CHAPTER ONE GENERAL INTRODUCTION
Copyright is one of the intellectual property that possesses
the essential attributes of ownership
and transmissibility.1 The ownership in copyright is transferrable
as movable property by assignment, testamentary disposition or by operation of law.2
Therefore, the incidence of ownership is
subject to any contractual agreement that may exist between the author
and other persons before or after the creation of the work. In the same vein, the provisions of the Copyright
Act3 concerning first ownership
of copyright and its consequences are also subject to the traditional tenet of freedom of contract.4
However, unlike many other movable properties,
copyright ownership cannot be taken
into physical possession. It falls into that class of properties more appropriately
described as choses in action.5
This is because rather than the
proprietary right over it being
exercised through physical possession, it can
only be realized by an action in court.6 What the owner has is a right of action.
Ownership in copyright comes
into existence automatically without need for formalities.7 The
result is that it is possible for the question of
ownership never to arise at all, until the copyright is the subject of some dispute. It will then be necessary to work out who is the
owner, with no assistance from
registers or formal documents. The rules of law
governing ownership of copyright are
therefore important.8 Authorship and ownership as distinct concepts under the Nigerian
copyright law are very important in exploiting the fruits in a
work and laying claim to copyright protection. Ownership flows
from authorship.
The person who makes the work is normally
the first owner of the copyright in the work, provided he has not created the work in the course of employment in which case his employer will be the first
owner of copyright. The owner of the copyright in a work may decide to exploit
the work by the use of one or
more contractual methods. He may grant a licence to allow others exploit the
work while he retains ownership of copyright. Alternatively, the owner may assign the copyright to another that is transfer the ownership of the copyright to a new owner,
relinquishing the economic rights under copyright law.
Under the Nigerian Copyright Act,9
ownership of copyright is not automatic.10 For example, if the
author is not a citizen of Nigeria or domiciled in Nigeria, he cannot lay claim
to copyright ownership, unless the work was first published in Nigeria or being
sound recording made in Nigeria. Likewise, if by contract of employment, an
author transferred the copyright in his work to the employer, he cannot also
lay claim to copyright ownership.11 The Copyright Act provides guide
as to who may claim copyright and the duration within which such copyright
ownership will last. The statutory provisions also define the extent of the
copyright owner and limits to these rights.