CALIFORNIA CIVIL CODE § 980- §989
980.
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- The author of any original work
of authorship that is not fixed in any tangible medium of expression
has an exclusive ownership in the representation or expression thereof
as against all persons except one who orginally and independently
creates the same or similar work. A work shall be considered not fixed
when it is not embodied in a tangible medium of expression or when its
embodiment in a tangible medium of expression is not sufficiently
permanent or
stable to permit it to be perceived, reproduced, or otherwise
communicated for a period of more than transitory duration, either
directly or with the aid of a machine or device.
- The author of an original work of authorship
consisting of a sound recording initially fixed prior to February 15,
1972, has an exclusive ownership therein until February 15, 2047, as
against all persons except one who independently makes or duplicates
another sound recording that does not directly or indirectly recapture
the actual sounds fixed in such prior sound recording, but consists
entirely of an independent fixation of other sounds, even though such
sounds imitate or simulate the sounds contained in the prior sound
recording.
- The inventor or proprietor of any invention or design,
with or without delineation, or other graphical representation, has an
exclusive ownership therein, and in the representation or expression
thereof, which continues so long as the invention or design and the
representations or expressions thereof made by him remain in his
possession.
981.
- Unless otherwise agreed, an original work of authorship not fixed
in any tangible medium of expression and in the creation of which
several persons are jointly concerned, is owned by them in equal
proportion.
- Unless otherwise agreed, an invention or design in the production of which several persons are jointly concerned is owned by
them as follows:
- If the invention or design is single, in equal proportions.
- If it is not single, in proportion to the contribution of
each.
982.
- The owner of any rights in any original works of authorship not
fixed in any tangible medium of expression may transfer the ownership
therein.
- The owner of any invention or design, or of any
representation or expression thereof, may transfer his or her
proprietary interest in it.
- Notwithstanding any other provision in this section,
whenever a work of fine art is transferred, whether by sale or on
commission or otherwise, by or on behalf of the artist who created it,
or that artist's heir, legatee, or personal representative, the right
of reproduction thereof is reserved to such artist or such heir,
legatee, or personal representative until it passes into the public
domain by act or operation of law, unless that right is expressly
transferred by a document in writing in which reference is made to the
specific right of reproduction, signed by the owner of the rights
conveyed or that person's duly authorized agent. If the transfer is
pursuant to an employment relationship, the right of reproduction is
transferred to the employer, unless it is expressly reserved in
writing. If the transfer is pursuant to a legacy or inheritance, the
right of reproduction is transferred to the legatee or heir, unless it
is expressly reserved by will or codicil. Nothing contained herein,
however, shall be construed to prohibit the fair use of such work of
fine art.
- As used in subdivision (c):
- "Fine art" means any work of
visual art, including but not limited to, a drawing, painting,
sculpture, mosaic, or photograph, a work of calligraphy, work of
graphic art (including an etching, lithograph, offset print, silk
screen, or a work of graphic art of like nature), crafts (including
crafts in clay, textile, fiber, wood, metal, plastic, and like
materials), or mixed media (including a
collage, assemblage, or any combination of the foregoing art media).
- "Artist" means the creator of a work of fine art.
- "Right of reproduction", at the present state of
commerce and technology shall be interpreted as including, but shall
not be limited to, the following: reproduction of works of fine art as
prints suitable for framing; facsimile casts of sculpture;
reproductions used for greeting cards; reproductions in general books
and magazines not devoted primarily to art, and in newspapers in other
than art or news sections, when such reproductions in books, magazines,
and newspapers are used for purposes similar to those of material for
which the publishers customarily pay; art films; television, except
from stations operated for educational purposes, or on programs for
educational purposes from all stations; and reproductions used in any
form of advertising, including magazines, calendars, newspapers,
posters, billboards, films or television.
- The amendments to this section made at the 1975-76 Regular
Session shall only apply to transfers made on or after January 1, 1976.
983. If the owner of any invention or design intentionally makes it
public, a copy or reproduction may be made public by any person,
without responsiblily to the owner, so far as the law of this state is
concerned.
984. If the owner of an invention or design does not make it
public, any other person subsequently and originally producing the same
thing has the same right therein as the prior inventor, which is
exclusive to the same extent against all persons except the prior
inventor, or those claiming under him.
985. Letters and other private communications in writing belong
to the person to whom they are addressed and delivered; but they cannot
be published against the will of the writer, except by authority of
law.
986.
- Whenever a work of fine art is sold and the seller resides in
California or the sale takes place in California, the seller or the
seller's agent shall pay to the artist of such work of fine art or to
such artist's agent 5 percent of the amount of such sale. The right of
the artist to receive an amount equal to 5 percent of the amount of
such sale may be waived only by a contract in writing
providing for an amount in excess of 5 percent of the amount of such
sale. An artist may assign the right to collect the royalty payment
provided by this section to another individual or entity. However, the
assignment shall not have the effect of creating a waiver prohibited by
this subdivision.
- When a work of fine art is sold
at an auction or by a gallery, dealer, broker, museum, or other person
acting as the agent for the seller the agent shall withhold 5 percent
of the amount of the sale, locate the artist and pay the artist.
- If the seller or agent is unable to locate and
pay the artist within 90 days, an amount equal to 5 percent of the
amount of the sale shall be tranferred to the Arts Council.
- If a seller or the seller's agent fails to pay
an artist the amount equal to 5 percent of the sale of a work of fine
art by the artist or fails to transfer such amount to the Arts Council,
the artist may bring an action for damages within three years after the
date of sale or one year after the discovery of the sale, whichever is
longer. The prevailing party in any action brought under this paragraph
shall be entitled to reasonable attorney fees, in an amount
as determined by the court.
- Moneys received by the council pursuant to this
section shall be deposited in an account in the Special Deposit Fund in
the State Treasury.
- The Arts Council shall attempt to locate any
artist for whom money is received pursuant to this section. If the
council is unable to locate the artist and the artist does not file a
written claim for the money received by the council within seven years
of the date of sale of the work of fine art, the right of the artist
terminates and such money shall be transferred to the council for use
in acquiring fine art pursuant to the Art in Public Buildings program
set forth in Chapter 2.1 (commencing with Section 15813) of Part 10b of
Division 3 of Title 2, of the Government Code.
- Any amounts of money held by any seller or
agent for the payment of artists pursuant to this section shall be
exempt from enforcement of a money judgment by the creditors of the
seller or agent.
- Upon the death of an artist, the rights and
duties created under this section shall inure to his or her heirs,
legatees, or personal representative, until the 20th anniversary of the
death of the artist. The provisions of this paragraph shall be
applicable only with respect to an artist who dies after January 1,
1983.
- Subdivision (a) shall not apply to any of the following:
- To the initial sale of a work of
fine art where legal title to such work at the time of such initial
sale is vested in the artist thereof.
- To the resale of a work of fine art for a gross sales price of less than one thousand dollars ($1,000).
- Except as provided in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a), to a resale after the death of such artist.
- To the resale of the work of fine art for a gross sales price less than the purchase price paid by the seller.
- To a transfer of a work of fine art which is
exchanged for one or more works of fine art or for a combination of
cash, other property, and one or more works of fine art where the fair
market value of the property exchanged is less than one thousand
dollars ($1,000).
- To the resale of a work of fine art by an art
dealer to a purchaser within 10 years of the initial sale of the work
of fine art by the artist to an art dealer, provided all intervening
resales are between art dealers.
- To a sale of a work of stained glass artistry
where the work has been permanently attached to real property and is
sold as part of the sale of the real property to which it is attached.
- For purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meanings:
- "Artist" means the person who
creates a work of fine art and who, at the time of resale, is a citizen
of the United States, or a resident of the state who has resided in the
state for a minimum of two years.
- "Fine art" means an original painting, sculpture, or drawing, or an original work of art in glass.
- "Art dealer" means a person who is actively and
principally engaged in or conducting the business of selling works of
fine art for which business such person validly holds a sales tax
permit.
- This section shall become operative on January 1, 1977,
and shall apply to works of fine art created before and after its
operative date.
- If any provision of this section or the application
thereof to any person or circumstance is held invalid for any reason,
such invalidity shall not affect any other provisions or applications
of this section which can be effected, without the invalid provision or
application, and to this end the provisions of this section are
severable.
- The amendments to this section enacted during the 1981-82
Regular Session of the Legislature shall apply to transfers of works of
fine art, when created before or after January 1, 1983, that occur on
or after that date.
987.
- The Legislature hereby finds and declares that the physical
alteration or destruction of fine art, which is an expression of the
artist's personality, is detrimental to the artist's reputation, and
artists therefore have an interest in protecting their works of fine
art against any alteration or destruction; and
that there is also a public interest in preserving the integrity of
cultural and artistic creations.
- As used in this section:
- "Artist" means the individual or individuals who create a work of fine art.
- "Fine art" means an original painting,
sculpture, or drawing, or an original work of art in glass, of
recognized quality, but shall not include work prepared under contract
for commercial use by its purchaser.
- "Person" means an individual, partnership,
corporation, limited liability company, association or other group,
however organized.
- "Frame" means to prepare, or cause to be
prepared, a work of fine art for display in a manner customarily
considered to be appropriate for a work of fine art in the particular
medium.
- "Restore" means to return, or cause to be
returned, a deteriorated or damaged work of fine art as nearly as is
feasible to its original state or condition, in accordance with
prevailing standards.
- "Conserve" means to preserve, or cause to be
preserved, a work of fine art by retarding or preventing deterioration
or damage through appropriate treatment in accordance with prevailing
standards in order to maintain the structural integrity to the fullest
extent possible in an unchanging state.
- "Commercial use" means fine art created under a
work-for-hire arrangement for use in advertising, magazines,
newspapers, or other print and electronic media.
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- No person, except an artist who
owns and possesses a work of fine art which the artist has created,
shall intentionally commit, or authorize the intentional commission of,
any physical defacement, mutilation, alteration, or destruction of a
work of fine art.
- In addition to the prohibitions contained in
paragraph (1), no person who frames, conserves, or restores a work of
fine art shall commit, or authorize the commission of, any physical
defacement, mutilation, alteration, or destruction of a work of fine
art by any act constituting gross negligence. For purposes of this
section, the term "gross negligence" shall mean the exercise of so
slight a degree of care as to justify the belief that there was an
indifference to the particular work of fine art.
- The artist shall retain at all times the right to claim
authorship, or, for a just and valid reason, to disclaim authorship of
his or her work of fine art.
- To effectuate the rights created by this section, the artist may commence an action to recover or obtain any of the following:
- Injunctive relief.
- Actual damages.
- Punitive damages. In the event that punitive
damages are awarded, the court shall, in its discretion, select an
organization or organizations engaged in charitable or educational
activities involving the fine arts in California to receive any
punitive damages.
- Reasonable attorneys' and expert witness fees.
- Any other relief which the court deems proper.
- In determining whether a work of fine art is of recognized
quality, the trier of fact shall rely on the opinions of artists, art
dealers, collectors of fine art, curators of art museums, and other
persons involved with the creation or marketing of fine art.
- The rights and duties created under this section:
- Shall, with respect to the
artist, or if any artist is deceased, his or her heir, beneficiary,
devisee, or personal representative, exist until the 50th anniversary
of the death of the artist.
- Shall exist in addition to any other rights and duties which may now or in the future be applicable.
- Except as provided in paragraph (1) of
subdivision (h), may not be waived except by an instrument in writing
expressly so providing which is signed by the artist.
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- If a work of fine art cannot be
removed from a building without substantial physical defacement,
mutilation, alteration, or destruction of the work, the rights and
duties created under this section, unless expressly reserved by an
instrument in writing signed by the owner of the building, containing a
legal description of the property and properly recorded, shall be
deemed waived. The instrument, if properly recorded, shall be binding
on subsequent owners of the building.
- If the owner of a building wishes to remove a
work of fine art which is a part of the building but which can be
removed from the building without substantial harm to the fine art, and
in the course of or after removal, the owner intends to cause or allow
the fine art to suffer physical defacement, mutilation, alteration, or
destruction, the rights and duties created under this section shall
apply unless the owner has diligently attempted without success to
notify the artist, or, if the artist is deceased, his or her heir,
beneficiary, devisee, or personal representative, in writing of his or
her intended action affecting the work of fine art, or unless he or she
did provide notice and that person failed within 90 days either to
remove the work or to pay for its removal. If the work is removed at
the expense of the artist, his or her heir, beneficiary, devisee, or
personal representative, title to the fine art shall pass to that
person.
- If a work of fine art can be removed from a
building scheduled for demolition without substantial physical
defacement, mutilation, alteration, or destruction of the work, and the
owner of the building has notified the owner of the work of fine art of
the scheduled demolition or the owner of the building is the owner of
the work of fine art, and the owner of the work of fine art elects not
to remove the work of fine art, the rights and duties created under
this
section shall apply, unless the owner of the building has diligently
attempted without success to notify the artist, or, if the artist is
deceased, his or her heir, beneficiary, devisee, or personal
representative, in writing of the intended action affecting the work of
fine art, or unless he or she did provide notice and that person failed
within 90 days either to remove the work or to pay for its removal. If
the work is removed at the expense of the artist, his or
her heir, beneficiary, devisee, or personal representative, title to
the fine art shall pass to that person.
- Nothing in this subdivision shall affect the rights of authorship created in subdivision (d) of this section.
- No action may be maintained to enforce any liability under
this section unless brought within three years of the act complained of
or one year after discovery of the act, whichever is longer.
- This section shall become operative on January 1, 1980,
and shall apply to claims based on proscribed acts occurring on or
after that date to works of fine art whenever created.
- If any provision of this section or the application
thereof to any person or circumstance is held invalid for any reason,
the invalidity shall not affect any other provisions or applications of
this section which can be effected without the invalid provision or
application, and to this end the provisions of this section are
severable.
988.
For the purpose of this section:
- The term "artist" means the creator of a work of art.
- The term "work of art" means any work of visual or graphic art of any media including, but not limited to, a painting, print,
drawing, sculpture, craft, photograph, or film.
- Whenever an exclusive or nonexclusive conveyance of any
right to reproduce, prepare derivative works based on, distribute
copies of, publicly perform, or publicly display a work of art is made
by or on behalf of the artist who created it or the owner at the time
of the conveyance, ownership of the physical work of art shall remain
with and be reserved to the artist or owner, as the case may be,
unless such right of ownership is expressly transferred by an
instrument, note, memorandum, or other writing, signed by the artist,
the owner, or their duly authorized agent.
- Whenever an exclusive or nonexclusive conveyance of any
right to reproduce, prepare derivative works based on, distribute
copies of, publicly perform, or publicly display a work of art is made
by or on behalf of the artist who created it or the owner at the time
of the conveyance, any ambiguity with respect to the nature or extent
of the rights conveyed shall be resolved in favor of the reservation of
rights by the artist or owner, unless in any given case the federal
copyright law provides to the contrary.
989.
- The Legislature hereby finds and declares that there is a public
interest in preserving the integrity of cultural and artistic
creations.
- As used in this section:
- "Fine art" means an original
painting, sculpture, or drawing, or an original work of art in glass,
of recognized quality, and of substantial public interest.
- "Organization" means a public or private
not-for-profit entity or association, in existence at least three years
at the time an action is filed pursuant to this section, a major
purpose of which is to stage, display, or otherwise present works of
art to the public or to promote the interests of the arts or artists.
- "Cost of removal" includes reasonable costs, if
any, for the repair of damage to the real property caused by the
removal of the work of fine art.
- An organization acting in the public interest may commence
an action for injunctive relief to preserve or restore the integrity of
a work of fine art from acts prohibited by subdivision (c) of Section
987.
- In determining whether a work of fine art is of recognized
quality and of substantial public interest the trier of fact shall rely
on the opinions of those described in subdivision (f) of Section 987.
-
- If a work of fine art cannot be
removed from real property without substantial physical defacement,
mutilation, alteration, or destruction of such work, no action to
preserve the integrity of the work of fine art may be brought under
this section. However, if an organization offers some evidence giving
rise to a reasonable likelihood that a work of art can be removed from
the real property without substantial physical defacement, mutilation,
alteration, or
destruction of the work, and is prepared to pay the cost of removal of
the work, it may bring a legal action for a determination of this
issue. In that action the organization shall be entitled to injunctive
relief to preserve the integrity of the work of fine art, but shall
also have the burden of proof. The action shall commence within 30 days
after filing. No action may be brought under this
paragraph if the organization's interest in preserving the work of art
is in conflict with an instrument described in paragraph (1) of
subdivision (h) of Section 987.
- If the owner of the real property wishes to
remove a work of fine art which is part of the real property, but which
can be removed from the real property without substantial harm to such
fine art, and in the course of or after removal, the owner intends to
cause or allow the fine art to suffer physical defacement, mutilation,
alteration, or destruction the owner shall do the following:
- If the artist or
artist's heir, legatee, or personal representative fails to take action
to remove the work of fine art after the notice provided by paragraph
(2) of subdivision (h) of Section 987, the owner shall provide 30 days'
notice of his or her intended action affecting the work of art. The
written notice shall be a display advertisement in a newspaper of
general circulation in
the area where the fine art is located. The notice required by this
paragraph may run concurrently with the notice required by subdivision
(h) of Section 987.
- If within the 30-day period an organization agrees to remove
the work of fine art and pay the cost of removal of the work, the
payment and removal shall occur within 90 days of the first day of
the 30-day notice.
- If the work is removed at the expense of an organization,
title to the fine art shall pass to that organization.
- If an organization does not agree to remove
the work of fine art within the 30-day period or fails to remove and
pay the cost of removal of the work of fine art within the 90-day
period the owner may take the intended action affecting the work of
fine art.
- To effectuate the rights created by this section, the court may do the following:
- Award reasonable attorney's and expert witness fees to the prevailing party, in an amount as determined by the court.
- Require the organization to post a bond in a reasonable amount
as determined by the court.
- No action may be maintained under this section
unless brought within three years of the act complained of or one year
after discovery of such act, whichever is longer.
- This section shall become operative on January 1, 1983,
and shall apply to claims based on acts occurring on or after that date
to works of fine art, whenever created.
- If any provision of this section or the application
thereof to any person or circumstances is held invalid, such invalidity
shall not affect other provisions or applications of this section which
can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and
to this end the provisions of this section are severable.