THE COPY RIGHT
ACT, 1957
CONTENTS
PRELIMINARY
1. Short title,
extent and commencement
4. When work not deemed to be published or performed
in public
5. When work deemed to be first published in India
6. Certain
disputes to be decided by Copyright Board
7. Nationality
of author where the making of unpublished work is extended over considerable period
COPYRIGHT
OFFICE AND COPYRIGHT BOARD
10. Registrar
and Deputy Registrars of Copyrights
11. Copyright
Board
12. Powers and
procedure of Copyright Board
COPYRIGHT
13. Works in
which copyright subsists
16. No copyright
except as provided in this Act
OWNERSHIP OF COPYRIGHT AND THE RIGHTS OF THE OWNER
19A. Disputes with
respect to assignment of copyright
20. Transmission
of copyright in manuscript by testamentary disposition
21. Right of
author to relinquish copyright
TERM
OF COPYRIGHT
22. Term of
copyright in published literary, dramatic, musical and artistic works
23. Term of
copyright in anonymous and pseudonymous works
24. Term of
copyright in posthumous work
25. Term of
copyright in photographs
26. Term of
copyright in cinematograph films
27. Term of
copyright in sound recording
28. Term of copyright
in Government work
28A. Term of
copyright in works of public undertakings
29. Term of
copyright in works of international organisations
CHAPTER VI
LICENCES
30. Licences by owners of
copyright
30A. Application of sections 19
and 19A
31. Compulsory licence in works
withheld from public
31A. Compulsory licence in
unpublished Indian works
32. Licence to produce and
publish translation
32A. License to reproduce and
publish works for certain purposes
32B. Termination of licences
issued under this Chapter
COPYRIGHT
SOCIETIES
33. Registration of copyright
society
34. Administration of rights of
owner by copyright society
34A. Payment of remunerations by
copyright society
35. Control over the copyright
society by the owner of rights
36. Submission of returns and
reports
36A. Rights and liabilities of
performing rights societies
RIGHTS OF BROADCASTING ORGANISATION AND OF PERFORMERS
37. Broadcast reproduction
right
39. Acts not infringing broadcast reproduction right or performer's
right
39A. Other provisions applying to broadcast reproduction right and performer's right
INTERNATIONAL
COPYRIGHT
40. Power to extend copyright
to foreign works
41. Provisions
as to works of certain international organisations
42. Power to restrict rights in works of foreign authors first
published in India
43. Orders
under this Chapter to be laid before Parliament
REGISTRATION
OF COPYRIGHT
45. Entries in Register of
Copyrights
46. Indexes
47. Form and inspection of
register
48. Register of
Copyrights to be prima facie evidence of particulars entered therein
49. Correction of entries in
the Register of Copyrights
50. Rectification of Register
by Copyright Board
50A. Entries in the Register of
Copyrights, etc. to be published
INFRINGEMENT
OF COPYRIGHT
52. Certain
acts not be infringement of copyright
52A. Particulars
to be included in sound recording and video films
52B. Accounts
and audit
53. Importation
of infringing copies
53A. Resale share
right in original copies
CIVIL
REMEDIES
54. Definition
55. Civil
remedies for infringement of copyright
56. Protection
of separate rights
58. Rights of
owner against persons possessing or dealing with infringing copies
59. Restriction
on remedies in the case of works of architecture
60. Remedy in
the case of groundless threat of legal proceedings
61. Owner of
copyright to be party to the proceeding
62. Jurisdiction
of court over matters arising under this Chapter
OFFENCES
63. Offence of
infringement of copyright or other rights conferred by this Act
63A. Enhanced
penalty on second and subsequent convictions
63B. Knowing
use of infringing copy of computer programme to be an offence
64. Power of
police to seize infringing copies
65. Possession
of plates for purpose of making infringing copies
66. Disposal
of infringing copies or plates for purpose of making infringing copies
67. Penalty
for making false entries in registers, etc. for producing or tendering false
entries
68A. Penalty
for contravention of section 52A
APPEALS
71. Appeals
against certain order of Magistrate
72. Appeals
against orders of Registrar of Copyrights and Copyright Board
MISCELLANEOUS
74. Registrar of
Copyrights and Copyright Board to posses certain powers of Civil Courts
76. Protection
of action taken in good faith
77. Certain
persons to be public servants
79. Repeals,
savings and transitional provisions
THE
COPYRIGHT ACT, 19571
[14
of 1957]
[4th June, 1957]
An Act to amend and
consolidate the law relating to copyright.
Be it enacted by Parliament in
the Eighth Year of the Republic of India as follows:-
1. The Act has been extended to Goa, Daman and Diu by Reg. 12 of 1962, s. 3 and Sch.; to Dadra and Nagar Haveli by Reg. 6 of 1963, s. 2 and Sch. 1; to Pondicherry by Reg. 7 of 1963, s. 3 and Sch. 1; and brought into force in the State of Sikkim (w.e.f. 27.4.1979) vide Notification No. S.O. 226(E), dt. 27.4.1979, Gazette of India, Extraordinary, Part 11, Section 3(ii), page 430.
CHAPTER I
PRELIMINARY
1. Short title,
extent and commencement-
(1) This Act may be called
the Copyright Act, 1957.
(2) It extends to the whole
of India.
(3) It shall come into force
on such date 1
as the Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, appoint.
1. 21.1.1958, vide
Notification No. S.R.O. 269, dt. 21.1.1958, Gazette of India, Extraordinary,
Part II, s.3, P. 167.
2. Interpretation-
In this
Act, unless the context otherwise requires, -
(a) “Adaptation” means, -
(i) In relation to a
dramatic work, the conversion of the work into a non-dramatic work;
(ii) In relation to a
literary work or an artistic work, the conversion of the work into a dramatic
work by way of performance in public or otherwise;
(iii) In relation to a
literary or dramatic work, any abridgement of the work or any version of the
work in which the story or action is conveyed wholly or mainly by means of
pictures in a form suitable for reproduction in a book, or in a newspaper,
magazine or similar periodical; 1[***]
(iv) In relation to a musical
work, any arrangement or transcription of the work; 2[and]
2[(v) In relation to any work, any use of such work involving its
rearrangement or alteration;]
(b) 3[“Work of architecture” means any
building or structure having an artistic character or design, or any model for
such building or structure;
(c) “Artistic work” means-
(i) A painting, a sculpture, a drawing
(including a diagram, map, chart or plan), an engraving or a photograph,
whether or not any such work possesses artistic quality;
(ii) An architectural work of art; and
(iii) Any
other work of artistic craftsmanship;
(d) “Author” means-
(i) In relation to a literary or dramatic
work, the author of the work;
(ii) In relation to a musical work, the
composer;
(iii) In relation to an artistic work other than
a photograph, the artist;
(iv) In relation to a photograph, the person
taking the photograph;
4[(v) In
relation to a cinematograph film or sound recording, the producer; and
(vi) In relation to any literary, dramatic,
musician or artistic work which is computer-generated, the person who causes
the work to be created;]
5[(dd) “Broadcast;'
means communication to the public--
(i) By any means of wireless diffusion,
whether in any one or more of the forms of signs, sounds or visual images; or
(ii) By
wire,
And includes a
re-broadcasts;]
(e) “Calendar year” means the year commencing
on the lst day of January;
6[(f) “Cinematograph
film” means any work of visual recording on any medium produced through a
process from which a moving image may be produced by any means and includes a
sound recording accompanying such visual recording and “cinematograph” shall be
construed as including any work produced by any process analogous to
cinematograph including video films;
(ff) “Communication to the public” means making any work available for being seen or heard or otherwise enjoyed by the public directly or by any means of display or diffusion other than by issuing copies of such work regardless of whether any member of the public actually sees, hears or otherwise enjoys the work so made available.]
Explanation- For the purposes of this clause, communication through satellite or
cable or any other means of simultaneous communication to more than one
household or place of residence including residential rooms of any hotel or
hostel shall be deemed to be communication to the public;
(ffa) “Computer”, in relation to a musical work, means the person who composes the music regardless of whether he records it in any form of graphical notation-
(ffb) “Computer” includes any electronic or
similar device having information processing capabilities,
(ffc) “Computer
programme” means a set of instructions expressed in words, codes, schemes or hi
any other form, including a machine readable medium, capable of causing a
computer to perform a particular task or achieve a particular result;
(ffd) “Copyright society” means a society
registered under sub-section (3) of section 33;]
(g) “Delivery”, in relation to a lecture,
includes delivery by means of any mechanical instrument or by 7[broadcast];
(h) “Dramatic work” includes any piece for
recitation, choreographic work or entertainment in dumb show, the scenic
arrangement or acting, form of which is fixed in writing or otherwise but does
not include a cinematograph film;
8[(hh) “Duplicating
equipment” means any mechanical contrivance or device used or intended to be
used for making copies of any work;]
(i) “Engravings” include etchings,
lithographs, wood-cuts, prints and other similar works, not being photographs;
(j) “Exclusive licence” means a licence which confers on the licensee or on the licencee and persons authorised by him, to the exclusion of all other persons (including the owner of the copyright), any right comprised in the copyright in a work, and “exclusive licensee” shall be construed accordingly;
(k) “Government work” means a work, which is
made or published by or under the direction or control of-
(i) The
Government or any department of the Government;
(ii) Any
Legislature in India;
(iii) Any
Court, Tribunal or other judicial authority in India;
9[(l) “Indian
work” means a literary, dramatic or musical work. –
(i) The author of which is a citizen of
India; or
(ii) Which is first published in India; or
(iii) The author of which, in the case of an
unpublished work is, at the time of the making of the work, a citizen of
India;]
1[(m) “Infringing copy” means,-
(i) In relation to a
literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work, a reproduction thereof otherwise
than in the form of a cinematographic film;
(ii) In relation to a
cinematographic film, a copy of the film made on any medium by any means;
(iii) In relation to a sound
recording, any other recording embodying the same sound recording, made by any
means;
(iv) In relation to a
programme or performance in which such a broadcast reproduction right or a performer's
right subsists under the provisions of this Act, the sound recording or a
cinematographic film of such programme or performance,
If such
reproduction, copy of sound recording is made or imported in contravention of
the provisions of this Act;]
(n) “Lecture”
includes address, speech and sermon;
10[(o) “Literary work” includes computer programmes, tables and
compilations including computer data basis;]
10[(p) “Musical work” means a work consisting of music and includes any
graphical notation of such work but does not include any words or any action
intended to be sung, spoken or performed with the music;]
10[(q) “Performance”, in relation to performer's right, means any visual
or acoustic presentation made live by one or more performers;)
10[(qq)”Performer” includes an
actor, singer, musician, dancer, acrobat, juggler, conjurer, snake charmer, a
person delivering a lecture or any other person who makes a performance;]
(r) [Omitted by Act 38 of
1994, s. 2, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.]
(s) “Photograph” includes
photo-lithograph and any work produced by any process analogous to photography
but does not include any part of a cinematograph film;
(t) “Plate” includes any
stereo type or other plate, stone, block, mould, matrix, transfer, negative, 11[duplicating
equipment] or other device used or intended to be used for printing or
reproducing copies of any work, and any matrix or other appliance by which 12[sound
recording] for the acoustic presentation of the work are or are intended to be
made;
(u) “Prescribed” means
prescribed by rules made under this Act;
13[(uu) “Producer”, in relation to a cinematograph film or sound
recording, means a person who takes the initiative and responsibility for
making the work;]
(v) [Omitted by Act 23 of 1983, s. 3, w.e.f.
9.8.1984.]
(w) [Omitted by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.]
14[(x) “Reprography”
means the making of copies of a work, by photocopying or similar means;
(xx) “Sound recording” means a recording of
sounds from which such sounds may be produced regardless of the medium on which
such recording is made or the method by which the sounds are produced;]
(y) “Work” means any of the following works,
namely,-
(i) A
literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work;
(ii) A
cinematograph film;
(iii) A
15[sound
recording];
(z) “Work of joint authorship” means a work produced by the collaboration of two r more authors in which the contribution of one author is not distinct from the contribution of the other author or authors;
(za) “Work
of sculpture” includes casts and models.
1. Omitted by Act
38 of 1994, s. 2, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
2. Ins. by Act 38
of 1994, s. 2, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
3. Subs. by Act
38 of 1994, s. 2(ii), w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
4. Ins. by Act 38
of 1994, s. 2, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
5. Ins. by Act 23
of 1983, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
6. Subs. by Act
38 of 1994, s. 2, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
7. Subs. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 2. for
“radio-diffusion”, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
8. Ins. by Act 65 of 1984, w.e.f.
8.10.1984.
9. Subs. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 3, for
clause (1), w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
10. Subs. by Act 38
of 1994, s. 2, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
11. Ins. by Act 65
of 1984, s. 2, w.e.f. 8.10.1984.
12. Subs. by Act 38
of 1994, s. 2(xii), for “records”, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
13. Clause (uu) ins.
by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
14. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.
15. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2(xii), for
'records”, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
1[3. Meaning of publication-
For the
purposes of this Act, “publication” means making a work available to the public
by issue of copies or by communicating the work to the public.)
1. Section 3 subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 3, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
4. When work not
deemed to be published or performed in public-
Except in
relation to infringement of copyright, a work shall not be deemed to be
published or performed in public, if published or performed in public, without
the licence of the owner of the copyright.
5. When work
deemed to be first published in India- For purposes of this Act, a
work published in India shall be deemed to be first published in India,
notwithstanding that it has been published simultaneously in some other
country, unless such other country provides a shorter term of copyright for
such work; and a work shall be deemed to be published simultaneously in India
and in another country if the time between the publication in India and the
publication in such other country does not exceed thirty days or such other
period as the Central Government may, in relation to any specified country,
determine.
1[6. Certain
disputes to be decided by Copyright Board-
If any
question arises,-
(a) Whether a work has been published or as
to the date on which a work was published for the purposes of Chapter V, or
(b) Whether the term of copyright for any
work is shorter in any other country than that provided in respect of that work
under this Act,
It shall be
referred to the Copyright Board constituted under section 11 whose decision
thereon shall be final.
Provided that if in the
opinion of the Copyright Board, the issue of copies or communication to the
public referred to in section 3 was of an insignificant nature, it shall not be
deemed to be publication for the purposes of that section.]
1. Section 6 subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 4,
w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
7. Nationality
of author where the making of unpublished work is extended over considerable
period- Where, in the case of an
unpublished work, the making of the work is extended over a considerable
period, the author of the work shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed
to be a citizen of, or domiciled in, that country of which he was a citizen or
wherein he was domiciled during any substantial part of that period.
8. Domicile of
corporations- For the purposes of this
Act, a body corporate shall be deemed to be domiciled in India if it is
incorporated under any law in force in India.
CHAPTER
II
COPYRIGHT
OFFICE AND COPYRIGHT BOARD
(1) There shall be established for the purposes of this Act an office to be called the Copyright Office.
(2) The Copyright Office shall be under the immediate control of the Registrar of Copyrights who shall act under the superintendence and direction of the Central Government.
There shall be a seal for the Copyright Office.
10. Registrar and Deputy Registrars of Copyrights-
(1) The Central Government shall. appoint a
Registrar of Copyrights and may appoint one or more Deputy Registrars of
Copyrights.
(2) A Deputy Registrar of Copyrights shall
discharge under the superintendence and direction of the Registrar of
Copyrights such functions of the Registrar under this Act as the Registrar may,
from time to time, assign to him; and any reference in this Act to the
Registrar of Copyrights shall include a reference to a Deputy Registrar of
Copyrights when so discharging any such functions.
(1) As soon as may be after the commencement
of this Act, the Central Government shall constitute a Board to be called the
Copyright Board which shall consist of a Chairman and not less than two or more
than 1[fourteen]
other members.
(2) The Chairman and other members of the
Copyright Board shall hold office for such period and on such terms and
conditions as may be prescribed.
(3) The Chairman of the Copyright Board shall
be a person who is, or has been, a Judge of 2[ ***] a High Court, or is
qualified for appointment as a Judge of a High Court.
The Registrar of Copyrights shall be the Secretary of the Copyright Board and shall perform such functions as may be prescribed.
1. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 5, for
“eight”, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
2. Omitted by Act 38 of 1994, s. 5, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.
12. Powers
and procedure of Copyright Board-
(1) The Copyright Board shall, subject to any
rules that may be made under this Act, have power to regulate its own
procedure, including the fixing of places and times of its sittings.
Provided that the Copyright
Board shall ordinarily hear any proceeding instituted before it under this Act
within the zone in which, at the time of the institution of the proceeding, the
person instituting the proceeding actually and voluntarily resides or carries
on business or personally works for gain.
Explanation- In this sub-section “zone” means a zone specified in section 15 of the
States Reorganisation Act, 1956 (37 of 1956).
(2) The Copyright Board may exercise and
discharge its powers and functions through Benches constituted by the Chairman
of the Copyright Board from amongst its members, each Bench consisting of not
less than three members.
1[Provided that, if the Chairman is of opinion that any matter of
importance is required to be heard by a larger bench, he may refer the matter
to a special bench consisting of five members.]
(3) If there is a difference of opinion among
the members of the Copyright Board or any Bench thereof in respect of any
matter coming before it for decision under this Act, the opinion of the
majority shall prevail.
2[Provided that where there is no such majority, the opinion of the
Chairman shall prevail.]
(4) 3[The Chairman may authorise any of its members to
exercise any of the powers conferred on it by section 74 and any order made or
act done in exercise of those powers by the member so authorised shall. be
deemed to be the order or act, as the case may be, of the Board.
(5) No member of the Copyright Board shall
take part in any proceedings before the Board in respect of any matter in which
he has a personal interest.
(6) No act done or proceeding taken by the Copyright
Board under this Act shall be questioned on the ground merely of the existence
of any vacancy in, or defect in the
constitution of, the Board.
(7) The Copyright Board shall be deemed to be
a Civil Court for the purposes of 4[sections 345 and 346 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974)] and all proceedings before the Board shall be
deemed to be judicial proceedings within the meaning of sections 193 and 228 of
the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (45 of IS60).
1. Proviso ins. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 6,
w.e.f, 10.5.1995.
2. Proviso subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 6,
w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
3. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 6, for “The
Copyright Board”, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
4. Subs. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 6, for certain words, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
CHAPTER
III
COPYRIGHT
13. Works in which copyright subsists-
(1) Subject to the provisions of this section and the other provisions of this Act, copyright shall subsist throughout India in the following classes of works, that is to say,-
(a) Original literary, dramatic, musical and
artistic works;
(b) Cinematograph films; and
(c) 1[Sound recording].
(2) Copyright shall not subsist in any work specified in sub-section (1), other than a work to which the provisions of section 40 or section 41 apply, unless,-
(i) In the case of a published work, the
work is first published in India, or where the work is first published outside
India, the author is at the date of such publication, or in a case where the
author was dead at that date, was at the time of his death, a citizen of India;
(ii) In the case of an unpublished work other
than 2[work
of architecture], the author is at the date of the making of the work a citizen
of India or domiciled in India; and
(iii) In the case of 2[work of architecture], the work is
located in India.
Explanation- In the case of a work of joint authorship, the conditions conferring
copyright specified in this sub-section shall be satisfied by all the authors
of the work.
(3) Copyright shall not subsist-
(a) In any cinematograph film if a
substantial part of the film is an infringement of the copyright in any other
work;
(b) In any 1[sound recording] made in respect
of a literary, dramatic or musical work, if in making the 1[sound recording], copyright in
such work has been infringed.
(4) The copyright in a cinematograph film or
a 1[sound
recording] shall not affect the separate copyright in any work in respect of
which or a substantial part of which, the film, or as the case may be, the 1[sound
recording] is made.
(5) In the case of 2[work of architecture], copyright
shall subsist only in the artistic character
and design and shall not extend to processes or methods of construction.
1. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2(xii), for
“record”, w.e.f. 10.5.1995
2. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2(ii),
w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
1[14. Meaning of copyright-
For the
purposes of this Act, “copyright” means the exclusive right subject to the
provisions of this Act, to do or authorise the doing of any of the following
acts in respect of a work or any substantial part thereof, namely,-
(a) In the case of a
literary, dramatic or musical work, not being a computer programme,-
(i) To reproduce the work
in any material form including the storing of it in any medium by electronic means;
(ii) To issue copies of the
work to the public not being copies already in circulation;
(iii) To perform the work in
public, or communicate it to the public;
(iv) To make any cinematograph
film or sound recording in respect of the work;
(v) To make any translation of
the work;
(vi) To make any adaptation of
the work;
(vii) To do, in relation to a
translation or an adaptation of the work, any of the acts specified in relation
to the work in sub-clauses (i) to (vi);
(b) In the case of a computer
programme,-
(i) To do any of the acts
specified in clause (a);
(ii) To sell or give on hire,
or offer for sale or hire, any copy of the computer programme, regardless of
whether such copy has been sold or given on hire on earlier occasions;
(c) In the case of an artistic
work,-
(i) To reproduce the work in
any material form including depiction in three dimensions of a two dimensional
work or in two dimensions of a three dimensional work;
(ii) To communicate the work
to the public;
(iii) To issue copies of the
work to the public not being copies already in circulation;
(iv) To include the work in any
cinematograph film;
(v) To make any adaptation of
the work;
(vi) To do in relation to an adaptation
of the work any of the acts specified in relation to the work in sub-clauses
(i) to (iv);
(d) In the case of a
cinematograph film,-
(i) To make a copy of the film
including a photograph of any image forming part thereof;
(ii) To sell or give on hire
or offer for sale or hire, any copy of the film, regardless of whether such
copy has been sold or given on hire on earlier occasional
(iii) To communicate the film
to the public;
(e) In the case of a sound recording-
(i) To make any other sound recording
embodying it;
(ii) To sell or give on hire, or offer for sale or hire, any copy of the sound recording, regardless of whether such copy has been sold or given on hire on earlier occasions;
(iii) To communicate the sound recording to the
public.
Explanation- For the purposes of this section, a copy, which has been sold once,
shall be deemed to be a copy already in circulation.]
1. Section 14 subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s.
7, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
(1) Copyright shall not subsist under this Act in any design which is registered under the 1[***] Designs Act, 1911 (2 of 1911).
(2) Copyright in any design, which is capable
of being registered under the Designs Act, 1911 (2 of 1911), but which has not
been so registered, shall cease as soon as any article to which the design has
been applied has been reproduced more than fifty times by an industrial process
by the owner of the copyright or, with his licence., by any other person.
1. The words
“Indian Patents and” omitted by Act 23 of 1983, s. 7, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
16. No copyright
except as provided in this Act- No person shall be entitled
to copyright or any similar right in any work, whether published or
unpublished, otherwise than under and in accordance with the provisions of this
Act or of any other law for the time being in force, but nothing in this
section shall be construed as abrogating any right or jurisdiction to restrain
a breach of trust or confidence.
CHAPTER IV
OWNERSHIP OF
COPYRIGHT AND THE RIGHTS OF THE OWNER
17. First owner of copyright- Subject to the provisions of
this Act, the author of a work shall be the first owner of the copyright
therein.
Provided that-
(a) In the case of a literary, dramatic or
artistic work made by the author in the course of his employment by the
proprietor of a newspaper, magazine or similar periodical under a contract of
service or apprenticeship, for the purpose of publication in a newspaper,
magazine or similar periodical, the said proprietor shall, in the absence of
any agreement to the contrary, be the first owner of the copyright in the work
in so far as the copyright relates to the publication of the work in any
newspaper, magazine or similar periodical, or to the reproduction of the work
for the purpose of its being so published, but in all other respects the author
shall be the first owner of the copyright in the work;
(b) Subject to the provisions of clause (a), in the case of a
photograph taken, or a painting or portrait drawn, or an engraving or a
cinematograph film made, for valuable consideration at the instance of any
person, such person shall, in the absence of any agreement to the contrary, be
the first owner of the copyright therein;
(c) In the case of a work made in the course of the author's employment
under a contract of service or apprenticeship, to which clause (a) or clause
(b) does not apply, the employer shall, in the absence of any agreement to the
contrary, be the first owner of the copyright therein;
1[(cc) In the case of any address or speech delivered
in public, the person who has delivered, such address or speech or if such
person has delivered such address or speech on behalf of any other person, such
other person shall be the first owner of the copyright therein notwithstanding
that the person who delivers such address or speech, or, as the case may be, the
person on whose behalf such address or speech is delivered, is employed by any
other person who arranges such address or speech or on whose behalf or premises
such address or speech is delivered;]
(d) In the case of a Government work, Government
shall, in the absence of any agreement to the contrary, be the first owner of
the copyright therein;
2[(dd) In the
case of a work made or first published by or under the direction or control of
any public undertaking, such public undertaking shall, in the absence of any
agreement to the contrary, be the first owner of the copyright therein.
Explanation- For the purposes of this clause and section 28A, “public undertaking”
means-
(i) An undertaking owned or controlled by
Government; or
(ii) A Government company as defined in
section 617 of the Companies Act, 1956 (I of 1956); or
(iii) A body corporate established by or under
any Central, Provincial or State Act;]
(e) In the case of a work to which the
provisions of section 41 apply, the international Organisation concerned shall
be the first owner of the copyright therein.
1. Ins. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 7, w.e.f.
9.8.1984.
2.
Ins. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 8, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
(1) The owner of the
copyright in an existing work or the prospective owner of the copyright in a
future work may assign to any person the copyright either wholly or partially
and either generally or subject to limitations and either for the whole term of
the copyright or any part thereof.
Provided that in the case of
the assignment of copyright in any future work, assignment shall take effect
only when the work comes into existence.
(2) Where the assignee of a
copyright becomes entitled to any right comprised in the copyright, the
assignee as respects the rights so assigned, and the assignor as respects the
rights not assigned, shall be treated for the purposes of this Act as the owner
of copyright and the provisions of this Act shall have effect accordingly.
(3) In this section, the expression “assignee” as respects the
assignment of the copyright in any future work includes the legal
representatives of the assignee, if the assignee dies before the work comes
into existence.
1[(l)] No
assignment of the copyright in any work shall be valid unless it is in writing
signed by the assignor or by his duly authorised agent.
2[(2) The
assignment of copyright in any work shall identify such work, and shall specify
the rights assigned and the duration and territorial extent of such assignment.
(3) The assignment of copyright in any work
shall also specify the amount of royalty payable, if any, to the author or his
legal heirs during the currency of the assignment and the assignment shall be
subject to revision, extension or termination on terms mutually agreed upon by
the parties.
(4) Where the assignee does not exercise the
right assigned to him under any of the other sub-sections of this section within
period of one year from the date of assignment, the assignment in respect of
such rights shall be deemed to have lapsed after the expiry of the said period
unless otherwise specified in the assignment.
(5) If the period of assignment is not
stated, it shall be deemed to be five years from the date of assignment.
(6) If the territorial extent of assignment
of the rights is not specified, it shall be presumed to extend within India.
(7) Nothing in sub-section (2) or sub-section
(3) or sub-section (4) or subsection (5) or sub-section (6) shall be applicable
to assignments made before the coming into force of the Copyright (Amendment)
Act, 1994.]
1. Section 19 renumbered as sub-section (i)
of section 19 by Act 23 of 1983, s. 9, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
2. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 9, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.
2[19A. Disputes
with respect to assignment of copyright-
(1) If an assignee fails to make sufficient
exercise of the rights assigned to him, and such failure is not attributable to
any act or omission of the assignor, then, the Copyright Board may, on receipt
of a complaint from the assignor and after holding such inquiry, as it may deem
necessary, revoke such assignment.
(2) If any dispute arises with respect to the
assignment of any copyright, the Copyright Board may, on receipt of a complaint
from the aggrieved party and after holding such inquiry as it considers
necessary, pass such order as it may deem fit including an order for the
recovery of any royalty payable.
Provided that the Copyright
Board shall not pass any order under this subsection to revoke the assignment
unless it is satisfied that the terms of assignment are harsh to the assignor
in case the assignor is also the author.
Provided further that no
order of revocation of assignment under this sub-section, shall be made within
a period of five years from the date of such assignment.]
1. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 9, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.
20. Transmission
of copyright in manuscript by testamentary disposition- Where under a bequest a person is entitled to the manuscript of a
literary, dramatic or musical work, or to an artistic work, and the work was
not published before the death of the testator, the bequest shall, unless the
contrary intention is indicated in the testator's will or any codicil thereto,
be construed as including the copyright in the work in so far as the testator
was the owner of the copyright immediately before his death.
Explanation- In this section, the expression “manuscript” means the original document
embodying the work, whether written by hand or not.
21. Right of
author to relinquish copyright-
(1) The author of a work may relinquish all or
any of the rights comprised in the copyright in the work by giving notice in
the prescribed form to the Registrar of Copyrights and thereupon such rights
shall, subject to the provisions of sub-section (3), cease to exist from the
date of the notice.
(2) On receipt of a notice under sub-section
(1), the Registrar of Copyrights shall cause it to be published in the Official
Gazette and in such other manner as he may deem fit.
(3) The relinquishment of all or any of the
rights comprised in the copyright in a work shall not affect any rights
subsisting in favour of any person on the date of the notice referred to in
sub-section (1).
CHAPTER
V
TERM
OF COPYRIGHT
22. Term of
copyright in published literary, dramatic, musical and artistic works-
Except
as otherwise hereinafter provided, copyright shall subsist in any literary,
dramatic, musical or artistic work (other than a photograph) published within
the lifetime of the author until 1[sixty years] from the beginning of the calendar
year next following the year in which the author dies.
Explanation- In this section the reference to the author shall, in the case of a
work of joint authorship, be construed as a reference to the author who dies
last.
23. Term of copyright in anonymous and
pseudonymous works-
(1) In the case of a literary, dramatic, musical
or artistic work (other than a photograph), which is published anonymously or
pseudonymous, copyright shall subsist until '[sixty years] from the beginning
of the calendar year next following the year in which the work is first
published.
Provided. that where the
identity of the author is disclosed before the expiry of the said period,
copyright shall subsist until 1[sixty years] from the beginning of the calendar
year next following the year in which the author dies.
(2) In sub-section (1), references to the
outlier shall, in the case of an anonymous work of joint authorship, be
construed,-
(a) Where
the identity of one of the authors is disclosed, as references to that author;
(b) Where the identity of more authors than
one is disclosed, as references to the author who dies last from amongst such
authors.
(3) In sub-section (1), references to the
author shall, in the case of a pseudonymous work of joint authorship, be
construed, -
(a) Where the names of one or more (but not
all) of the authors are pseudonymous and his or their identity is not
disclosed, as references to the author whose name is not a pseudonym, or, if
the names of two or more of the authors are not pseudonyms, as references to
such of those authors who dies last;
(b) Where the names of one or more (but not
all) of the authors are pseudonyms and the identity of one or more of them is
disclosed, as references to the author who dies last from amongst the authors
whose names are not pseudonyms and the authors whose names are pseudonyms and
are disclosed; and
(c) Where the names of all the authors are
pseudonyms and the identity of one of them is disclosed, as references to the
author whose identity is disclosed or if the identity of two or more of such
authors is disclosed, as references to such of those authors who dies last.
Explanation- For the purposes of this section, the identity of an author shall be
deemed to have been disclosed, if the identity of the author either is
disclosed publicly by both the author and the publisher or is otherwise
established to the satisfaction of the Copyright Board by that author.
24. Term of copyright in posthumous work-
(1)
In
the case of a literary, dramatic or musical work or an engraving, in which
copyright subsists at the date of the
death of the author or, in the case of any such work of joint authorship, at or
immediately before the date of the death of the author who dies last, but
which, or any adaptation of which, has not been published before that date,
copyright shall subsist until 1[sixty years] from the beginning of the calendar
year next following the year in which the work is first published or, where an
adaptation of the work is published in any earlier year, from the beginning of
the calendar year next following that year.
(2) For
the purposes of this section a literary, dramatic or musical work or an
adaptation of any such work shall be deemed to have been published, if it has
been performed in public or if any '[sound recording] made in respect of the work
have been sold to the public or have been offered for sale to the public.
1. Subs. by Act 13 of 1992, for “fifty
years”, w.e.f. 28.12.1991.
25. Term of
copyright in photographs- In the case of a photograph,
copyright shall subsist until 1[sixty years] from the beginning of the calendar
year next following the year in which the photograph is published.
1. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2(xii), for “record”, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
26. Term of
copyright in cinematograph films- In the case of a cinematograph
film, copyright shall subsist until 1[Sixty years] from the beginning of the calendar
year next following the year in which the film is published.
1. Subs. by Act 13 of 1992, for “fifty years”, w.e.f. 28.12.1991.
27. Term of
copyright in 1[sound recording]- In the case of a 1[sound recording], copyright shall subsist
until 2[sixty
years] from the beginning of the calendar year next following the year in which
the 1[sound
recording] is published.
1. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2(xii), for
“record”, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
2. Subs. by Act 13 of 1992, for “fifty
years”, w.e.f. 28.12.1991.
1[28. Term of copyright in Government work-
In the
case of Government work, where Government is the first owner of the copyright
therein, copyright shall subsist until 2[sixty years] from the beginning of the calendar
year next following the year in which the work is first published.
1. Ins. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 11, w.e.f.
9.8.1984.
2. Subs. by Act 13 of 1992, for “fifty
years”, w.e.f. 28.12.1991.
1[28A. Term of
copyright in works of public undertakings- In
the case of a work, where a public undertaking is the first owner of the
copyright therein, copyright shall subsist until 2[sixty
years] from the beginning of the calendar year next following the year in which
the work is first published.]
1. Ins. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 11, w.e.f.
9.8.1984.
2. Subs. by Act 13 of 1992, for “fifty
years”, w.e.f. 28.12.1991.
29. Term of
copyright in works of international organisations-
In the case
of a work of an international Organisation to which the provisions of section
41 apply, copyright shall subsist until 2[sixty years] from the beginning of the calendar
year next following the year in which the work is first published.
1. Subs. by Act 13 of 1992, for “fifty
years”, w.e.f. 28.12.1991.
CHAPTER
VI
LICENCES
30. Licences by
owners of copyright- The owner of the copyright
in any existing work or the prospective owner of the copyright in any future
work may grant any interest in the right by licence in writing signed by him or
by his duly authorised agent.
Provided that in the case of
a licence relating to copyright in any future work, the licence shall take
effect only when the work comes into existence.
Explanation- Where a person to whom a licence relating to copyright in any future
work is granted under this section dies before the work comes into existence,
his legal representatives shall, in the absence of any provision to the
contrary in the licence, be entitled to the benefit of the licence.
1[30A. Application
of sections 19 and 19A-The provisions of section 19
and 19A shall, with any necessary adaptations and modifications, apply in
relation to a licence under section 30 as they apply in relation to assignment
of copyright in a work.]
1. Section
30A ins. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 10, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
31. Compulsory
licence in works withheld from public-
(1) If at any time during the term of
copyright in any Indian work which has been published or performed in public, a
complaint is made to the Copyright Board that the owner of copyright in the
work-
(a) Has refused to re-publish or allow the
re-publication of the work or has refused to allow the performance in public of
the work, and by reason of such refusal the work is withheld from the public;
or
(b) Has refused to allow communication to the
public by 1[broadcast],
of such work or in the case of a 2[sound recording] the work recorded in such 2[sound recording],
on terms which the complainant considers reasonable;
The Copyright Board, after
giving to the owner of the copyright in the work a reasonable opportunity of
being heard and after holding such inquiry as it may deemed necessary, may if
it is satisfied that the grounds for such refusal are not reasonable, direct
the Registrar of Copyrights of grant to the complainant a licence to republish
the work, perform the work in public or communicate the work to the public by 1[broadcast],
as the case may be, subject to payment to the owner of the copyright of such
compensation and subject to such other terms and conditions as the Copyright
Board may determine; and thereupon the Registrar of Copyright shall grant the
licence to the complainant in accordance with the directions of the Copyright
Board, on payment of such fee as may be prescribed.
Explanation- In this sub-section, the expression “Indian work” includes-
(i) An artistic work, the author of which is
a citizen of India; and
(ii) A cinematograph film or a 2[sound
recording] made or manufactured
in India.
(2) Where two or more persons have made a
complaint under sub-section (1), the licence shall be granted to the
complainant who in the opinion of the Copyright Board would best serve the
interests of the general public.
1. Subs. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 2, for “radio-diffusion”, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
2. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2(xii), for
“record”, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
1[31A. Compulsory licence in unpublished Indian works-
(1) Where, in the case of an Indian work
referred to in sub-clause (iii) of clause (1) of section 2, the author is dead
or unknown or cannot be traced, or the owner of the copyright in such work
cannot be found, any person may apply to the Copyright Board for a licence to
publish such work or a translation thereof in any language.
(2) Before making an application under
sub-section (1), the applicant shall publish his proposal in one issue of a
daily newspaper in the English language having circulation in the major part of
the country and where the application is for the publication of a translation
in any language, also in one issue of any daily newspaper in that language.
(3) Every such application shall be made in
such form as may be prescribed and shall be accompanied with a copy of the
advertisement issued under subsection (2), and such fee as may be prescribed.
(4) Where an application is made to the
Copyright Board under this section, it may, after holding such inquiry as may
be prescribed, direct the Registrar of Copyrights to grant to the applicant a
licence to publish the work or a translation thereof in the language mentioned
in the application subject to the payment of such royalty and subject to such
other terms and conditions as the Copyright Board may determine, and thereupon
the Registrar of Copyrights shall grant the licence to the applicant in
accordance with the direction of the Copyright Board.
(5) Where a licence is granted under this
section, the Registrar of Copyrights may, by order, direct the applicant to
deposit the amount of the royalty determined by the Copyright Board in the
public account of India or in any other account specified by the Copyright
Board so as to enable to owner of the copyright or, as the case may be, his
heirs, executors or the legal representatives to claim such royalty at any
time.
(6) Without prejudice to the foregoing
provisions of this section, in the case of a work referred to in sub-section
(1), if the original author is dead, the Central Government may, if it
considers that the publication of the work is desirable in the national
interest, require the heirs, executors or legal representatives of the author
to publish such work within such period as may be specified by it.
(7) Where any work is not published within
the period specified by the Central Government under sub-section (6), the
copyright board may, on an application made by any person for permission to
publish the work and after hearing the parties concerned, permit such
publication on payment of such royalty as the Copyright Board may, in the
circumstances of such case, determine in the prescribed manner.]
1. Ins. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 12, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
32. Licence to produce and publish
translations-
(1)
Any person may apply to the Copyright
Board for a licence to produce and publish a translation of a literary or
dramatic work in any language 1[after a period of seven years from the first
publication of the work].
1[(lA) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), any person may apply to the Copyright Board for a licence to
produce and publish a translation, in printed or analogous forms of
reproduction, of a literary or dramatic work, other than an Indian work, in any
language in general use in India after a period of three years from the first
publication of such work, if such translation is required for the purposes of
teaching, scholarship or research.
Provided that where such
translation is in a language not in general use in any developed country, such application
may be made after a period of one year from such publication.]
(2) Every 2[application under this section]
shall be made in such form as may be prescribed and shall state the proposed
retail price of a copy of the translation of the work.
(3) Every applicant for a licence under this
section shall, along with his application, deposit with the Registrar of
Copyrights such fee as may be prescribed.
(4) Where an application is made to the
Copyright Board under this section, it may, after holding such inquiry as may
be prescribed, grant to the applicant a licence, not being an exclusive
licence, to produce and publish a translation of the work in the language
mentioned in 3[the
application-
(i) Subject to the condition that the
applicant shall pay to the owner of the copyright in the work royalties in
respect of copies of the translation of the work sold to the public, calculated
at such rate as the Copyright Board may, in the circumstances of each case,
determine in the prescribed manner; and
(ii) Where such licence is granted on an
application under sub-section (1A), subject also to the condition that the
licence shall not extend to the export of copies of the translation of the work
outside Indian and every copy of such translation shall contain a notice in the
language of such translation that the copy is available for distribution only
in India.
Provided that nothing in
clause (ii) shall apply to the export by Government or any authority under the
Government of copies of such translation in a language other than English,
French or Spanish to any country if-
(1) Such copies are sent to citizens of India
residing outside India or to any association of such citizens outside India; or
(2) Such copies are meant to be used for
purposes of teaching, scholarship or research and not for any commercial
purpose; and
(3) In either case, the permission for such
export has been given by the Government of that country.] 3[Provided further that no licence
under this section] shall be granted, unless-
(a)
A translation of the work in the
language mentioned in the application has not been published by the owner of
the copyright in the work or any person authorised by him, 4[within seven years or three years
or one year, as the case may be, of the first publication of the work], or if a
translation has been so published, it has been out of print;
(b) The applicant has proved to the
satisfaction of the Copyright Board that he had requested and had been denied authorisation
by the owner of the copyright to produce and publish such translations or that 4[he
was, after due diligence on his part, unable to find] the owner of the
copyright;
(c) Where the applicant was unable to find
the owner of the copyright, he had sent a copy of his request for 4[such
authorisation by registered air mail post to the publisher whose name appears
from the work, and in the case of an application for a licence under
sub-section (1)] not less than two months before 4[such application];
5[(cc) A period of six months in the case of an
application under sub-section (lA) (not being an application under the proviso
thereto), or nine months in the case of an application under the proviso to
that subsection, has elapsed from the date of making the request under clause
(b) of this proviso, or where a copy of the request has been sent under clause
(c) of this proviso, from the date of sending of such copy, and the translation
of the work in the language mentioned in the application has not been published
by the owner of the copyright in the work or any person authorised by him
within the said period of six months or nine months, as the case may be;
(ccc)
In the case of any application made
under sub-section (IA), -
(i) The name of the author and the title of
the particular edition of the work proposed to be translated are printed on all
the copies of the translation;
(ii) If the work is composed mainly of
illustrations, the provisions of section 32A are also complied with;
(d) The Copyright Board is satisfied that the
applicant is competent to produce and publish a correct translation of the work
and possesses the means to pay to the owner of the copyright the royalties
payable to him under this section;
(e) The author has not withdrawn from
circulation copies of the work; and
(f) An opportunity of being heard is given,
wherever practicable, to the owner of the copyright in the work.
5[(5) Any broadcasting authority may apply to the Copyright Board for a
licence to produce and publish the translation of-
(a) A work referred to in sub-section (lA)
and published in printed or analogous forms of reproduction; or
(b) Any
text incorporated in audio-visual fixations prepared and published solely for the
purpose of systematic instructional activities,
For broadcasting such
translation for the purposes of teaching or for the dissemination of the
results of specialised, technical or scientific research to the experts in any
particular field.
(6) The provisions of sub-sections (2) to (4)
in so far as they are relatable to an application under sub-section (lA),
shall, with the necessary modifications, apply to the grant of a licence under
sub-section (5) and such licence shall not also be granted unless-
(a) The translation is made from a work
lawfully acquired;
(b) The broadcast is made through the medium
of sound and visual recordings;
(c) Such recording has been lawfully and
exclusively made for the purpose of broadcasting in India by the applicant or
by any other broadcasting agency; and
(d) The translation and the broadcasting of
such translation are not used for any commercial purposes.
Explanation- For the purposes of this section, -
(a) “Developed country,” means a country,
which is not a developing country;
(b) “Developing country” means a country,
which is for the time being regarded as such in conformity with the practice of
the General Assembly of the United Nations;
(c) “Purposes of research” does not include purposes
of industrial research, or purposes of research by bodies corporate (not being
bodies corporate owned or controlled by Government) or other associations or
body of persons for commercial purposes;
(d) “Purposes of teaching, research or
scholarship” includes-
(i) Purposes of instructional activity at all
levels in educational institutions, including schools, colleges, universities
and tutorial institutions; and
(ii) Purposes of all other types of organised
educational activity.
1. Ins. by Act 23 of
1983, s. 13, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
2. Subs. by Act 23 of
1983, s. 13, for “such application”, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
3. Subs. by Act 23 of
1983, s. 13, for certain words, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
4. Subs. by Act 23 of
1983, s. 13, for “Provided that no such licence”, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
5. Subs. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 13, for certain words, w.e.f.
9.8.1984.
1[32A. License to
reproduce and publish works for certain purposes-
(1)
Where, after the expiration of the
relevant period from the date of the first publication of an edition of a
literary, scientific or artistic work,-
(a) The copies of such edition are not made
available in India; or
(b) Such copies have not been put on sale in
India for a period of six months,
To the general public, or in
connection with systematic instructional activities at a price reasonably
related to that normally charged in India for comparable works by the owner of
the right of reproduction or by any person authorised by him in this behalf,
any person may apply to the Copyright Board for a licence to reproduce and
publish such work in printed or analogous forms of reproduction at the price at
which such edition is sold or at a lower price for the purposes of systematic
instructional activities.
(2) Every
such application shall be made in such form as may be prescribed and shall
state the proposed retail price of a copy of the work to be produced.
(3) Every applicant for a licence under this
section shall, along with his application, deposit with the Registrar of Copyrights
such fee as may be prescribed.
(4) Where an application is made to be
Copyright Board under this section, it may, after holding such inquiry as may
be prescribed, grant to the applicant a licence, not being an exclusive
licence, to produce and publish a reproduction of the work mentioned in the
application subject to the conditions that, -
(i) The applicant shall pay to the owner of
the copyright in the work royalties in respect of copies of the reproduction of
the work sold to the public, calculated at such rate as the Copyright Board
may, in the circumstances of each case, determine in the prescribed manner;
(ii) A licence granted under this section
shall not extend to the export of copies of the reproduction of the work
outside India and every copy of such reproduction shall contain a notice that
the copy is available for distribution only in India.
Provided that no such
licence shall be granted unless-
(a) The applicant has proved to the
satisfaction of the Copyright Board that he had requested and had been denied
authorisation by the owner of the copyright in the work to reproduce and
publish such work or that he was, after due diligence on his part, unable to
find such owner;
(b) Where the applicant was unable to find
the owner of the copyright, he had sent a copy of his request for such
authorisation by registered airmail post to the publisher whose name appears
from the work not less than three months before the application for the
licence;
(c) The Copyright Board is satisfied that the
applicant is competent to reproduce and publish an accurate reproduction of the
work and possesses the means to pay to the owner of the copyright the royalties
payable to him under this section;
(d) The applicant undertakes to reproduce and
publish the work at such price as may be fixed by the Copyright Board, being a
price reasonably related to the price normally charged in India for works of
the same standard on the same or similar subjects;
(e) A period of six months in the case of an
application for the reproduction and publication of any work of natural
science, physical science, mathematics or technology, or a period of three
months in the case of an application for the reproduction and publication of
any other work, has elapsed from the date of making the request under clause
(a), or where a copy of the request has been sent under clause (b), from the
date of sending of a copy, and a reproduction of the work has not been
published by the owner of the copyright in the work or any person authorised by
him within the said period of six months or, three months, as the case may be;
(f) The name of the author and the title of
the particular edition of the work proposed to be reproduced are printed on all
the copies of the reproduction;
(g) The author has not withdrawn from
circulation copies of the work; and
(h) An opportunity of being heard is given,
wherever practicable, to the owner of the copyright in the work.
(5) No licence to reproduce and publish the
translation of a work shall be granted under this section unless such
translation has been published by the owner of the right of translation or any
person authorised by him and the translation is not in a language in general
use in India.
(6) The provisions of this section shall also
apply to the reproduction and publication, or translation into a language in
general use in India, of any text incorporated in audio-visual fixations
prepared and published solely for the purpose of systematic instructional
activities.
Explanation- For the purposes of this section, “relevant period”, in relation to
any work, means a period of-
(a) Seven years from the date of the first
publication of that work, where the application is for the reproduction and
publication of any work of, or relating to, fiction, poetry, drama, music or
art;
(b) Three years, from the date of the first
publication of that work, where the application is for the reproduction and
publication of any work of, or relating to, natural science, physical science,
mathematics or technology; and
(c) Five years from the date of the first
publication of that work, in any other case.
1. Ins. by Act 23 of
1983, s. 14, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
32B. Termination of licences issued under this Chapter-
(1)
If, at any time after the granting of
a licence to produce and publish the translation of a work in any language
under sub-section (lA) of section 32 (hereafter in this sub-section referred to
as the licensed work), the owner of the copyright in the work or any person
authorised by him publishes a translation of such work in the same language and
which is substantially the same in content at a price reasonably related to the
price normally charged in India for the translation of works of the same
standard on the same or similar subject, the licence so granted shall be
terminated.
Provided that no such
termination shall take effect until after the expiry of a period of three
months from the date of service of a notice in the prescribed manner on the
person holding such licence by the owner of the right of translation intimating
the publication of the translation as aforesaid.
Provided
further that copies of the licensed work produced and published by the person
holding such licence before the termination of the licence takes effect may
continue to be sold or distributed until the copies already produced and
published are exhausted.
(2) If, at any time after the granting of a
licence to produce and publish the reproduction or translation of any work
under section 32A, the owner of the right of reproduction or any person
authorised by him sells or distributes copies such work or a translation
thereof, as the case may be, in the same language and which is substantially
the same in content at a price reasonably related to the price normally charged
in India for works of the same standard on the same or similar subject, the
licence so granted shall be terminated.
Provided that no such
termination shall take effect until after the expiry of a period of three
months from the date of service of a notice in the prescribed manner on the
person holding the licence by the owner of the right of reproduction intimating
the sale or distribution of the copies of the editions of work as aforesaid.
Provided further that any
copies already reproduced by the licensee before such termination takes effect
may continue to be sold or distributed until the copies already produced are
exhausted.]
1[CHAPTER VII
COPYRIGHT SOCIETIES
1. Chapter VII subs. by
Act 38 of 1994, s. 11, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
33. Registration of copyright society-
(1) No person or association of persons shall, after coming into force of the Copyright (Amendment) Act, 1994 commence or, carry on the business of issuing or granting licences in respect of any work in which copyright subsists or in respect of any other rights conferred by this Act except under or in accordance with the registration granted under sub-section (3).
Provided that an owner of
copyright shall, in his individual capacity, continue to have the right to
grant licences in respect of his own works consistent with his obligations as a
member of the registered copyright society.
Provided further that a
performing rights society functioning in accordance with the provisions of
section 33 on the date immediately before the coming into force of the
Copyright (Amendment) Act, 1994 shall be deemed to be a copyright society for
the purposes of this Chapter and every such society shall get itself registered
within a period of one year from the date of commencement of the Copyright
(Amendment) Act, 1994.
(2) Any association of persons who fulfils
such conditions as may be prescribed may apply for permission to do the
business specified in sub-section (1) to the Registrar of Copyrights who shall
submit the application to the Central Government.
(3) The Central Government may, having regard
to the interests of the authors and other owners of rights under this Act, the
interest and convenience of the public and in particular of the groups of
persons who are most likely to seek licences in respect of the relevant rights
and the ability and professional competence of the applicants, register such
association of persons as a copyright society subject to such conditions as may
be prescribed.
Provided that the Central
Government shall not ordinarily register more than one copyright society to do
business m respect of the same class of works.
(4) The Central Government may, if it is
satisfied that a copyright society is being managed in a manner detrimental to
the interests of the owners of rights concerned, cancel the registration of
such society after such inquiry as may be prescribed.
(5) If the Central Government is of the
opinion that in the interest of the owners of rights concerned, it is necessary
so to do, it may, by order, suspend the registration of such society pending
inquiry for such period not exceeding one year as may be specified in such
order under sub-section (4) and that Government shall appoint an administrator
to discharge the functions of the copyright society.
34. Administration of rights of owner by
copyright society-
(1)
Subject to such conditions as may be
prescribed,-
(a) A copyright society may accept from an
owner of rights exclusive authorisation to administer any right in any work by issue
of licences or collection of licence fees or both; and
(b) An owner of rights shall have the right
to withdraw such authorisation without prejudice to the rights of the copyright
society under any contract.
(2) It shall be competent for a copyright
society to enter into agreement with any foreign society or Organisation
administering rights corresponding to rights under this Act, to entrust to such
foreign society or Organisation the administration in any foreign country of
rights administered by the said copyright society in India, or for
administering in India the rights administered in a foreign country by such
foreign society or Organisation.
Provided that no such
society or Organisation shall permit any discrimination in regard to the terms
of licence or the distribution of fees collected between rights in Indian and
other works.
(3) Subject to such conditions as may be
prescribed, a copyright society may-
(i) Issue licences under section 30 in
respect of any rights under this Act;
(ii) Collect fees in pursuance of such
licences;
(iii) Distribute such fees among owners of
rights after making deductions for its own
expenses;
(iv) Perform any other functions consistent
with the provisions of section 35.
34A. Payment of remunerations by copyright
society-
(1)
If the Central Government is of the
opinion that a copyright society for a class of work is generally administering
the rights of the owners of rights in such work throughout India, it shall
appoint that society for the purposes of this section.
(2) The copyright society shall, subject to
such rules as may be made in this behalf, frame a scheme for determining the
quantum of remuneration payable to individual copyright owners having regard to
the number of copies of the work in circulation.
Provided that such scheme
shall restrict payment to the owners of rights whose works have attained a
level of circulation, which the copyright society considers reasonable.
35. Control over
the copyright society by the owner of rights-
(1)
Every copyright society shall be
subject to the collective control of the owners of rights under this Act whose
rights it administers (not being owners of rights under this Act administered
by a foreign society or Organisation referred to in sub-section (2) of section
34 and shall, in such manner as may bee prescribed, -
(a) Obtain the approval of such owners of
rights for its procedures of collection and distribution of fees;
(b) Obtain their approval for the utilisation
of any amounts collected as fees for any purpose other than distribution to the
owner of rights; and
(c) Provide to such owner’s regular, full and
detailed information conceding all its activities, in relation to the
administration of their rights.
(2) All fees distributed among the owners of
rights shall, as far as may be, be distributed in proportion to the actual use
of their works.
36. Submission of returns and reports-
(1) Every copyright society shall submit to the Registrar of Copyrights such returns as may be prescribed.
(2) Any officer duly authorised by the
Central Government in this behalf may call for any report and also call for any
records of any copyright society for the purpose of satisfying himself that the
fees collected by the society in respect of rights administered by it are being
utilised or distributed in accordance with the provisions of this Act.
36A. Rights and liabilities of performing rights
societies- Nothing in this Chapter
shall affect any rights or liabilities in any work in connection with a
performing rights society which has accrued or were incurred on or before the
day prior to the commencement of the Copyright (Amendment) Act, 1994; or any
legal proceedings. in respect of any such rights or liabilities, pending on
that day.]
CHAPTER
VIII
1[RIGHTS OF
BROADCASTING ORGANISATION AND OF PERFORMERS]
2[37. Broadcast
reproduction right-
(1) Every broadcasting Organisation shall have
a special right to be known as “broadcast reproduction right” in respect of its
broadcasts.
(2) The broadcast reproduction right shall
subsist until twenty-five years from the beginning of the calendar year next
following the year in which the broadcast is made.
(3) During the continuance of a broadcast reproduction
right in relation to any broadcast, any person who, without the licence of the
owner of the right does any of he following acts of the broadcast or any
substantial part thereof, -
(a) Re-broadcasts the broadcast; or
(b) Causes the broadcast to be heard or seen
by the public on payment of any charges; or
(c) Makes any sound recording or visual
recording of the broadcast; or
(d) Makes any reproduction of such sound
recording or visual recording where such initial recording was done without licence
or, where it was licensed, for any purpose not envisaged by such licence; or
(e) Sells or hires to the public, or offers
for such sale or hire, any such sound recording or visual recording referred to
in clause (c) or clause (d),
Shall, subject to the
provisions of section 39, be deemed to have infringed the broadcast
reproduction right.]
1. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 12, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.
2. Section 37 subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s.
13, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
1[38. Performer's right-
(1) Where any performer appears or engages in
any performance, he shall have a special right to be known as the “performer's
right” in relation to such performance.
(2) The performer's right shall subsist until
twenty-five years from the beginning of the calendar year next following the
year in which the performance is made.
(3) During the continuance of a performer's
right in relation to any performance, any person who, without the consent of
the performer, does any of the following acts in respect of the performance or
any substantial part thereof, namely, -
(a) Makes a sound recording or visual
recording of the performance; or
(b) Reproduces a sound recording or visual
recording of the performance, which sound recording or visual recording was-
(i) Made without the performer's consent; or
(ii) Made for purposes different from those
for which the performer gave his consent; or
(iii) Made for purposes different from those
referred to in section 39 from a sound recording or visual recording which was
made in accordance with section 39; or
(c) Broadcasts the performance except where
the broadcast is made from a sound recording or visual recording other than one
made in accordance with section 39, or is a re-broadcast by the same
broadcasting Organisation of an earlier broadcast which did not infringe the
performer's right; or
(d) Communicates the performance to the
public otherwise than by broadcast, except where such communication to the
public is made from a sound recording or a visual recording or a broadcast,
Shall, subject
to the provisions of section 39, be deemed to have infringed the performer'
right.
(4) Once a performer has consented to the
incorporation of his performance in a cinematograph film, the provisions of
sub-sections (1), (2), and (3) shall have no further application to such
performance.]
1. Section 38 subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s.
14, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
1[39. Acts not infringing broadcast
reproduction right or performer's right- No broadcast reproduction
right or performer's right shall be deemed to be infringed by-
(a) The making of any sound recording or visual
recording for the private use of the person making such recording, or solely
for purposes of bona fide teaching or research; or
(b) The use, consistent with fair dealing, of
excepts of a performance or of a broadcast in the reporting of current events
or for bona fide review, teaching or research; or
(c) Such other acts, with any necessary
adaptations and modifications, which do not constitute infringement of
copyright under section 52.
1. Section 39 subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 15, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
39A. Other
provisions applying to broadcast reproduction right and performer's right- Sections
18, 19, 30, 53, 55, 58, 64, 65 and 66 shall, with any necessary adaptations and
modifications, apply in relation to the broadcast reproduction right in any
broadcast and the performer's right in any performance as they apply in
relation to copyright in a work.
Provided that where
copyright or performer's right subsists in respect of any work or performance
that has been broadcast, no licence to reproduce such broadcast, shall take
effect without the consent of the owner of rights or performer, as the case may
be, or both of them.]
CHAPTER
IX
INTERNATIONAL
COPYRIGHT
40. Power to
extend copyright to foreign works- The Central Government may,
by order published in the Official Gazette, direct that all or any provisions
of this Act shall apply-
(a) To words first published in any territory outside India to which
the order relates in like manner as if they were first published within India;
(b) To unpublished works, or any class thereof, the authors whereof
were at the time of the making of the work, subjects or citizens of a foreign
country to which the order relates, in like manner as if the authors were
citizens of India;
(c) In respect of domicile in any territory outside India to which
the order relates in like manner as if such domicile were in India;
(d) To any work of which the author was at the date of the first
publication thereof, or, in a case where the author was dead at that date, was
at the time of his death, a subject or citizen of a foreign country to which
the order relates in like manner as if the author was a citizen of India at
that date or time;
And thereupon, subject to
the provisions of this Chapter and of the order, this Act shall apply
accordingly.
Provided that-
(i) Before making an order under this
section in respect of any foreign country (other than a country with which
India has entered into a treaty or which is a party to a convention relating to
copyright to which India is also a party), the Central Government shall be
satisfied that foreign country has made, or has undertaken to make, such
provisions, if any, as it appears to the Central Government expedient to
require for the protection in that country of works entitled to copyright under
the provisions of this Act;
(ii) The order may provide that the provisions
of this Act shall apply either generally or in relation to such classes of
works or such classes of cases as may be specified in the order;
(iii) The order may provide that the term of
copyright in India shall not exceed that conferred by the law of the country to
which the order relates;
(iv) The order may provide that the enjoyment
of the rights conferred by this Act shall be subject to the accomplishment of
such conditions and formalities, if any, as may be prescribed by the order;
(v) In applying the provisions of this Act as
to ownership of copyright, the order may make such exceptions and modifications
as appear necessary, having regard to the law of the foreign country;
(vi) The order may provide that this Act or any
part thereof shall not apply to works made before the commencement of the order
or that this Act or any part thereof shall not apply to works first published
before the commencement of the order.
41. Provisions as to works of
certain international organisations-
(1) Where-
(a) Any work is made or first published by or
under the directions or control of any Organisation to which this section
applies, and
(b) There would, apart from this section, be
no copyright in the work in India at the time of the making or, as the case may
be, of the first publication thereof, and
(c) Either-
(i) The work is published as aforesaid in
pursuance of an agreement in that behalf with the author, being an agreement
which does not reserve to the author the copyright if any, in the work, or
(ii) Under section 17 any copyright in the
work would belong to the Organisation;
There shall, by virtue of
this section, be copyright in the work throughout India.
(2) Any Organisation to which this section
applies which at the material time had not the legal capacity of a body
corporate shall have and be deemed at all material times to have had the legal
capacity of a body corporate for the purpose of holding, dealing with, and
enforcing copyright and in connection with all legal proceedings relating to
copyright.
(3) The organisations to which this section
applies are such organisations as the Central Government may, by order'
published in the Official Gazette, declare to be organisations of which one or
more sovereign powers or the Government or Governments thereof are members to
which it is expedient that this section shall apply.
42. Power to
restart rights in works of foreign authors first published in India-
If it
appears to the Central Government that a foreign country does not give or has
not undertaken to give adequate protection to the works of Indian authors, the
Central Government may, by order, published in the Official Gazette, direct
that such of the provisions of this Act as confer copyright on works first
published in India shall not apply to works, published after the date specified
in the order, the authors whereof are subjects or citizens of such foreign
country and are not domiciled in India, and thereupon those provisions shall
not apply to such works.
43. Orders under
this Chapter to be laid before Parliament-
Every
order made by the Central Government under this Chapter shall, as soon as may
be after it is made, be laid before both Houses of Parliament and shall be
subject to such modifications as Parliament may make during the session in
which it is so laid or the session immediately following.
CHAPTER
X
REGISTRATION
OF COPYRIGHT
44. Register
of Copyrights- There shall be kept at the
Copyright Office a register in the prescribed form to be called the Register of
Copyrights in which may be entered the names or titles of works and the names
and addresses of authors, publishers and owners of copyright and such other
particulars as may be prescribed.
45. Entries in Register of Copyrights-
(1) The author or publisher of, or the owner
of or other person interested in the copyright in, any work may make an
application in the prescribed form accompanied by the prescribed fee to the
Registrar of Copyrights for entering particulars of the work in the Register of
Copyrights.
1[Provided that in respect of an artistic work which is used or is
capable of being used in relation to any goods, the application shall include a
statement to that effect and shall be accompanied by a certificate from the
Registrar of Trade Marks referred to in section 4 of the Trade and Merchandise
Marks Act, 1958 (43 of 1958), to the effect that no trade mark identical with
or deceptively similar to such artistic work has been registered under that Act
in the name of, or that no application has been made under that Act for such
registration by, any person other than the applicant.]
(2) On receipt of an application in respect
of any work under sub-section (1), the Registrar of Copyrights may, after
holding such inquiry as he may deem fit, enter the particulars of the work in
the register of Copyrights.
1. Added
by Act 23 of 1983, s. 16, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
46. Indexes- There shall be also kept at
the Copyright Office such indexes of the Register of Copyrights as may be
prescribed.
47. Form and
inspection of register -The Register of Copyrights and indexes thereof kept under this Act
shall at all reasonable times be open to inspection, and any person shall be
entitled to take copies of, or make extracts from, such register or indexes on
payment of such fee and subject to such conditions as may be prescribed.
48. Register of
Copyrights to be prima facie evidence of particulars entered therein-
The
Register of Copyrights shall be prima-facie evidence of the particulars entered
therein and documents purporting to be copies of any entries therein, or
extracts therefrom certified by the Registrar of Copyrights and sealed with the
seal of the Copyright Office shall be admissible in evidence in all Courts
without further proof or production of the original.
49. Correction of
entries in the Register of Copyrights- The
Registrar of Copyrights may, in the prescribed cases and subject to the
prescribed conditions, amend or alter the Register of Copyrights by-
(a) Correcting any error in any name, address or particulars; or
(b) Correcting any other error, which may have arisen therein by
accidental slip or omission.
50. Rectification
of Register by Copyright Board- The Copyright Board, on
application of the Registrar of Copyrights or of any person aggrieved, shall
order the rectification of the Register of Copyrights by-
(a) The making of any entry wrongly omitted
to be made in the register, or
(b) The expunging of any entry wrongly made
in, or remaining on, the register, or
(c) The correction of any error or defect in
the register.
1[50A. Entries
in the Register of Copyrights, etc., to be published- Every
entry made in the Register of Copyrights or the particulars of any work entered
under section 45, the correction of every entry made in such register under
section 49, and every rectification ordered under section 50, shall be
published by the Registrar of Copyrights in the Official Gazette or in such
other manner as he may deem fit.]
1. Ins. by Act 23
of 1983, s. 17, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
CHAPTER XI
INFRINGEMENT OF COPYRIGHT
51. When copyright infringed-
Copyright
in a work shall be deemed to be infringed-
(a) When any person, without
a licence granted by the owner of the copyright or the Registrar of Copyrights under
this Act or in contravention of the conditions of a licence so granted or of
any condition imposed by a competent authority under this Act-
(i) Does anything, the
exclusive right to do which is by this Act conferred upon the owner of the
copyright, or
1[(ii) Permits for profit any place to be used for the communication
of the work to the public where such communication constitutes an infringement
of the copyright in the work, unless he was not aware and had no reasonable
ground for believing that such communication to the public would be an
infringement of copyright; or]
(b) When
any person-
(i) Makes for sale or hire, or sells or lets
for hire, or by way of trade displays or offers for sale or hire, or
(ii) Distributes either for the purpose of trade
or to such an extent as to affect prejudicially the owner of the copyright, or
(iii) By way of trade exhibits in public, or
(iv) Imports 2[***] into India,
Any infringing copies of the
work:
3[Provided that nothing in sub-clause (iv) shall apply to the import of
two copies of any work, other than a cinematograph film or record, for the
private and domestic use of the importer.]
Explanation- For the purposes of this section' the reproduction of a literary,
dramatic, musical or artistic work in the form of a cinematograph film shall be
deemed to be an “infringing copy”.
1. Sub-clause (ii) of clause (a) of section 51 subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 16, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
2. Certain words omitted by Act 65 of 1984, s. 3, w.e.f. 8.10.1984.
3. Ins.
by Act 65 of 1984, s. 3, w.e.f. 8.10.1984.
52. Certain acts
not to be infringement of copyright- The following acts shall not
constitute an infringement of copyright, namely, -
(a) A fair dealing with a literary, dramatic,
musical or artistic work, 1[not being a computer programme,] for the purpose
of-
2[(i) Private
use, including research;]
(ii) Criticism or review, whether of that work
or of any other work;
3[(aa) The
making of copies or adaptation of a computer programme by the lawful possessor
of a copy of such computer programme, from such copy-
(i) In order to utilise the computer
programme for the purpose for which it was supplied; or
(ii) To make back-up copies purely as a
temporary protection against loss, destruction or damage in order only to
utilise the computer programme for the purpose for which it was supplied;]
(b) A fair dealing with a literary, dramatic,
musical or artistic work for the purpose of reporting current events-
(i) In a newspaper, magazine or similar
periodical, or
(ii) By 4[broadcast] or in a cinematograph film or by
means of photographs.
5[Explanation- The publication of a
compilation of addresses or speeches delivered in public is not a fair dealing
of such work within the meaning of this clause;]
(c) The reproduction of a literary, dramatic,
musical or artistic work for the purpose of a judicial proceeding or for the
purpose of a report of a judicial proceeding;
(d) The reproduction or publication of a literary,
dramatic, musical or artistic work in any work prepared by the Secretariat of a
Legislature or, where the Legislature consists of two Houses, by the
Secretariat of either House of the Legislature, exclusively for the use of the
members of that Legislature;
(e) The reproduction of any literary,
dramatic or musical work in a certified copy made or supplied in accordance
with any law for the time being in force;
(f) The reading or recitation in public of
any reasonable extract from a published literary or dramatic work;
(g) The publication in a collection, mainly
composed of non-copyright matter, bonafide intended for the use of educational
institutions, and so described in the title and in any advertisement issued by
or on behalf of the publisher, of short passages from published literary or
dramatic works, not themselves published for the use of educational
institutions, in which copyright subsists.
Provided that not more than
two such passages from works by the same author are published by the same
publisher during any period of five years.
Explanation- In the case of a work of joint authorship, references in this clause
to passages from works shall include references to passages from works by any
one or more of the authors of those passages or by any one or more of those
authors in collaboration with any other person;
(h) The reproduction of a literary; dramatic,
musical or artistic work-
(i) By a teacher or a pupil in the course of
instruction; or
(ii) As part of the questions to be answered in
an examination; or
(iii) In answers to such questions;
(i) The performance in the course of the
activities of an educational institution, of a literary, dramatic or musical
work by the staff and students of the institution, or of a cinematograph film or
a 6[sound
recording], if the audience is limited to such staff and students, the parents
and guardians of the students and persons directly connected with the
activities of the institution 7[or the communication to such an audience of a
cinematograph film or sound recording;]
8[(j) The
making of sound recordings in respect of any literary, dramatic or musical
work, if-
(i) Sound recordings of that work have been
made by or with the licence or consent of the owner of the right in the work;
(ii) The person making the sound recordings
has given a notice of his intention to make the sound recordings, has provided
copies of all covers or labels with which the sound recordings are to be sold,
and has paid in the prescribed manner to the owner of rights in the work
royalties in respect of all such sound recordings to be made by him, at the
rate fixed by the Copyright Board in this behalf.
Provided that-
(i) No alterations shall be made which have
not been made previously by or with the consent of the owner of rights, or
which are not reasonably necessary for the adaptation of the work for the
purpose of making the sound recordings;
(ii) The sound recordings shall not be issued
in any form of packaging or with any label, which is likely to mislead or confuse
the public as to their identity;
(iii) No such sound recording shall be made
until the expiration of two calendar years after the end of the year in which
the first sound recording of the work was made; and
(iv) The person making such sound recordings
shall allow the owner of rights or his duly authorised agent or representative
to inspect all records and books of account relating to such sound recording.
Provided further that if on
a complaint brought before the Copyright Board to the effect that the owner of
rights has not been paid in full for any sound recordings purporting to be made
in pursuance of this clause, the Copyright Board is, prima-facie, satisfied
that the complaint is genuine, it may pass an order ex parte directing the
person making the sound recording to cease from making further copies and,
after holding such inquiry as it considers necessary, make such further order
as it may deem fit, including an order for payment of royalty;
(k) The causing of a recording to be heard in
public by utilizing it,-
(i) In an enclosed room or hall meant for
the common use of residents in any residential premises (not being a hotel or
similar commercial establishment) as part of the amenities provided exclusively
or mainly for residents therein; or
(ii) As part of the activities of a club or
similar Organisation, which is not established or conducted for profit;]
(l) The performance of a literary, dramatic
or musical work by an amateur club or society, if the performance is given to a
non-paying audience, or for the benefit of a religious institution;
(m) The reproduction is a newspaper, magazine
or other periodical of an article on current economic, political, social or religious
topics, unless the author of such article has expressly reserved to himself the
right of such reproduction;
(n) The publication in a newspaper, magazine
or other periodical of a report of a lecture delivered in public;
(o) The making of not more than three copies
of a book (including a pamphlet, sheet of music, map, chart or plan) by or
under the direction of the person in charge of a public library for the use of
the library if such book is not available for sale in India;
(p) The reproduction, for the purpose of
research or private study or with a view to publication, of an unpublished
literary, dramatic or musical work kept in a library, museum or other
institution to which the public has access.
Provided that where the
identity of the author of any such work or, in the case of a work of joint
authorship, of any of the authors is known to the library, museum or other
institution, as the case may be, the provisions of this clause shall apply only
if such reproduction is made at a time more than fifty years from the date of
the death of the author or, in the case of a work of joint authorship, from the
death of the author whose identity is known or, if the identity of more authors
than one is known from the death of such of those authors who dies last;
(q) The reproduction or publication of-
(i) Any matter, which has been published in
any Official Gazette except an Act of a Legislature;
(ii) Any Act of a Legislature subject to the
condition that such Act is reproduced or published together with any commentary
thereon or any other original matter;
(iii) The report of any committee, commission,
council, board or other like body appointed by the Legislature, unless the
reproduction or publication of such report is prohibited by the Government;
(iv) Any judgment or order of a Court, Tribunal
or other judicial authority, unless the reproduction or publication of such
judgment or order is prohibited by the Court, the Tribunal or other judicial
authority, as the case may be;
(r) The production or publication of a
translation in any Indian language of an Act of a Legislature and of any rules
or orders made thereunder-
(i) If no translation of such Act or rules
or orders in that language has previously been produced or published by the
Government; or
(ii) Where a translation of such Act or rules
or orders in that language has been produced or published bv the Government, if
the translation is not available for sale to the public.
Provided that such translation
contains a statement at a prominent place to the effect that the translation
has not been authorised or accepted as authentic by the Government.
9[(s) The
making or publishing of a painting, drawing, engraving or photograph of a work
of architecture or the display of a work of architecture;]
(t) The making or publishing of a painting,
drawing, engraving or photograph of a sculpture, or other artistic work falling
under sub-clause (iii) of clause (c) of section 2, if such work is permanently
situate in a public place or any premises to which the public has access;
(u) The inclusion in a cinematograph film of-
(i) Any artistic work permanently situate in
a public place or any premises to which the public has access; or
(ii) Any other artistic work, if such
inclusion is only by way of background or is otherwise incidental to the
principal matters represented in the film;
(v) The use by the author of an artistic work,
where the author of such work is not the owner of the copyright therein, of any
mould, cast, sketch, plan, model or study made by him for the purpose of the
work.
Provided that he does not
thereby repeat or imitate the main design of the work;
(w) [Omitted by Act 38 of 1994, s. 17, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.]
(x) The reconstruction of a building or
structure in accordance with the architectural drawings or plans by reference
to which the building or structure was originally constructed.
Provided that the original
construction was made with the consent or licence of the owner of the copyright
in such drawings and plans;
(y) In relation to a literary, dramatic or
musical work recorded or reproduced in any cinematograph film, the exhibition
of such film after the expiration of the term of copyright therein.
Provided that the provisions
of sub-clause (ii) of clause (a), sub-clause (i) of clause (b) and clauses (d),
(f), (g), (m) and (p) shall not apply as respects any act unless that act is
accompanied by an acknowledgement-
(i) Identifying the work by its title or
other description; and
(ii) Unless the work is anonymous or the
author of the work has previously agreed or required that no acknowledgment of
his name should be made, also identifying the author;
10[(z) The
making of an ephemeral recording, by a broadcasting Organisation using its own
facilities for its own broadcast by a broadcasting Organisation of a work which
it has the right to broadcast; and the retention of such recording for archival
purposes on the ground of its exceptional documentary character;
(za) The performance of a literary, dramatic or
musical work or the communication to the public of such work or of a sound
recording in the course of any bonafide religious ceremony or an official
ceremony held by the Central Government or the State Government or any local
authority.
Explanation- For the purpose of this clause, religious ceremony including a
marriage procession and other social festivities associated with a marriage.
(2) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall
apply to the doing of any act in relation to the translation of a literary,
dramatic or musical work or the adaptation of a literary, dramatic, musical or
artistic work as they apply in relation to the work itself.
1. Ins. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 17, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.
2. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 17, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.
3. Clause (aa) ins. by Act 38 of 1994, s.
17, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
4. Subs. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 2, for
“radio-diffusion”, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
5. Ins. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 18, w.e.f.
9.8.1984.
6. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2(xii), for “record”,
w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
7. Ins. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 17, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.
8.
Clauses (j) & (k) subs. by Act
38 of 1994, s. 17, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
9.
Clause (s) subs. by Act 38 of 1994,
s. 17, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
10. Clauses (z) and (za) ins. by Act 38 of
1994, s- 17, % w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
1[52A. Particulars to be included in 2[sound recording] and video films-
(1) No person shall publish
a 2[sound
recording] in resident of any work unless the following particulars are
displayed on the 2[sound recording] and on any container thereof, namely, -
(a) The name and address of the person who
has made the 2[sound
recording];
(b) The name and address of the owner of the
copyright in such work; and.
(c) The year of it first publication.
(2) No person shall publish a video film in
respect of any work unless the following particulars are displayed in the video
film, when exhibited, and on the video cassette or other container thereof,
namely, -
(a) If such work is cinematograph film
required to be certified for exhibition under the provisions of the
Cinematograph Act, 1952 (37 of 1952), a copy of the certificate granted by the
Board of Film Certification under section 5A of that Act in respect of such
work;
(b) The name and address of the person who
has made the video film and a declaration by him that he has obtained the
necessary licence or consent from the owner of the copyright in such work for
making such video film; and
(c) The name and address of the owner of the
copyright in such work.]
1. Ins. by Act 65 of 1984, s. 4, w.e.f.
8.10.1984.
2. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2(xii), for
“record”, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
1[52B. Accounts and audit-
(1) Every copyright society appointed under
section 34A shall maintain proper accounts and other relevant records and
prepare an annual statement of accounts, in such form and in such manner as may
be prescribed by the Central Government in consultation with the Comptroller
and Auditor-General of India.
(2) The accounts of each of the copyright
societies in relation to the payments received from the Central Government
shall be audited by the Comptroller and Audit-General of India at such
intervals as may be specified by him and any expenditure incurred in connection
with such audit shall be payable by the copyright society to the Comptroller
and Auditor-General.
(3) The Comptroller and Auditor-General of
India or any other person appointed by him in connection with the audit of the
accounts of the copyright society referred to in sub-section (2) shall have the
same rights and privileges and authority in connection with such audit as the
Comptroller and Auditor-General has in connection with the audit of the
Government accounts and, in particular, shall have the right to demand the
production of books, accounts and other documents and papers and to inspect any
of the offices of the copyright society for the purpose only of such audit.
(4) The accounts of each of the copyright
societies as certified by the Comptroller and Auditor-General of India or any
other person appointed by him in this behalf together with the audit report
thereon shall be forwarded annually to the Central Government and that
Government shall cause the same to be laid before each House of Parliament.]
1. Section 52B ins. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 18,
w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
53. Importation
of infringing copies-
(1) The Registrar of Copyrights, on
application by the owner of the copyright in any work or by his duly authorised
agent and on payment of the prescribed fee, may, after making such inquiry as
he deemed fit, order that copies made out of India of the work which if made in
India would infringe copyright shall not be imported.
(2) Subject to any rules made under this Act,
the Registrar of Copyrights or any person authorised by him in this behalf may
enter any ship, dock or premises where any such copies as are referred to in
sub-section (1) may be found and may examine such copies.
(3) All copies to which any order made under
sub-section (1) applies shall be deemed to be goods of which the import had
been prohibited or restricted 1[under section 11 of the Customs Act, 1962 (51 of
1962)], and all the provisions of the Act shall have effect accordingly.
Provided that all such
copies confiscated under the provisions of the said Act shall not vest in the
Government but shall be delivered to the owner of the copyright in the work.
1. Subs. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 19, for
“under section 19 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878”, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
1[53A. Resale share right in original copies-
(1) In the case of resale for a price
exceeding ten thousand rupees, of the original copy of a painting, sculpture or
drawing, or of the original manuscript of a literary or dramatic work or
musical work, the author of such work if he was the first owner of rights under
section 17 or his legal heirs shall, notwithstanding any assignment of
copyright in such work, have a right to share in the resale price of such
original copy or manuscript in accordance with the provisions of this section.
Provided that such right
shall cease to exist on the expiration of the term of the copyright in the
work.
(2) The share referred to in sub-section (1)
shall be such as the Copyright Board may fix and the decision of the Copyright
Board in this behalf shall be final.
Provided that the Copyright
Board may fix different shares for different classes of work.
Provided further that in no
case shall the share exceed ten per cent, of the resale price.
(3) If any dispute arises regarding the right
conferred by this section, it shall be referred to the Copyright Board whose
decision shall be final.]
1. Sections 53A ins. by Act 38 of 1994, s.
19, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
CHAPTER
XII
CIVIL
REMEDIES
54. Definition-
For the purposes
of this Chapter, unless the context otherwise requires, the expression “owner
of copyright” shall include-
(a) An exclusive licensee-
(b) In the case of an anonymous or pseudonymous literary, dramatic,
musical or artistic work, the publisher of the work, until the identity of the
author or, in the case of an anonymous work of joint authorship, or a work of
joint authorship published under names all of which are pseudonyms, the
identity of any of the authors, is disclosed publicly by the author and the
publisher or is otherwise established to the satisfaction of the Copyright
Board by that author or his legal representatives.
55. Civil
remedies for infringement of copyright-
(1) Where copyright in any work has been
infringed, the owner of the copyright shall, except as otherwise provided by
this Act, be entitled to all such remedies by way of injunction, damages,
accounts and otherwise as are or may be conferred by law for the infringement
of a right.
Provided that if the
defendant proves that at the date of the infringement he was not aware and had
no reasonable ground for believing that copyright subsisted in the work, the
plaintiff shall not be entitled to any remedy other than an injunction in
respect of the infringement and a decree for the whole or part of the profits
made by the defendant by the sale of the infringing copies as the Court may in
the circumstances deem reasonable.
(2) Where, in the case of a literary,
dramatic, musical or artistic work, a name purporting to be that of the author
or the publisher, as the case may be, appears on copies of the work as
published, or, in the case of an artistic work, appeared on the work when it
was made., the person whose name so appears or appeared shall in any proceeding
in respect of infringement of copyright in such work, be presumed, unless the
contrary is proved, to be the author or the publisher of the work, as the case
may be.
(3) The costs of all parties in any
proceedings in respect of the infringement of copyright shall be in the discretion
of the Court.
56. Protection of
separate rights- Subject to the provisions of
this Act, where the several rights comprising the copyright in any work are
owned by different persons, the owner of any such right shall, to the extent of
that right, be entitled to the remedies provided by this Act and may
individually enforce such right by means of any suit, action or other
proceeding without making the owner of any other right a party to such suit,
action or proceeding.
1[(l) Independently
of the author's copyright and even after the assignment either wholly or
partially of the said copyright, the author of a work shall have the right-
(a) To claim authorship of the work; and
(b) To restrain or claim damages in respect
of any distortion, mutilation, modification or other act in relation to the
said work, which is done before the expiration of the term of copyright if
such, distortion, mutilation, modification or other act would be prejudicial to
his honour or reputation.
Provided that the author
shall not have any right to restrain or claim damages in respect of any
adaptation of a computer programme to which clause (aa) of subsection (1) of
section 52 applies.
Explanation- Failure to display a work or to display it to the satisfaction of the
author shall not be deemed to be an infringement of the rights conferred by
this section.
(2) The right conferred upon an author of a
work by sub-section (1), other than the right to claim authorship of the work,
may be exercised by the legal representatives of the author.
1. Subs. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 20, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.
58. Rights of
owner against persons possessing or dealing with infringing copies- All infringing copies of
any work in which copyright subsists, and all plates used or intended to be
used for the production of such infringing copies, shall be deemed to be the
property of the owner of the copyright, who accordingly may take proceedings
for the recovery of possession thereof or in respect of the conversion thereof.
Provided that the owner of
the copyright shall not be entitled to any remedy in respect of the conversion
of any infringing copies, if the opponent proves-
(a) That he was not aware and had no
reasonable ground to believe that copyright subsisted in the work of which such
copies are alleged to be infringing copies; or
(b) That he had reasonable grounds for
believing that such copies or plates do not involve infringement of the
copyright in any work.
59. Restriction on remedies in
the case of works of architecture-
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in 1[the
Specific Relief Act, 1963 (47 of 1963)] where the construction of a building or
other structure which infringes or which, if completed, would infringe the
copyright in some other work has been commenced, the owner of the copyright
shall not be entitled to obtain an injunction to restrain the construction of
such building or structure or to order its demolition.
(2) Nothing in section 58 shall apply in
respect of the construction of a building or other structure which infringes or
which, if completed, would infringe the copyright in some other work.
1. Subs. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 20, for “the
Specific Relief Act, 1877”, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
60. Remedy in the
case of groundless threat of legal proceedings- Where any person claiming to be the owner of copyright in any work, by
circulars, advertisements or otherwise, threatens any other person with any
legal proceedings or liability in respect of an alleged infringement of the
copyright, any person aggrieved thereby may, notwithstanding anything contained
1[in
section 34 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 (47 of 1963)] institute a
declaratory suit that the alleged infringement to which the threats related was
not in fact an infringement of any legal rights of the person making such
threats and may in any such suit-
(a) Obtain an injunction against the
continuance of such threats; and
(b) Recover such damages, if any, as he has
sustained by reason of such threats.
Provided that this section
shall not apply if the person making such threats, with due diligence,
commences and prosecutes an action for infringement of the copyright claimed by
him.
1. Subs. by Act 23 of 1983, s. 21, for “in
section 42 of the Specific Relief Act, 1877”, w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
61. Owner of copyright to be party to the
proceeding-
(1) In every Civil Suit or other proceeding
regarding infringement of copyright instituted by an exclusive licensee, the owner
of the copyright shall, unless the Court otherwise directs, be made a defendant
and where such owner is made a defendant, he shall have the right to dispute
the claim of the exclusive licensee.
(2) Where any Civil Suit or other proceeding
regarding infringement of copyright instituted by an exclusive licensee is
successful, no fresh suit or other proceeding in respect of the same cause of
actions shall lie at the instance of the owner of the copyright.
62. Jurisdiction
of court over matters arising under this Chapter-
(1) Every suit or other civil proceeding arising under this Chapter in respect of the infringement of copyright in any work or the infringement of any other right conferred by this Act shall be instituted in the district court having jurisdiction.
(2) For the purpose of sub-section (1), a
“District Court having jurisdiction” shall, notwithstanding anything contained
in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), or any other law for the time
being in force, include a District Court within the local limits of whose
jurisdiction, at the time of the institution of the suit or other proceeding,
the person instituting the suit or other proceeding or, where there are more
than one such persons, arty of them actually and voluntarily resides or carries
on business or personally works for gain.
CHAPTER
XIII
OFFENCES
63. Offence of
infringement of copyright or other rights conferred by this Act-
Any
person who knowingly infringes or abets the infringement of-
(a) The copyright in a work, or
(b) Any other right conferred by this Act, 1[except
the right conferred by section 53A],
2[shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which shall not be
less than six months but which may extend to three years and with fine which shall
not be less than fifty thousand rupees but which may extend to two lakh rupees.
Provided that 1[where
the infringement has not been made for gain in the course of trade or business]
the Court may, for adequate and special reasons to be mentioned in the
judgment, impose a sentence of imprisonment for a term of less than six months
or a fine of less than fifty thousand rupees.]
Explanation- Construction of a building or other structure, which infringes or
which, if completed, would infringe the copyright in some other work shall not
be an offence under this section.
1. Ins.
by Act 38 of 1994, s. 21, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
2. Subs. by Act 65 of 1984, s. 5, for
certain words, w.e.f.,8.10,1984.
1[63A.Enhanced
penalty on second and subsequent convictions- Whoever
having already been convicted of an offence under section 63 is again convicted
of any such offence shall be punishable for the second and for every subsequent
offence, with imprisonment for a term which shall not be less than one year but
which may extend to three years and with fine which shall not be less than one
lakh rupees but which may extend to two lakh rupees.
Provided that 2[where
the infringement has not been made for gain in the course of trade or business]
the court may, for adequate and special reasons to be mentioned in the
judgment, impose a sentence of imprisonment for a term of less than one year or
a fine of less than one lakh rupees.
Provided further that for
the purposes of this section, no cognizance shall be taken of any conviction
made before the commencement of the Copyright (Amendment) Act, 1984 (65 of
1984).]
1. Ins. by Act 65 of 1984, s. 6, w.e.f.
8.10.1984.
2. Ins. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 22, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.
1[63B.Knowing
use of infringing copy of computer programme to be an offence- Any
person who knowingly makes use on a computer of an infringing copy of a
computer programme shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which shall
not be less than seven days but which may extend to three years and with fine
which shall not be less than fifty thousand rupees but which may extend to two
lakh rupees.
Provided that where the
computer programme has not been used for gain or in the course of trade or
business, the court may, for adequate and special reasons to be mentioned in
the judgment, not impose any sentence of imprisonment and may impose a fine
which may extend to fifty thousand rupees.]
1. Section 63B ins. by Act 38 of 1994, s.
23, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
64. Power of police to seize
infringing copies-
1[(1) Any police officer, not below the rank of a sub-inspector, may, if he is satisfied that an offence under section 63 in respect of the infringement of copyright in any work has been, is being, or is likely to be, committed, seize without warrant, all copies of the work, and all plates used for the purpose of making infringing copies of the work, wherever found, and all copies and plates so seized shall, as soon as practicable, be produced before a Magistrate.]
(2) Any person having an interest in any
copies of a work, 4[or plates] seized under sub-section (1) may,
within fifteen days of such seizure, make an application to the magistrate for
such copies 2[or
plates] being restored to him and the Magistrate, after hearing the applicant and
the complainant and making such further inquiry as may be necessary, shall make
such order on the application as he may deed fit.
1. Subs. by Act 65 of 1984, s. 7, w.e.f.
8.10.1984.
2. Ins. by Act 65 of 1984, s. 7, w.e.f.
8.10.1984.
65. Possession of
plates for purpose of making infringing copies-
Any
person who knowingly makes, or has in his possession, any plate for the purpose
of making infringing copies of any work in which copyright subsists shall be
punishable with imprisonment which may extend to 1[two years and shall also be liable
to fine].
1. Subs. by Act 65 of 1984, s. 9, w.e.f.
8.10.1984.
66. Disposal of
infringing copies or plates for purpose of making infringing copies-
The
Court trying any offence Linder this Act may, whether the alleged offender is
convicted or not, order that all copies of the work or all plates in the
possession of the alleged offender, which appear it to be infringing copies, or
plates for the purpose of making infringing copies, be delivered up to the
owner of the copyright.
67. Penalty for
making false entries in register, etc. for producing or tendering false
entries- Any person who, --
(a) Makes or causes to be made a false entry in
the Register of Copyrights kept under this Act, or
(b) Makes or causes to be made a writing
falsely purporting to be a copy of any entry in such register, or
(c) Produces or tenders or causes to be
produced or tendered as evidence any such entry or writing, knowing the same to
be false,
Shall be punishable with
imprisonment, which may extend to one year, or with fine, or with both.
68. Penalty for
making false statements for the purpose of deceiving or influencing any
authority or officer- Any person who,-
(a) With a view to deceiving any authority or
officer in the execution of the provisions of this Act, or
(b) With a view to procuring or influencing
the doing or omission of anything in relation to this Act or any matter
thereunder,
Makes a false statement or
representation knowing the same to be false, shall be punishable with
imprisonment which may extend to one year, or with fine, or with both.
1[68A.Penalty
for contravention of section 52A- Any person who publishes a 2[sound recording] or a video film
in contravention of the provisions of section 52A shall be punishable with
imprisonment which may extend to three years and shall also be liable to fine.]
1. Ins.
by Act 65 of 1984, s. 2, w.e.f. 8.10.1984.
2. Subs.
by Act 38 of 1994, s. 2(xii), for “record”, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
(1) Where any offence under this Act has been
committed by a company, every person who at the time the offence was committed
was in charge of, and was responsible to the company for, the conduct of the business
of the company, as well as the company shall be deemed to be deemed to be
guilty of such offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against and punished
accordingly.
Provided that nothing
contained in this sub-section shall render any person liable to any punishment,
if he proves that the offence was committed without his knowledge or that he
exercised all due diligence to prevent the commission of such offence.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), where an offence under this Act has been committed by a
company, and it is proved that the offence was committed with the consent or
connivance of, or is attributable to any negligence on the part of, any
director, manager, secretary or other officer of the company, such director,
manager, secretary or other officer shall also be deemed to be guilty of that
offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against and punished
accordingly.
Explanation- For the purposes of this section-
(a) “Company” means any body
corporate and includes a firm or other association of persons; and
(b) “Director” in relation
to a firm means a partner in the firm.
70. Cognizance of offences-
No court
inferior to that of 1[a Metropolitan Magistrate or a Judicial
Magistrate of the first class] shall try any offence under this Act.
1. Subs. by Act
23 of 1983, s. 22, for “a Presidency Magistrate or a Magistrate of the first
class”, w.e.f. 9.8,1984.
CHAPTER XIV
APPEALS
71. Appeals against certain order of Magistrate-
Any person
aggrieved by an order made under sub-section (2) of section 64 or section 66
may, within thirty days of the date of such order, appeal to the Court to which
appeals from the Court making the order ordinarily lie, and such Appellate
Court may direct that execution of the order be stayed pending disposal of the
appeal.
72. Appeals against orders of Registrar of Copyrights
and Copyright Board-
(1) Any person aggrieved by
any final decision or order of the Registrar of Copyrights may, within three
months from the date of the order or decision, appeal to the Copyright Board.
(2) Any person aggrieved bv
any final decision or order of the Copyright Board, not being a decision or
order made in an appeal under sub-section (1), may, within three months from
the date of such decision or order, appeal to the High Court within whose
jurisdiction the appellant actually and voluntarily resides or carries on
business or personally works for gain.
Provided that
no such appeal shall lie against a decision of the Copyright Board under
section 6.
(3) In calculating the
period of three months provided for an appeal under this section, the time
taken in granting a certified copy of the order or record of the decision
appealed against shall be excluded.
73. Procedure for appeals- The High Court may make rules consistent with this Act as to the
procedure to be followed in respect of appeals made to it under section 72.
CHAPTER XV
MISCELLANEOUS
74. Registrar of Copyrights and Copyright Board to
possess certain powers of Civil Courts- The Registrar of Copyrights
and the Copyright Board shall have the powers of a Civil Court when trying a
suit under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), in respect of the
following matters, namely,-
(a) Summoning and enforcing the attendance of
any person and examining him on oath;
(b) Requiring the discovery and production of any document;
(c) Receiving evidence on affidavits;
(d) Issuing commissions for the examination of witnesses or
documents;
(e) Requisitioning any public record or copy thereof from any Court
or Office;
(f) Any other matter, which may be prescribed.
Explanation- For the purpose of enforcing the attendance of witnesses, the local
limits of the jurisdiction of the Registrar of Copyrights or the Copyright
Board, as the case may be, shall be the limits of the territory of India.
75. Orders for
payment of money passed by Registrar of Copyrights, and Copyright Board to be
executable as a decree- Every order made by the
Registrar of Copyrights or the Copyright Board under this Act for the payment
of any money or by the High Court in any appeal against any such order of the
Copyright Board shall, on a certificate issued by the Registrar of Copyrights,
the Copyright Board or the Registrar of the High Court, as the case may be, be
deemed to be a decree of a Civil Court and shall be executable in the same
manner as a decree of such Court.
76. Protection
of action taken in good faith- No suit or other legal
proceeding shall lie against any person in respect of anything which is in good
faith done or intended to be done in pursuance of this Act.
77. Certain
persons to be public servants- Every officer appointed
under this Act and every member of the Copyright Board shall be deemed to be a public
servant within the meaning of section 21 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).
(1)
The Central Government may, by
notification in the Official Gazette, make rules1 for carrying out the purposes of
this Act.
(2) In particular, and without prejudice to
the generality of the foregoing power, the Central Government may make rules to
provide for all or any of the following matters, namely,-
(a) The term of office and conditions of
service of the Chairman and other members of the Copyright Board;
(b) The form of complaints and applications
to be made, and the licences to be granted, under this Act;
(c) The procedure to be followed in
connection with any proceeding before the Registrar of Copyrights;
2[(ca) The conditions for submission of application under sub-section (2)
of section 33;
(cb) The conditions subject to which a copyright
society may be registered under sub-section (3) of section 33;
(cc) The inquiry for cancellation of
registration under sub-section (4) of section 33;
(cd) The conditions subject to which the
copyright society may accept authorisation under clause (a) of sub-section (1)
of section 34 and the conditions subject to which owners of rights have right
to withdraw such authorisation under clause (d) of that sub-section;
(ce) The conditions subject to which a copyright
society may issue licences, collect fees and distribute such fees amongst
owners of rights under sub-section (3) of section 34;
(cf) The manner in which the approval of the
owners of rights regarding collection and distribution of fees, approval for
utilization of any amount collected as fees and to provide to such owners
information concerning activities in relation to the administration of their
rights under sub-section (1) of section 35;
(cg) The returns to be filed by copyright
societies to the Registrar of Copyrights under sub-section (1) of section 36;]
(d) The manner of determining any royalties
payable under this Act, and the security to be taken for the payment of such
royalties;
3[(da) The manner of payment of royalty under clause (j) of sub-section
(1) of section 52;
(db) The form and the manner in which the
copyright society shall maintain accounts and other relevant records and
prepare annual statements of accounts and the manner in which the quantum of
remuneration is to be paid to individual owner of rights under sub-section (1)
of section 52B;]
(e) The form of Register of Copyrights to be
kept under this Act and the particulars to be entered therein;
(f) The matters in respect of which the
Registrar of Copyrights and the Copyright Board shall have powers of a Civil
Court;
(g) The fees which may be payable under this
Act;
(h) The regulation of business of the
Copyright Office and of all things by this Act placed under the direction or
control of the Registrar of Copyrights.
4[(3) Every rule made under this section shall be laid, as soon as may
be, after it is made, before each House of Parliament, while it is in session,
for a total period of thirty days which may be comprised in one session or in
two or more successive sessions, and if, before the expiry of the session
immediately following the session or the successive sessions aforesaid, both
Houses agree in making any modification in the rule or both Houses agree that
the rule should not be made, the rule shall thereafter have effect only in such
modified form or be of no effect, as the case may be; so, however, that any
such modification or inurnment shall be without prejudice to the validity of
anything previously done under that rule.]
1. Printed after the
Copyright Act, 1957.
2. Clauses (ca), (cb),
(cc), (cd), (ce), (co and (cg) ins. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 24, w.e.f. 10.5.1995.
3. Clauses (da) and (db) ins. by Act 38 of 1994, s. 24, w.e.f.
10.5.1995.
4. Subs. by Act 23 of
1983, s. 23, for sub-section (3), w.e.f. 9.8.1984.
79. Repeals, savings and transitional
provisions-
(1) The
Indian Copyright Act, 1914 (3 of 1914) and the Copyright Act of 1911 passed
by the Parliament of the United Kingdom
as modified in its application to India by the Indian Copyright Act, 1914 (3 of
1914), are hereby repealed.
(2) Where any person has, before the
commencement of this Act, taken any action where by he has incurred any
expenditure or liabilities in connection with the production or performance of
any work in a manner which at the time was lawful or for the purpose of or with
a view to the reproduction or performance of a work at a time when such
reproduction or performance would, but for the coming into force of this Act,
have been lawful, nothing in this section shall diminish, or prejudice any
rights or interests arising from or in connection with such action which are
subsisting and valuable at the said date, unless the person who, by virtue of
this Act, becomes entitled to restrain such reproduction or performance agrees
to pay such compensation as, failing agreement, may be determined by the
Copyright Board.
(3) Copyright shall not subsist by virtue of
this Act in any work in which copyright did not subsist immediately before the
commencement of this Act under any Act repealed by sub-section (1).
(4) Where copyright subsisted in any work
immediately before the commencement of this Act, the rights comprising such
copyright shall, as from the date of such commencement, be the rights specified
in section 14 in relation to the class of works to which such work belongs, and
where any new rights are conferred by that section, the owner of such rights
shall be-
(a) In any case where copyright in the work
was wholly assigned before the commencement of this Act, the assignee or his
successor-in-interest;
(b) In any other case, the person who was the
first owner of the copyright in the work under any Act repealed by sub-section
(1) or his legal representatives.
(5) Except as otherwise provided in this Act,
where any person is entitled immediately before commencement of this Act to
copyright in any work or any right in such copyright or to an interest in any
such right, he shall continue to be entitled to such right or interest for the
period for which he would have been entitled thereto if this Act has not come
into force.
(6) Nothing contained in this Act shall be
deemed to render any act done before its commencement an infringement of
copyright if that act would not otherwise have constituted such an
infringement.
(7) Save as otherwise provided in this
section, nothing in this section shall be deemed to affect the application of
the General Clauses Act, 1897 (10 of 1897), with respect to the effect of
repeals.