeding, in
respect of any Infringement of such Copyright, unless he shall, before commencing such Action, Suit, or Proceeding, have caused an Entry to be made, in the Book of Registry of the Stationers' Company, of such Book, pursuant to this Act: Provided always, that the Omission to make such Entry shall not affect the Copyright in any Book, but only the Right to sue or proceed in respect of the Infringement thereof as aforesaid: Provided also, that nothing herein contained shall prejudice the Remedies which the Proprietor of the sole Liberty of representing any Dramatic Piece shall have by virtue of the Act passed in the Third Year of the Reign of His late Majesty King William the Fourth, to amend the Laws relating to Dramatic Literary Property, or of this Act, although no Entry shall be made in the Book of Registry aforesaid.[1733]
[Sidenote: Copyright shall be Personal Property.]
XXV. All Copyright shall be deemed Personal Property, and shall be transmissible by Bequest, or, in case of Intestacy, shall be subject to the same Law of Distribution as other Personal Property, and in Scotland shall be deemed to be Personal and Movable Estate.
[Sidenote: General Issue.]
[Sidenote: Limitation of Actions;]
[Sidenote: not to extend to Actions, &c., in respect of the Delivery of Books.]
XXVI. _If any Action or Suit shall be commenced or brought against any Person or Persons whomsoever for doing or causing to be done anything in pursuance of this Act, the Defendant or Defendants in such Action may plead the General Issue, and give the special Matter in Evidence; and if upon such Action a Verdict shall be given for the Defendant, or the Plaintiff shall become nonsuited, or discontinue his Action, then the Defendant shall have and recover his full Costs, for which he shall have the same Remedy as a Defendant in any Case by Law hath_;[1734] and all Actions, Suits, Bills, Indictments, or Informations for any Offence that shall be committed against this Act shall be brought, sued, and commenced within Twelve Calendar Months[1735] next after such Offence committed, or else the same shall be void and of none effect; provided that such Limitation of Time shall not extend or be construed to extend to any Actions, Suits, or other Proceedings which under the Authority of this Act shall or may be brought, sued, or commenced for or in respect of any Copies of Books to be delivered for the Use of the British Museum, or of any One of the Four Libraries hereinbefore mentioned.
[Sidenote: Saving the Rights of the Universities, and the Colleges of Eton, Westminster, and Winchester.]
XXVII. Provided always, That nothing in this Act contained shall affect or alter the Rights of the Two Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, the Colleges or Houses of Learning within the same, the Four Universities in Scotland, the College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity of Queen Elizabeth near Dublin, and the several Colleges of Eton, Westminster, and Winchester, in any Copyrights heretofore and now vested or hereafter to be vested in such Universities and Colleges respectively, anything to the contrary herein contained notwithstanding.
[Sidenote: Saving all subsisting Rights, Contracts, and Engagements.]
XXVIII. Provided also, That nothing in this Act contained shall affect, alter, or vary any Right subsisting at the Time of passing of this Act, except as herein expressly enacted; and all Contracts, Agreements, and Obligations made and entered into before the passing of this Act, and all Remedies relating thereto, shall remain in full force, any thing herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding.
[Sidenote: Extent of the Act.]
XXIX. This Act shall extend to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and to every Part of the British Dominions.
[Sidenote: Act may be amended this Session.]
XXX. _This Act may be amended or repealed by any Act to be passed in the present Session of Parliament._[1736]
SCHEDULE TO WHICH THE PRECEDING ACT REFERS.
No. 1.
FORM of MINUTE of CONSENT to be entered at Stationers' Hall.
WE, the undersigned, _A. B._ of ---- the Author of a certain Book, intituled _Y. Z._ [_or_ the personal Representative of the Author, _as the Case may be_], and _C. D._ of ---- do hereby certify, That we have consented and agreed to accept the Benefits of the Act passed in the Fifth Year of the Reign of Her Majesty Queen Victoria, Cap. ----, for the Extension of the Term of Copyright therein provided by the said Act, and hereby declare that such extended Term of Copyright therein is the Property of the said _A. B._ or _C. D._
Dated this ---- Day of ---- 18--.
(Signed) _A. B._ Witness _C. D._
To the Registering Officer appointed by the Stationers' Company.
No. 2.
FORM of REQUIRING ENTRY of PROPRIETORSHIP.
I _A. B._ of ---- do hereby certify, That I am the Proprietor of the Copyright of a Book, intituled _Y. Z._, and I hereby require you to make Entry in the Register Book of the Stationers' Company of my Proprietorship of such Copyright, according to the Particulars underwritten.
-------+-----------------------+-------------------+-------------- Title | Name of Publisher, | Name and Place | Date of First of | and | of Abode of | Publication. Book. | Place of Publication. | the Proprietor | | | of the Copyright | -------+-----------------------+-------------------+-------------- _Y. Z._| | _A. B._ | -------+-----------------------+-------------------+--------------
Dated this ---- Day of ---- 18--.
Witness, _C. D._ ---- (Signed) _A. B._
NO. 3.
ORIGINAL ENTRY of PROPRIETORSHIP of COPYRIGHT of a BOOK.
--------+----------+----------------+-----------------+-------------- Time of | Title of | Name of the | Name and Place | Date of First making | Book. | Publisher, and | of Abode of the | Publication. the | | Place of | Proprietor of | Entry. | | Publication. | the Copyright. | --------+----------+----------------+-----------------+-------------- |_Y. Z._ | _A. B._ | _C. D._ | --------+----------+----------------+-----------------+--------------
NO. 4.
FORM of CONCURRENCE of the PARTY assigning in any BOOK previously registered.
I _A. B._ of ---- being the Assigner of the Copyright of the Book hereunder described, do hereby require you to make Entry of the Assignment of the Copyright therein.
---------------+----------------------------+----------------------- Title of Book. | Assigner of the Copyright. | Assignee of Copyright. ---------------+----------------------------+----------------------- _Y. Z._ | _A. B._ | _C. D._ ---------------+----------------------------+-----------------------
Dated this ---- Day of ---- 18--.
(Signed) _A. B._
No. 5.
Date of Entry. Title of Book. Assigner of the Assignee of Copyright. Copyright.
[_Set out the Title of the Book, and refer to the Page of the Registry Book in _A. B._ _C. D._ which the original Entry of the Copyright thereof is made._]
THE INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT ACT, 1844.
7 & 8 VICT. C. 12.
An Act to amend the Law relating to International Copyright.
[10th May 1844.]
[Sidenote: 1 & 2 Vict. c. 59.]
[Sidenote: 3 & 4 W. 4. c. 15]
[Sidenote: 5 & 6 Vict. c. 45.]
[Sidenote: 8 G. 2c. 13.]
[Sidenote: 7 G. 3c. 38.]
[Sidenote: 17 G. 3 c. 57.]
[Sidenote: 6 & 7 W. 4 c. 59.]
[Sidenote: 38 G. 3 c. 71.]
[Sidenote: 54 G. 3 c. 56.]
[Sidenote: Repeal of International Copyright Act.]
I. _Whereas by an Act passed in the Session of Parliament held in the First and Second Years of the Reign of Her present Majesty, intituled An Act for securing to Authors in certain Cases the Benefit of international Copyright (and which Act is hereinafter, for the sake of Perspicuity, designated as "the International Copyright Act"), Her Majesty was empowered by Order in Council to direct that the Authors of Books which should after a future Time, to be specified in such Order in Council, be published in any Foreign Country, to be specified in such Order in Council, and their Executors, Administrators, and Assigns, should have the sole Liberty of printing and reprinting such Books within the British Dominions for such Term as Her Majesty should by such Order in Council direct, not exceeding the Term which Authors, being British Subjects, were then, (that is to say) at the Time of passing the said Act, entitled to in respect of Books first published in the United Kingdom; and the said Act contains divers Enactments securing to Authors and their Representatives the Copyright in the Books to which any such Order in Council should extend: And whereas an Act was passed in the Session of Parliament held in the Fifth and Sixth Years of the Reign of Her present Majesty, intituled An Act to amend the Law of Copyright (and which Act is hereinafter, for the sake of Perspicuity, designated as "the Copyright Amendment Act"), repealing various Acts therein mentioned relating to the Copyright of printed Books, and extending, defining, and securing to Authors and their Representatives the Copyright of Books: And whereas an Act was passed in the Session of Parliament held in the Third and Fourth Years of the Reign of His late Majesty King William the Fourth, intituled An Act to amend the Laws relating to Dramatic Literary Property (and which Act is hereinafter, for the sake of Perspicuity, designated as "the Dramatic Literary Property Act"), whereby the sole Liberty of representing or causing to be represented any Dramatic Piece in any Place of Dramatic Entertainment in any Part of the British Dominions, which should be composed and not printed or published by the Author thereof or his Assignee, was secured to such Author or his Assignee; and by the said Act it was enacted, that the Author of any such Production which should thereafter be printed and published, or his Assignee, should have the like sole Liberty of Representation until the End of Twenty-eight Years from the first Publication thereof: And whereas by the said Copyright Amendment Act the Provisions of the said Dramatic Literary Property Act and of the said Copyright Amendment Act were made applicable to Musical Compositions; and it was thereby also enacted, that the sole Liberty of representing or performing, or causing or permitting to be represented or performed, in any Part of the British Dominions, any Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition, should endure and be the Property of the Author thereof and his Assigns for the Term in the said Copyright Amendment Act provided for the Duration of the Copyright in Books, and that the Provisions therein enacted in respect of the Property of such Copyright should apply to the Liberty of representing or performing any Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition: And whereas under or by virtue of the Four several Acts next hereinafter mentioned; (that is to say,) an Act passed in the Eighth Year of the Reign of His late Majesty King George the Second, intituled An Act for the Encouragement of the Arts of designing, engraving, and etching historical and other Prints, by vesting the Properties thereof in the Inventors or Engravers during the Time therein mentioned; an Act passed in the Seventh Year of His late Majesty King George the Third, intituled An Act to amend and render more effectual an Act made in the Eighth Year of the Reign of King George the Second, for Encouragement of the Arts of designing, engraving, and etching historical and other Prints; and for vesting in and securing to Jane Hogarth, Widow, the Property in certain Prints; an Act passed in the Seventeenth Year of the Reign of His late Majesty King George the Third, intituled An Act for more effectually securing the Property of Prints to Inventors and Engravers, by enabling them to sue for and recover Penalties in certain Cases; and an Act passed in the Session of Parliament held in the Sixth and Seventh Years of the Reign of His late Majesty King William the Fourth, intituled An Act to extend the Protection of Copyright in Prints and Engravings to Ireland; (and which said Four several Acts are hereinafter, for the sake of Perspicuity, designated as the Engraving Copyright Acts;) every Person who invents or designs, engraves, etches, or works in Mezzotinto or Chiaro-oscuro, or from his own Work, Design, or Invention causes or procures to be designed, engraved, etched, or worked in Mezzotinto or Chiaro-oscuro any historical Print or Prints, or any Print or Prints of any Portrait, Conversation, Landscape, or Architecture, Map, Chart, or Plan, or any other Print or Prints whatsoever, and every Person who engraves, etches, or works in Mezzotinto or Chiaro-oscuro, or causes to be engraved, etched, or worked, any Print taken from any Picture, Drawing, Model, or Sculpture, either ancient or modern, notwithstanding such Print shall not have been graven or drawn from the original Design of such Graver, Etcher, or Draftsman, is entitled to the Copyright of such Print for the Term of Twenty-eight Years from the first publishing thereof; and by the said several Engraving Copyright Acts it is provided that the Name of the Proprietor shall be truly engraved on each Plate, and printed on every such Print, and Remedies are provided for the Infringement of such Copyright: And whereas under and by virtue of an Act passed in the Thirty-eighth Year of the Reign of His late Majesty King George the Third, intituled An Act for encouraging the Art of making new Models and Casts of Busts and other Things therein mentioned, and of an Act passed in the Fifty-fourth Year of the Reign of His late Majesty King George the Third, intituled An Act to amend and render more effectual an Act of His present Majesty, for encouraging the Art of making new Models and Casts of Busts and other Things therein mentioned, and for giving further Encouragement to such Arts, (and which said Acts are, for the sake of Perspicuity, hereinafter designated as the Sculpture Copyright Acts,) every Person who makes or causes to be made any new and original Sculpture, or Model or Copy or Cast of the Human Figure, any Bust or Part of the Human Figure clothed in Drapery or otherwise, any Animal or Part of any Animal combined with the Human Figure or otherwise, any Subject, being Matter of Invention in Sculpture, any Alto or Basso-Relievo, representing any of the Matters aforesaid, or any Cast from Nature of the Human Figure or Part thereof, or of any Animal or Part thereof, or of any such Subject representing any of the Matters aforesaid, whether separate or combined, is entitled to the Copyright in such new and original Sculpture, Model, Copy, and Cast, for Fourteen Years from first putting forth and publishing the same, and for an additional Period of Fourteen Years in case the original Maker is living at the End of the first Period; and by the said Acts it is provided that the Name of the Proprietor, with the Date of the Publication thereof, is to be put on all such Sculptures, Models, Copies, and Casts, and Remedies are provided for the Infringement of such Copyright: And whereas the Powers vested in Her Majesty by the said International Copyright Act are insufficient to enable Her Majesty to confer upon Authors of Books first published in Foreign Countries Copyright of the like Duration, and with the like Remedies for the Infringement thereof, which are conferred and provided by the said Copyright Amendment Act with respect to Authors of Books first published in the British Dominions; and the said International Copyright Act does not empower Her Majesty to confer any exclusive Right of representing or performing Dramatic Pieces or Musical Compositions first published in Foreign Countries upon the Authors thereof, nor to extend the Privilege of Copyright to Prints and Sculpture first published abroad; and it is expedient to vest increased Powers in Her Majesty in this respect, and for that Purpose to repeal the said International Copyright Act, and to give such other Powers to Her Majesty, and to make such further Provisions, as are hereinafter contained:[1737] the said recited Act herein designated as the International Copyright Act shall be and the same is hereby repealed._[1738]
[Sidenote: Her Majesty, by Order in Council, may direct that Authors, &c., of Works first published in Foreign Countries shall have Copyright therein within Her Majesty's Dominions.]
II. It shall be lawful for Her Majesty, by any Order of Her Majesty in Council, to direct that, as respects all or any particular Class or Classes of the following Works, (namely,) Books, Prints, Articles of Sculpture, and other Works of Art, to be defined in such Order, which shall after a future Time, to be specified in such Order, be first published in any Foreign Country to be named in such Order, the Authors, Inventors, Designers, Engravers, and Makers thereof respectively, their respective Executors, Administrators, and Assigns, shall have the Privilege of Copyright therein during such Period or respective Periods as shall be defined in such Order, not exceeding, however, as to any of the above-mentioned Works, the Term of Copyright which Authors, Inventors, Designers, Engravers, and Makers of the like Works respectively first published in the United Kingdom may be then entitled to under the hereinbefore recited Acts respectively, or under any Acts which may hereafter be passed in that Behalf.
[Sidenote: If the Order applies to Books, the Copyright Law as to Books first published in this Country shall apply to the Books to which the Order relates, with certain Exceptions.]
III. In case any such Order shall apply to Books, all and singular the Enactments of the said Copyright Amendment Act, and of any other Act for the Time being in force with relation to the Copyright in Books first published in this Country, shall, from and after the Time so to be specified in that Behalf in such Order, and subject to such Limitation as to the Duration of the Copyright as shall be therein contained, apply to and be in force in respect of the Books to which such Order shall extend, and which shall have been registered as hereinafter is provided, in such and the same Manner as if such Books were first published in the United Kingdom, save and except such of the said Enactments, or such Parts thereof, as shall be excepted in such Order, and save and except such of the said Enactments as relate to the Delivery of Copies of Books at the British Museum, and to or for the Use of the other Libraries mentioned in the said Copyright Amendment Act.
[Sidenote: If the Order applies to Prints, Sculptures, &c., the Copyright Law as to Prints or Sculptures first published in this Country shall apply to the Prints, Sculptures, &c., to which such Order relates.]
IV. In case any such Order shall apply to Prints, Articles of Sculpture, or to any such other Works of Art as aforesaid, all and singular the Enactments of the said Engraving Copyright Acts and the said Sculpture Copyright Acts, or of any other Act for the Time being in force with relation to the Copyright in Prints or Articles of Sculpture first published in this Country, and of any Act for the Time being in force with relation to the Copyright in any similar Works of Art first published in this Country, shall, from and after the Time so to be specified in that Behalf in such Order, and subject to such Limitation as to the Duration of the Copyright as shall be therein contained respectively, apply to and be in force in respect of the Prints, Articles of Sculpture, and other Works of Art to which such Order shall extend, and which shall have been registered as hereinafter is provided, in such and the same Manner as if such Articles and other Works of Art were first published in the United Kingdom, save and except such of the said Enactments or such Parts thereof as shall be excepted in such Order.
[Sidenote: Her Majesty may, by Order in Council, direct that Authors and Composers of Dramatic Pieces and Musical Compositions first publicly represented and performed in Foreign Countries shall have similar Rights in the British Dominions.]
V. It shall be lawful for Her Majesty, by any Order of Her Majesty in Council, to direct that the Authors of Dramatic Pieces and Musical Compositions which shall after a future Time, to be specified in such Order, be first publicly represented or performed in any Foreign Country to be named in such Order, shall have the sole Liberty of representing or performing in any Part of the British Dominions such Dramatic Pieces or Musical Compositions during such Period as shall be defined in such Order, not exceeding the Period during which Authors of Dramatic Pieces and Musical Compositions first publicly represented or performed in the United Kingdom may for the Time be entitled by Law to the sole Liberty of representing and performing the same; and from and after the Time so specified in any such last-mentioned Order the Enactments of the said Dramatic Literary Property Act and of the said Copyright Amendment Act, and of any other Act for the Time being in force with relation to the Liberty of publicly representing and performing Dramatic Pieces or Musical Compositions, shall, subject to such Limitation as lo the Duration of the Right conferred by any such Order as shall be therein contained, apply to and be in force in respect of the Dramatic Pieces and Musical Compositions to which such Order shall extend, and which shall have been registered as hereinafter is provided, in such and the same Manner as if such Dramatic Pieces and Musical Compositions had been first publicly represented and performed in the British Dominions, save and except such of the said Enactments or such Parts thereof as shall be excepted in such Order.
[Sidenote: Particulars to be observed as to Registry and to Delivery of Copies.]
VI. Provided always, That no Author of any Book, Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition, or his Executors, Administrators, or Assigns, and no Inventor, Designer, or Engraver of any Print, or Maker of any Article of Sculpture, or other Work of Art, his Executors, Administrators, or Assigns, shall be entitled to the Benefit of this Act, or of any Order in Council to be issued in pursuance thereof, unless, within a Time or Times to be in that Behalf prescribed in each such Order in Council, such Book, Dramatic Piece, Musical Composition, Print, Article of Sculpture, or other Work of Art, shall have been so registered, and such Copy thereof shall have been so delivered as hereinafter is mentioned; (that is to say,) as regards such Book, and also such Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition, (in the event of the same having been printed,) the Title to the Copy thereof, the Name and Place of Abode of the Author or Composer thereof, the Name and Place of Abode of the Proprietor of the Copyright thereof, the Time and Place of the first Publication, Representation, or Performance thereof, as the Case may be, in the Foreign Country named in the Order in Council under which the Benefits of this Act shall be claimed, shall be entered in the Register Book of the Company of Stationers in London, and One printed Copy of the whole of such Book, and of such Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition, in the event of the same having been printed, and of every Volume thereof, upon the best Paper upon which the largest Number or Impression of the Book, Dramatic Piece, or Musical Composition shall have been printed for Sale, together with all Maps and Prints relating thereto, shall be delivered to the Officer of the Company of Stationers at the Hall of the said Company; and as regards Dramatic Pieces and Musical Compositions in Manuscript, the Title to the same, the Name and Place of Abode of the Author or Composer thereof, the Name and Place of Abode of the Proprietor of the Right of representing or performing the same, and the Time and Place of the first Representation or Performance thereof in the Country named in the Order in Council under which the Benefit of the Act shall be claimed, shall be entered in the said Register Book of the said Company of Stationers in London; and as regards Prints, the Title thereof, the Name and Place of Abode of the Inventor, Designer, or Engraver thereof, the Name of the Proprietor of the Copyright therein, and the Time and Place of the first Publication thereof in the Foreign Country named in the Order in Council under which the Benefits of the Act shall be claimed, shall be entered in the said Register Book of the said Company of Stationers in London, and a Copy of such Print, upon the best Paper upon which the largest Number or Impressions of the Print shall have been printed for Sale, shall be delivered to the Officer of the Company of Stationers at the Hall of the said Company; and as regards any such Article of Sculpture, or any such other Work of Art as aforesaid, a descriptive Title thereof, the Name and Place of Abode of the Maker thereof, the Name of the Proprietor of the Copyright therein, and the Time and Place of its first Publication in the Foreign Country named in the Order in Council under which the Benefit of this Act shall be claimed, shall be entered in the said Register Book of the said Company of Stationers in London; and the Officer of the said Company of Stationers receiving such Copies so to be delivered as aforesaid shall give a Receipt in Writing for the same, and such Delivery shall to all Intents and Purposes be a sufficient Delivery under the Provisions of this Act.
[Sidenote: In case of Books published anonymously, the Name of the Publisher to be sufficient.]
VII. Provided always, That if a Book be published anonymously it shall be sufficient to insert in the Entry thereof in such Register Book the Name and Place of Abode of the first Publisher thereof, instead of the Name and Place of Abode of the Author thereof, together with a Declaration that such Entry is made either on behalf of the Author or on behalf of such first Publisher, as the Case may require.
[Sidenote: The Provisions of the Copyright Amendment Act as regards Entries in the Register Book of the Company of Stationers, &c., to apply to Entries under this Act.]
VIII. And be it enacted, That the several Enactments in the said Copyright Amendment Act contained with relation to keeping the said Register Book, and the Inspection thereof, the Searches therein, and the Delivery of certified and stamped Copies thereof, the Reception of such Copies in Evidence, the making of false Entries in the said Book, and the Production in Evidence of Papers falsely purporting to be Copies of Entries in the said Book, the Applications to the Courts and Judges by Persons aggrieved by Entries in the said Book, and the expunging and varying such Entries, shall apply to the Books, Dramatic Pieces, and Musical Compositions, Prints, Articles of Sculpture, and other Works of Art, to which any Order in Council issued in pursuance of this Act shall extend, and to the Entries and Assignments of Copyright and Proprietorship therein, in such and the same Manner as if such Enactments were here expressly enacted in relation thereto, save and except that the Forms of Entry prescribed by the said Copyright Amendment Act may be varied to meet the Circumstances of the Case, and that the Sum to be demanded by the Officer of the said Company of Stationers for making any Entry required by this Act shall be One Shilling only.
[Sidenote: As to expunging or varying Entry grounded in wrongful first Publication.]
IX. Every Entry made in pursuance of this Act of a first Publication shall be _primâ facie_ Proof of a rightful first Publication; but if there be a wrongful first Publication, and any Party have availed himself thereof to obtain an Entry of a spurious Work, no Order for expunging or varying such Entry shall be made unless it be proved to the Satisfaction of the Court or of the Judge taking cognizance of the Application for expunging or varying such Entry, first, with respect to a wrongful Publication in a Country to which the Author or first Publisher does not belong, and in regard to which there does not subsist with this Country any Treaty of International Copyright, that the Party making the Application was the Author or first Publisher, as the Case requires; second, with respect to a wrongful first Publication either in the Country where a rightful first Publication has taken place, or in regard to which there subsists with this Country a Treaty of International Copyright, that a Court of competent Jurisdiction in any such country where such wrongful first Publication has taken place has given Judgment in favour of the Right of the Party claiming to be the Author or first Publisher.
[Sidenote: Copies of Books wherein Copyright is subsisting under this Act printed in Foreign Countries other than those wherein the Book was first published prohibited to be imported.]
X. All Copies of Books wherein there shall be any subsisting Copyright under or by virtue of this Act, or of any Order in Council made in pursuance thereof, printed or reprinted in any Foreign Country except that in which such Books were first published, shall be and the same are hereby absolutely prohibited to be imported into any Part of the British Dominions, except by or with the Consent of the registered Proprietor of the Copyright thereof, or his Agent authorised in Writing, and if imported contrary to this Prohibition the same and the Importers thereof shall be subject to the Enactments in force relating to Goods prohibited to be imported by any Act relating to the Customs; and as respects any such Copies so prohibited to be imported, and also as respects any Copies unlawfully printed in any Place whatsoever of any Books wherein there shall be any such subsisting Copyright as aforesaid, any Person who shall in any Part of the British Dominions import such prohibited or unlawfully printed Copies, or who, knowing such Copies to be so unlawfully imported or unlawfully printed, shall sell, publish, or expose to sale or hire, or shall cause to be sold, published, or exposed to sale or hire, or have in his Possession for sale or hire, any such Copies so unlawfully imported or unlawfully printed, such Offender shall be liable to a special Action on the Case at the Suit of the Proprietor of such Copyright, to be brought and prosecuted in the same Courts and in the same Manner, and with the like Restrictions upon the Proceedings of the Defendant, as are respectively prescribed in the said Copyright Amendment Act with relation to Actions thereby authorised to be brought by Proprietors of Copyright against Persons importing or selling Books unlawfully printed in the British Dominions.
[Sidenote: Officer of Stationers' Company to deposit Books, &c., in the British Museum.]
XI. The said Officer of the said Company of Stationers shall receive at the Hall of the said Company every Book, Volume, or Print so to be delivered as aforesaid, and within One Calendar Month after receiving such Book, Volume, or Print shall deposit the same in the Library of the British Museum.
[Sidenote: Second or subsequent Editions.]
XII. Provided always, That it shall not be requisite to deliver to the said Officer of the said Stationers' Company any printed Copy of the Second or of any subsequent Edition of any Book or Books so delivered as aforesaid, unless the same shall contain Additions or Alterations.
[Sidenote: Orders in Council may specify different Periods for different Foreign Countries and for different Classes of Works.]
XIII. The respective Terms to be specified by such Orders in Council respectively for the Continuance of the Privilege to be granted in respect of Works to be first published in Foreign Countries may be different for Works first published in different Foreign Countries and for different Classes of such Works; and the Times to be prescribed for the Entries to be made in the Register Book of the Stationers' Company, and for the Deliveries of the Books and other Articles to the said Officer of the Stationers' Company, as hereinbefore is mentioned, may be different for different Foreign Countries and for different Classes of Books or other Articles.
[Sidenote: No Order in Council to have any Effect unless it states that reciprocal Protection is secured.]
XIV. _Provided always, That no such Order in Council shall have any Effect unless it shall be therein stated, as the Ground for issuing the same, that due Protection has been secured by the Foreign Power so named in such Order in Council for the Benefit of Parties interested in Works first published in the Dominions of Her Majesty similar to those comprised in such Order._[1739]
[Sidenote: Orders in Council to be published in Gazette, and to have same Effect as this Act.]
XV. Every Order in Council to be made under the Authority of this Act shall as soon as may be after the making thereof by Her Majesty in Council be published in the London Gazette, and from the Time of such Publication shall have the same Effect as if every Part thereof were included in this Act.
[Sidenote: Orders in Council to be laid before Parliament.]
XVI. A Copy of every Order of Her Majesty in Council made under this Act shall be laid before both Houses of Parliament within Six Weeks after issuing the same, if Parliament be then sitting, and if not, then within Six Weeks after the commencement of the then next Session of Parliament.
[Sidenote: Orders in Council may be revoked.]
XVII. _It shall be lawful for Her Majesty by an Order in Council from Time to Time to revoke or alter any Order in Council previously made under the Authority of this Act, but nevertheless without Prejudice to any Rights acquired previously to such Revocation or Alteration._[1740]
[Sidenote: Translations.]
XVIII. _Provided always, That nothing in this Act contained shall be construed to prevent the printing, Publication, or Sale of any Translation of any Book the Author whereof and his Assigns may be entitled to the Benefit of this Act._[1741]
[Sidenote: Authors of Works first published in Foreign Countries not entitled to Copyright except under this Act.]
XIX.[1742] Neither the Author of any Book, nor the Author or Composer of any Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition, nor the Inventor, Designer, or Engraver of any Print, nor the Maker of any Article of Sculpture, or of such other Work of Art as aforesaid, which shall after the passing of this Act be first published out of Her Majesty's Dominions, shall have any Copyright therein respectively, or any exclusive Right to the public Representation or Performance thereof, otherwise than such (if any) as he may become entitled to under this Act.
[Sidenote: Interpretation Clause.]
XX. In the Construction of this Act the Word "Book" shall be construed to include "Volume," "Pamphlet," "Sheet of Letterpress," "Sheet of Music," "Map," "Chart," or "Plan;" and the Expression "Articles of Sculpture " shall mean all such Sculptures, Models, Copies, and Casts as are described in the said Sculpture Copyright Acts, and in respect of which the Privileges of Copyright are thereby conferred; and the Words "printing" and "reprinting," shall include engraving and any other Method of multiplying Copies; and the Expressions "Order of Her Majesty in Council," "Order in Council," and " Order," shall respectively mean Order of Her Majesty acting by and with the Advice of Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council; and the Expression "Officer of the Company of Stationers" shall mean the Officer appointed by the said Company of Stationers for the Purposes of the said Copyright Amendment Act; and in describing any Persons or Things any Word importing the Plural Number shall mean also One Person or Thing, and any Word importing the Singular Number shall include several Persons or Things, and any Word importing the Masculine shall include also the Feminine Gender; unless in any of such Cases there shall be something in the Subject or Context repugnant to such Construction.
[Sidenote: Act may be repealed this Session.]
XXI. _This Act may be amended or repealed by any Act to be passed in this present Session of Parliament._[1743]
THE COLONIAL COPYRIGHT ACT, 1847.[1744]
10 & 11 VICT. C. 95.
An Act to amend the Law relating to the Protection in the Colonies of Works entitled to Copyright in the United Kingdom.
[22nd July 1847.]
[Sidenote: 5 & 6 Vict. c. 45.]
[Sidenote: 8 & 9 Vict. c. 93.]
[Sidenote: Her Majesty may suspend in certain Cases the Prohibitions against the Admission of pirated Books into the Colonies in certain Cases.]
I. _Whereas by an Act passed in the Session of Parliament holden in the Fifth and Sixth Years of Her present Majesty, intituled An Act to amend the Law of Copyright, it is amongst other things enacted, that it shall not be lawful for any Person not being the Proprietor of the Copyright, or some Person authorised by him, to import into any Part of the United Kingdom, or into any other Part of the British Dominions, for Sale or Hire, any printed Book first composed or written or printed or published in any Part of the United Kingdom wherein there shall be Copyright, and reprinted in any Country or Place whatsoever out of the British Dominions: And whereas by an Act passed in the Session of Parliament holden in the Eighth and Ninth Years of the Reign of Her present Majesty, intituled An Act to regulate the Trade of the British Possessions abroad, Books wherein the Copyright is subsisting, first composed or written or printed in the United Kingdom, and printed or reprinted in any other Country, are absolutely prohibited to be imported into the British Possessions abroad: And whereas by the said last-recited Act it is enacted, that all Laws, Bye-Laws, Usages, or Customs in practice, or endeavoured or pretended to be in force or practice in any of the British Possessions in America, which are in anywise repugnant to the said Act or to any Act of Parliament made or to be made in the United Kingdom, so far as such Act shall relate to and mention the said Possessions, are and shall be null and void to all Intents and Purposes whatsoever:_[1745] In case the Legislature or proper legislative Authorities in any British Possession shall be disposed to make due Provision for securing or protecting the Rights of British Authors in such Possession, and shall pass an Act or make an Ordinance for that Purpose, and shall transmit the same in the proper Manner to the Secretary of State, in order that it may be submitted to Her Majesty, and in case Her Majesty shall be of opinion that such Act or Ordinance is sufficient for the Purpose of securing to British Authors reasonable Protection within such Possession, it shall be lawful for Her Majesty, if She think fit so to do, to express Her Royal Approval of such Act or Ordinance, and thereupon to issue an Order in Council declaring that so long as the Provisions of such Act or Ordinance continue in force within such Colony the Prohibitions contained in the aforesaid Acts, and hereinbefore recited, and any Prohibitions contained in the said Acts or in any other Acts against the importing, selling, letting out to hire, exposing for Sale or Hire, or possessing Foreign Reprints of Books first composed, written, printed, or published in the United Kingdom, and entitled to Copyright therein, shall be suspended so far as regards such Colony; and thereupon such Act or Ordinance shall come into operation, except so far as may be otherwise provided therein, or as may be otherwise directed by such Order in Council, any thing in the said last-recited Act or in any other Act to the contrary notwithstanding.
[Sidenote: Orders in Council to be published in Gazette. Orders in Council and the Colonial Acts or Ordinances to be laid before Parliament. Act may be amended, &c.]
II. Every such Order in Council shall, within One Week after the issuing thereof, be published in the _London Gazette_, and a Copy thereof, and of every such Colonial Act or Ordinance so approved as aforesaid by Her Majesty, shall be laid before both Houses of Parliament within Six Weeks after the issuing of such Order, if Parliament be then sitting, or if Parliament be not then sitting, then within Six Weeks after the opening of the next Session of Parliament.
III. _And be it enacted, This Act may be amended or repealed by any Act to be passed in the present Session of Parliament._[1746]
COPYRIGHT IN DESIGNS ACT, 1850.
13 & 14 VICT. C. 104.
An Act to extend and amend the Acts relating to the Copyright of Designs.
[14th August 1850.]
[Sidenote: Registration of Sculpture, Models, &c.]
VI. _The Registrar of Designs, upon Application by or on behalf of the Proprietor of any Sculpture, Model, Copy, or Cast within the Protection of the Sculpture Copyright Acts, and upon being furnished with such Copy, Drawing, Print, or Description, in Writing or in Print, as in the Judgment of the said Registrar shall be sufficient to identify the particular Sculpture, Model, Copy, or Cast in respect of which Registration is desired, and the Name of the Person claiming to be Proprietor, together with his Place of Abode or Business or other Place of Address, or the Name, Style, or Title of the Firm under which he may be trading, shall register such Sculpture, Model, Copy, or Cast in such Manner and Form as shall from Time to Time be prescribed or approved by the Board of Trade for the whole or any Part of the Term during which Copyright in such Sculpture, Model, Copy, or Cast may or shall exist under the Sculpture Copyright Acts; and whenever any such Registration shall be made, the said Registrar shall certify under his Hand and Seal of Office, in such Form as the said Board shall direct or approve, the Fact of such Registration, and the Date of the same, and the Name of the registered Proprietor, or the Style or Title of the Firm under which such Proprietor may be trading, together with his Place of Abode or Business or other Place of Address._[1747]
[Sidenote: Benefits conferred by Registration of Sculpture, &c.]
VII. _If any Person shall, during the Continuance of the Copyright in any Sculpture, Model, Copy, or Cast which shall have been so registered as aforesaid, make, import, or cause to be made, imported, exposed for Sale, or otherwise disposed of, any pirated Copy or pirated Cast of any such Sculpture, Model, Copy, or Cast, in such Manner and under such Circumstances as would entitle the Proprietor to a special Action on the case under the Sculpture Copyright Acts, the Person so offending shall forfeit for every such Offence a Sum not less than Five Pounds and not exceeding Thirty Pounds to the Proprietor of the Sculpture, Model, Copy, or Cast whereof the Copyright shall have been infringed; and for the Recovery of any such Penalty the Proprietor of the Sculpture, Model, Copy, or Cast which shall have been so pirated shall have and be entitled to the same Remedies as are provided for the Recovery of Penalties incurred under the Designs Act, 1842: Provided always, that the Proprietor of any Sculpture, Model, Copy, or Cast which shall be registered under this Act shall not be entitled to the Benefit of this Act, unless every Copy or Cast of such Sculpture, Model, Copy, or Cast which shall be published by him after such Registration shall be marked with the Word "registered" and with the Date of Registration._[1748]
THE INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT ACT, 1852.
15 & 16 VICT. C. 12.
An Act _to enable Her Majesty to carry into effect a Convention with France on the subject of Copyright_; to extend and explain the International Copyright Acts: and to explain the Acts relating to Copyright in Engravings.
[28th May 1852.]
Whereas an Act was passed in the Seventh Year of the Reign of Her present Majesty, intituled An Act to amend the Law relating to International Copyright, hereinafter called "The International Copyright Act": And whereas a Convention has lately been concluded between Her Majesty and the French Republic, for extending in each Country the Enjoyment of Copyright in Works of Literature and the Fine Arts first published in the other, and for certain Reductions of Duties now levied on Books, Prints, and Musical Works published in France: And whereas certain of the Stipulations on the Part of Her Majesty contained in the said Treaty require the Authority of Parliament: And whereas it is expedient that such Authority should be given, and that Her Majesty should be enabled to make similar Stipulations in any Treaty on the Subject of Copyright which may hereafter be concluded with any Foreign Power: Be it enacted as follows:
I. _The 18th Section of 7 Vict. c. 12 shall be repealed so far as the same is inconsistent with the provisions hereinafter contained._
II. _Her Majesty may by Order in Council[1749] direct that the Authors of Books which are after a future Time to be specified in such Order, published in any foreign Country to be named in such Order, their Executors, Administrators, and Assigns, shall, subject to the Provisions hereinafter contained or referred to, be empowered to prevent the Publication in the British Dominions of any Translations of such Books not authorised by them, for such Time as may be specified in such Order, not extending beyond the Expiration of five Years from the Time at which the authorised Translations of such Books hereinafter mentioned are respectively first published, and in the case of Books published in Parts not extending as to each Part beyond the Expiration of Five Years from the Time at which the authorised Translation of such Part is first published._
III. _Subject to any Provisions or Qualifications contained in such Order and to the provisions herein contained or referred to, the Laws and Enactments for the Time being in force for the purpose of preventing the Infringement of Copyright in Books published in the British Dominions, shall be applied for the Purpose of preventing the publication of Translations of the Books to which such Order extends which are not sanctioned by the Authors of such Books, except only such Parts of the said Enactments as relate to the Delivery of Copies of Books for the Use of the British Museum and for the Use of the other Libraries therein referred to._
IV. _Her Majesty may by Order in Council direct that Authors of Dramatic Pieces which are after a future Time to be specified in such Order, first publicly represented in any Foreign Country, to be named in such Order, their Executors, Administrators, and Assigns, shall, subject to the Provisions hereinafter mentioned or referred to, be empowered to prevent the Representation in the British Dominions of any Translation of such Dramatic Pieces not authorised by them, for such Time as may be specified in such Order, not extending beyond the Expiration of Five Years from the Time at which the Authorised Translations of such Dramatic Pieces hereinafter mentioned are first published or publicly represented._
V. _Subject to any Provisions or Qualifications contained in such last-mentioned Order and to the Provisions hereinafter contained or referred to, the Laws and Enactments for the Time being in force for ensuring to the Author of any Dramatic Piece first publicly represented in the British Dominions, the sole Liberty of representing the same shall be applied for the Purpose of preventing the Representation of any Translations of the Dramatic Pieces to which such last-mentioned Order extends, which are not sanctioned by the Authors thereof._[1750]
VI. Nothing herein contained shall be so construed as to prevent fair Imitations or Adaptations to the English Stage of any Dramatic Piece or Musical Composition published in any Foreign Country.
VII. Notwithstanding any thing in the said International Copyright Act or in this Act contained any Article of Political Discussion which has been published in any Newspaper or Periodical in a Foreign Country may, if the source from which the same is taken be acknowledged, be republished or translated in any Newspaper or Periodical in this Country: and any Article relating to any other Subject which has been so published as aforesaid may, if the source from which the same is taken be acknowledged, be republished or translated in like Manner, unless the Author has signified his Intention of preserving the Copyright therein and the Right of Translating the same in some conspicuous Part of the Newspaper or Periodical in which the same was first published, in which case the same shall without the Formalities required by the next following Section, receive the same Protection as is by virtue of the International Copyright Act or this Act extended to Books.
VIII. _No Author, or his Executors, Administrators, or Assigns shall be entitled to the Benefit of this Act, or of any Order in Council issued in pursuance thereof, in respect of the Translation of any Book or Dramatic Piece, if the following Requisitions are not complied with_; (_that is to say_)
1. _The original Work from which the Translation is to be made must be registered and a Copy thereof deposited in the United Kingdom in the manner required for Original Works by the said International Copyright Act within Three Calendar Months of its First Publication in the Foreign Country:_
2. _The Author must notify on the Title Page of the original Work, or if it is published in Parts on the Title Page of the first Part, or if there is no Title Page on some conspicuous Part of the Work, that it is his Intention to reserve the Right of Translating it:_
3. _The Translation sanctioned by the Author, or a Part thereof, must be published either in the country mentioned in the Order in Council, by virtue of which it is to be protected, or in the British Dominions, not later than One Year after the Registration and Deposit in the United Kingdom of the original Work, and the whole of such Translation must be published within Three Years of such Registration and Deposit:_
4. _Such Translation must be registered, and a Copy thereof deposited in the United Kingdom within a Time to be mentioned in that Behalf in the Order by which it is protected, and in the Manner provided by the said International Copyright Act for the Registration and Deposit of Original Works:_
5. _In the Case of Books published in Parts each Part of the original Work must be registered and deposited in this Country in the Manner required by the said International Copyright Act within Three Months after the first Publication thereof in the Foreign Country:_
6. _In the Case of Dramatic Pieces the Translation sanctioned by the Author must be published within Three Calendar Months of the Registration of the Original Work:_
7. _The above Requisitions shall apply to Articles originally published in Newspapers or Periodicals, if the same be afterwards published in separate form, but shall not apply to such Articles as originally published._[1751]
IX. All Copies of any Works of Literature or Art wherein there is any subsisting Copyright by virtue of the International Copyright Act and this Act, or of any Order in Council made in pursuance of such Acts or either of them, and which are printed, reprinted, or made in any Foreign Country, except that in which such Work shall be first published, and all unauthorised Translations of any Book or Dramatic Piece, the Publication or public Representation in the British Dominions of Translations whereof not authorised as in this
## Act mentioned shall for the Time being be prevented under any Order
in Council made in pursuance of this Act, are hereby absolutely prohibited to be imported into any Part of the British Dominions, except by, or with the Consent of the registered Proprietor of the Copyright 6f such Work or of such Book or Piece, or his Agent authorised in Writing; and the Provision of 5 & 6 Vict. c. 45, for the Forfeiture, Seizure, and Destruction of any printed Book first published in the United Kingdom wherein there shall be Copyright, and reprinted in any Country out of the British Dominions, and imported into any Part of the British Dominions by any Person not being the Proprietor of the Copyright, or a Person authorised by such Proprietor, shall extend and be applicable to all Copies of any Works of Literature and Art, and to all Translations, the Importation whereof into any Part of the British Dominions is prohibited under this Act.
X. The Provisions hereinbefore contained shall be incorporated with the International Copyright Act, and shall be read and construed therewith as One Act.
XI. [_Clause dispensing with a further Order in Council in respect of the Convention with France_, Rep. Int. Cop. Act, 1886, sec. 12].
XII., XIII. [_Clauses dealing with Duties on imported Works_, Rep. Stat. Law Rev. Act, 1875].
XIV. And Whereas by the Four several Acts of Parliament following; (that is to say) 8 Geo. II. c. 13; 7 Geo. III. c. 38; 17 Geo. III. c. 57; 6 & 7 Will. IV. c. 59, Provision is made for securing to every Person who invents or designs, engraves, etches, or works in Mezzotinto or Chiaro oscuro, or, from his own Work, Design, or Invention, causes or procures to be designed, engraved, etched, or worked in Mezzotinto or Chiaro oscuro any Historical Print or Prints, or any Print or Prints of any Portrait, Conversation, Landscape, or Architecture, Map, Chart or Plan, or any other Print or Prints whatsoever, and to every Person who engraves, etches, or works in Mezzotinto or Chiaro oscuro, or causes to be engraved, etched, or worked, any Print taken from any Picture, Drawing, Model, or Sculpture, notwithstanding such Print has not been graven or drawn from his own original Design, certain Copyrights therein defined: And whereas doubts are entertained whether the Provisions of the said Acts extend to Lithographs and certain other Impressions, and it is expedient to remove such Doubts:
It is hereby declared, That the Provisions of the said Acts are intended to include Prints taken by Lithography, or any other Mechanical Process by which Prints or Impressions of Drawings or Designs are capable of being multiplied indefinitely, and the said Acts shall be construed accordingly.
THE FINE ARTS COPYRIGHT ACT, 1862.
25 & 26 VICT. C. 68.
An Act for amending the Law relating to Copyright in Works of the Fine Arts, and for repressing the Commission of Fraud in the Production and Sale of such Works.
[29th July 1862.]
Whereas by Law, as now established, the Authors of Paintings, Drawings, and Photographs have no Copyright in such their Works, and it is expedient that the Law should in that respect be amended:
[Sidenote: Copyright in Works hereafter made or sold to vest in the Author for his Life and for Seven Years after his Death.]
I. The Author, being a British Subject or resident[1752] within the Dominions of the Crown, of every original Painting, Drawing, and Photograph[1753] which shall be or shall have been made either in the British Dominions or elsewhere, and which shall not have been sold or disposed of before the Commencement of this Act, and his Assigns, shall have the sole and exclusive Right of copying, engraving, reproducing, and multiplying such Painting or Drawing, and the Design thereof,[1754] or such Photograph, and the Negative thereof, by any Means and of any Size, for the Term of the natural Life of such Author, and Seven Years after his Death; provided that when any Painting or Drawing, or the Negative of any Photograph, shall for the First Time after the passing of this Act be sold or disposed of,[1755] or shall be made or executed for or on behalf of any other Person for a good or a valuable Consideration,[1756] the Person so selling or disposing of or making or executing the same shall not retain the Copyright thereof, unless it be expressly reserved to him by Agreement in Writing, signed, at or before the Time of such Sale or Disposition, by the Vendee or Assignee of such Painting or Drawing, or of such Negative of a Photograph, or by the Person for or on whose Behalf the same shall be so made or executed, but the Copyright shall belong to the Vendee or Assignee oi such Painting or Drawing, or of such Negative of a Photograph, or to the Person for or on whose Behalf the same shall have been made or executed; nor shall the Vendee or Assignee thereof be entitled to any such Copyright, unless, at or before the Time of such Sale or Disposition, an Agreement in Writing, signed by the Person so selling or disposing of the same, or by his Agent duly authorised, shall have been made to that Effect.
[Sidenote: Copyright not to prevent the Representation of the same Subjects in other Works. Assignments, Licences, &c., to be in Writing.]
II. Nothing herein contained shall prejudice the Right of any Person to copy or use any Work in which there shall be no Copyright, or to represent any Scene or Object, notwithstanding that there may be Copyright in some Representation of such Scene or Object.
III. All Copyright under this Act shall be deemed Personal or Movable Estate, and shall be assignable at Law, and every Assignment thereof, and every License to use or copy by any Means or Process the Design or Work which shall be the subject of such Copyright, shall be made by some Note or Memorandum in Writing, to be signed by the Proprietor of the Copyright, or by his Agent appointed for that Purpose in Writing.
[Sidenote: Register of Proprietors of Copyright in Paintings, Drawings, and Photographs to be kept at Stationers' Hall as in 5 & 6 Vict. c. 45.]
IV.[1757] There shall be kept at the Hall of the Stationers' Company by the Officer appointed by the said Company for the Purposes of the Act passed in the Sixth Year of Her present Majesty, intituled An Act to amend the Law of Copyright, a Book or Books, entitled "The Register of Proprietors of Copyright in Paintings, Drawings, and Photographs," wherein shall be entered a Memorandum of every Copyright to which any Person shall be entitled under this Act, and also of every subsequent Assignment of any such Copyright; and such Memorandum shall contain a Statement of the Date of such Agreement or Assignment, and of the Names of the Parties thereto, and of the Name and Place of Abode of the Person in whom such Copyright shall be vested by virtue thereof, and of the Name and Place of Abode of the Author of the Work in which there shall be such Copyright, together with a short Description of the Nature and Subject of such Work, and in addition thereto, if the Person registering shall so desire, a Sketch, Outline, or Photograph of the said Work, and no Proprietor of any such Copyright shall be entitled to the Benefit of this Act until such Registration, and no
## Action shall be sustainable nor any Penalty be recoverable in respect
of anything done before Registration.
[Sidenote: Certain Enactments of 5 & 6 Vict. c. 45 to apply to the Books to be kept under this Act.]
V. The several Enactments in the said Act of the Sixth Year of Her present Majesty contained, with relation to keeping the Register Book thereby required, and the Inspection thereof, the Searches therein and the Delivery of certified and stamped Copies thereof, the Reception of such Copies in Evidence, the making of false Entries in the said Book, and the Production in Evidence of Papers falsely purporting to be Copies of Entries in the said Book, the Application to the Courts and Judges by Persons aggrieved by Entries in the said Book, and the expunging and varying such Entries shall apply to the Book or Books to be kept by virtue of this Act, and to the Entries and Assignments of Copyright and Proprietorship therein under this Act, in such and the same Manner as if such Enactments were here expressly enacted in relation thereto, save and except that the Forms of Entry prescribed by the said Act of the Sixth Year of Her present Majesty may be varied to meet the Circumstances of the Case, and that the Sum to be demanded by the Officer of the said Company of Stationers for making any Entry required by this Act shall be One Shilling only.
[Sidenote: Penalties on Infringement of Copyright.]
VI. If the Author of any Painting, Drawing, or Photograph in which there shall be subsisting Copyright, after having sold or disposed of such Copyright, or if any other Person, not being the Proprietor for the Time being of Copyright in any Painting, Drawing, or Photograph, shall, without the Consent of such Proprietor, repeat, copy, colourably imitate, or otherwise multiply for Sale, Hire, Exhibition, or Distribution, or cause or procure to be repeated, copied, colourably imitated, or otherwise multiplied for Sale, Hire, Exhibition, or Distribution, any such Work or the Design thereof, or, knowing that any such Repetition, Copy, or other Imitation has been unlawfully made,[1758] shall import into any Part of the United Kingdom, or sell, publish, let to Hire, exhibit, or distribute, or offer for Sale, Hire, Exhibition, or Distribution, or cause or procure to be imported, sold, published, let to Hire, distributed, or offered for Sale, Hire, Exhibition, or Distribution, any Repetition, Copy, or Imitation of the said Work, or of the Design thereof, made without such Consent as aforesaid, such Person for every such Offence[1759] shall forfeit to the Proprietor of the Copyright for the Time being a Sum not exceeding Ten Pounds[1760]; and all such Repetitions, Copies, and Imitations made without such Consent as aforesaid, and all Negatives of Photographs made for the Purpose of obtaining such Copies, shall be forfeited to the Proprietor of the Copyright.
[Sidenote: Penalties on fraudulent Productions and Sales.]
VII. No Person shall do or cause to be done any or either of the following Acts; that is to say:
First, no Person shall fraudulently sign or otherwise affix, or fraudulently cause to be signed or otherwise affixed, to or upon any Painting, Drawing, or Photograph, or the Negative thereof, any Name, Initials, or Monogram:
Secondly, no Person shall fraudulently sell, publish, exhibit, or dispose of, or offer for Sale, Exhibition, or Distribution, any Painting, Drawing, or Photograph, or Negative of a Photograph, having thereon the Name, Initials, or Monogram of a Person who did not execute or make such Work:
Thirdly, no Person shall fraudulently utter, dispose of, or put off, or cause to be uttered or disposed of, any Copy or colourable Imitation of any Painting, Drawing, or Photograph, or Negative of a Photograph, whether there shall be subsisting Copyright therein or not, as having been made or executed by the Author or Maker of the original Work from which such Copy or Imitation shall have been taken:
Fourthly, where the Author or Maker of any Painting, Drawing, or Photograph, or Negative of a Photograph, made either before or after the passing of this Act, shall have sold or otherwise parted with the Possession of such Work, if any Alteration shall afterwards be made therein by any other Person, by Addition or otherwise, no Person shall be at liberty, during the Life of the Author or Maker of such Work, without his Consent, to make or knowingly to sell or publish, or offer for Sale, such Work or any Copies of such Work so altered as aforesaid, or of any Part thereof, as or for the unaltered Work of such Author or Maker:
[Sidenote: Penalties.]
Every Offender under this Section shall, upon Conviction, forfeit to the Person aggrieved a Sum not exceeding Ten Pounds, or not exceeding double the full Price, if any, at which all such Copies, Engravings, Imitations, or altered Works shall have been sold or offered for Sale; and all such Copies, Engravings, Imitations, or altered Works shall be forfeited to the Person, or the Assigns or legal Representatives of the Person, whose Name, Initials, or Monogram shall be so fraudulently signed or affixed thereto, or to whom such spurious or altered Work shall be so fraudulently or falsely ascribed as aforesaid: Provided always, that the Penalties imposed by this Section shall not be incurred unless the Person whose Name, Initials, or Monogram shall be so fraudulently signed or affixed, or to whom such spurious or altered Work shall be so fraudulently or falsely ascribed as aforesaid, shall have been living at or within Twenty Years next before the Time when the Offence may have been committed.
[Sidenote: Recovery of pecuniary Penalties.]
VIII. All pecuniary Penalties which shall be incurred, and all such unlawful Copies, Imitations, and all other Effects and Things as shall have been forfeited by Offenders, pursuant to this Act, and pursuant to any Act for the Protection of Copyright Engravings, may be recovered by the Person hereinbefore and in any such Act as aforesaid empowered to recover the same respectively, and hereinafter called the Complainant or the Complainer, as follows:
[Sidenote: In England and Ireland.]
[Sidenote: In Scotland.]
In England and Ireland, either by Action against the Party offending, or by summary Proceeding before any Two Justices having Jurisdiction where the Party offending resides:
In Scotland by Action before the Court of Session in ordinary Form, or by summary Action before the Sheriff of the County where the Offence may be committed or the Offender resides, _who, upon Proof of the Offence or Offences, either by Confession of the Party offending, or by the Oath or Affirmation of One or more credible Witnesses, shall convict the Offender, and find him liable to the Penalty or Penalties aforesaid, as also in Expenses, and it shall be lawful for the Sheriff in pronouncing such Judgment for the Penalty or Penalties and Costs, to insert in such Judgment a Warrant, in the event of such Penalty or Penalties and Costs not being paid, to levy and recover the Amount of the same by Poinding: Provided always, that it shall be lawful to the Sheriff, in the event of his dismissing the Action and assoilzieing the Defender, to find the Complainer liable in Expenses_,[1761] and any Judgment so to be pronounced by the Sheriff in such summary Application shall be final and conclusive, and not subject to Review by _Advocation_,[1762] Suspension, Reduction, or otherwise.
[Sidenote: Superior Courts of Record in which any Action is pending may make an Order for an Injunction, Inspection, or Account.]
IX. In any Action in any of Her Majesty's Superior Courts of Record at Westminster and in Dublin, for the Infringement of any such Copyright as aforesaid, it shall be lawful for the Court in which such Action is pending, if the Court be then sitting, or if the Court be not sitting then for a Judge of such Court, on the Application of the Plaintiff or Defendant respectively, to make such Order for an Injunction, Inspection, or Account, and to give such Direction respecting such
## Action, Injunction, Inspection, and Account, and the Proceedings
therein respectively, as to such Court or Judge may seem fit.
[Sidenote: Importation of pirated Works prohibited.]
[Sidenote: Application in such Cases of Customs Acts.]
X. All Repetitions, Copies, or Imitations of Paintings, Drawings, or Photographs, wherein or in the Design whereof there shall be subsisting Copyright under this Act, and all Repetitions, Copies, and Imitations of the Design of any such Painting or Drawing, or of the Negative of any such Photograph, which, contrary to the Provisions of this Act, shall have been made in any Foreign State, or in any Part of the British Dominions, are hereby absolutely prohibited to be imported into any Part of the United Kingdom, except by or with the Consent of the Proprietor of the Copyright thereof, or his Agent authorised in Writing; and if the Proprietor of any such Copyright, or his Agent, shall declare that any Goods imported are Repetitions, Copies, or Imitations of any such Painting, Drawing, or Photograph, or of the Negative of any such Photograph, and so prohibited as aforesaid, then such Goods may be detained by the Officers of Her Majesty's Customs.
[Sidenote: Saving of Right to bring Action for Damages.]
XI. If the Author of any Painting, Drawing, or Photograph, in which there shall be subsisting Copyright, after having sold or otherwise disposed of such Copyright, or if any other Person, not being the Proprietor for the Time being of such Copyright, shall, without the Consent of such Proprietor, repeat, copy, colourably imitate, or otherwise multiply, or cause or procure[1763] to be repeated, copied, colourably imitated, or otherwise multiplied, for Sale, Hire, Exhibition, or Distribution, any such Work or the Design thereof, or the Negative of any such Photograph, or shall import or cause to be imported into any Part of the United Kingdom, or sell, publish, let to Hire, exhibit, or distribute, or offer for Sale, Hire, Exhibition, or Distribution, or cause or procure to be sold, published, let to Hire, exhibited, or distributed, or offered for Sale, Hire, Exhibition, or Distribution, any Repetition, Copy, or Imitation, of such Work, or the Design thereof, or the Negative of any such Photograph, made without such Consent as aforesaid, then every such Proprietor, in addition to the Remedies hereby given for the Recovery of any such Penalties, and Forfeiture of any such Things as aforesaid, may recover Damages by and in a Special Action on the Case, to be brought against the Person so offending, and may in such Action recover and enforce the Delivery to him of all unlawful Repetitions, Copies, and Imitations, and Negatives of Photographs, or may recover Damages for the Retention or Conversion thereof: Provided that nothing herein contained, nor any Proceeding, Conviction, or Judgment, for any Act hereby forbidden, shall affect any Remedy which any Person aggrieved by such Act may be entitled to either at Law or in Equity.
[Sidenote: Provisions of 7 & 8 Vict. c. 12 to be considered as included in this Act.]
XII. This Act shall be considered as including the Provisions of the Act passed in the Session of Parliament held in the Seventh and Eighth Years of Her present Majesty, intituled An Act to amend the Law relating to International Copyright, in the same Manner as if such Provisions were Part of this Act.
THE INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT ACT, 1875.
38 VICT. C. 12.
An Act to amend the Law relating to International Copyright.
[13th May 1875.]
[Sidenote: 15 Vict. c. 12.]
_Whereas by an Act passed in the fifteenth year of the reign of Her present Majesty,