H.Rep - No. 92-487, 92d Cong., 1st Sess. (Sept. 22, 1971) PDF
H.Rep - No. 92-487, 92d Cong., 1st Sess. (Sept. 22, 1971) PDF
H.Rep - No. 92-487, 92d Cong., 1st Sess. (Sept. 22, 1971) PDF
CONGRESS
1st Session
H O U S E OF R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S
P R O H I B I T I N G PIRACY
REPORT
No. 9 2 - 4 8 7
OF S O U N D RECORDINGS
Mr.
KASTENMETEB,
REPORT
[To accompany S. 646]
OF T H E
AMENDMENTS
C3J
**
2
over the protection of sound recordings will, it is hoped, be part of a
copyright law revision.
PURPOSE
OF T H E A M E N D E D
BILL
Existing Federal copyright law (title 17, United States Code) pro
tects the owners of copyright in musical works from unauthorized and
uncompensated duplication but there is no Federal protection of sound
recordings, as such. As a result, so-called "record pirates," if they
satisfy the clam of the owner of the musical copyright, can and do
engage in widespread unauthorized reproduction of phonograph rec
ords and tapes without violating Federal copyright law.
It is also true under exsting law that the protection given to owners
of copyright in musical works with respect to recordings of their
works is special and limited.
The purpose of S. 646 as amended is twofold. First, Section 1 of the
bill creates a limited copyright in sound recordings, as such, making
unlawful the unauthorized reproduction and sale of copyrighted sound
recordings. By Committee Amendment No. 2, above, this right is ap
plicable only to sound recordings fixed, published, and copyrighted on
or after the effective date of the legislation and before January 1,1975.
Second, Section 2 of the bill provides that persons engaging in the
unauthorized use of copyrighted musical works in recordings shall be
subject to all the provisions of title 17 dealing with infringement of
copyrights and, in the case of willful infringement for profit, to
criminal prosecution pursuant to Section 104.
REASON
FOR T H E L E G I S L A T I O N
3
theory that the copyright clause of the Federal Constitution has pre
empted the field even if Congress has not granted any copyright pro
tection to sound recordings. While the committee expresses no opinion
concerning this legal question, it is clear that the extension of copy
right protection to sound recordings would resolve many of the prob
lems which have arisen in connection with the efforts to combat piracy
in State courts.
LEGISLATIVE
BACKGROUND
II
4
COMMITTEE
VIEWS:
GENERAL
REVISION
LICENSE
NO
SOLUTION
Senate Report No. 92-72, accompanying S. 646, noted that "[c]ertain of the manufacturers engaged in the unauthorized reproduction
of records and tapes have proposed the inclusion in the legislation of
provisions granting a compulsory license to reproduce records and
tapes upon payment of a statutory royalty." This proposal was
strongly reiterated during the hearings before our Subcommitee, the
argument being that, as paraphrased in the Senate Report, "such a
provision would be an appropriate adjunct to the compulsory license
provided the record industry by the mechanical royalty contained in
the Copyright Act." The Senate Committee rejected this proposal on
the ground that the two situations are not parallel: the existing com
pulsory license merely provides access to the copyrighted musical com
position, which is the "raw material" of a recording, and the perform
ers, arrangers, and recording experts are needed to produce the
finished creative work in the form of a distinctive sound recording. In
the view of the Senate Committee, there is "no justification for the
granting of a compulsory license to copy the finished product, which
has been developed and promoted through the efforts of the record
company and the artists."
The Committee agrees that it is necessary, without delay, to estab
lish Federal legislation prohibiting unauthorized manufacturers from
reproduction and distribution of recorded performances. We are also
persuaded that it would be wholly impracticable in this legislation, to
set up the complicated procedural machinery that would be required
for the fair administration of a compulsory license even if it were
found to have some advantages from the viewpoint of the public. We
believe that a strong case has been made for protection against the
current practices of the so-called "record pirates," and that the case
for a compulsory license has not been established. Any such compul
sory license would necessarily extend to all record producers and to
any of their recordings. It would have drastic effects upon the struc
ture of the industry, even if some way could be found to establish a
IS
5
fair royalty rate and assure a fair division and distribution of royalty
receipts. It would enable the "pirates" to select those recordings that
become hits, and thus to invade the producer's market for his profit
able recordings, while leaving the producer to suffer the losses from
his unsuccessful ones. At the same time, we recognize that in some
cases the consuming public may be able to obtain selections, or collec
tions of selections, not available from regular sources and at somewhat
lower than prevailing prices. The Committee believes that Section 1
of S. 646 as limited by the Committee's amendment should be enacted
in its present form. Certainly the entire question of compulsory licens
ing can be reexamined by the Committee when it again considers legis
lation for general revision of the copyright law.
SOUND
RECORDINGS
AS
"WORKS"
PICTURES
13
6
motion picture" from the scope of this legislation the Committee does
not intend to limit or otherwise alter the rights that exist currently
in such works. The exclusion reflects the Committee's opinion that
soundtracks or audio tracks are an integral part of the "motion pic
tures" already accorded protection under subsections (1) and (m)
of Section 1 of title 17, and that the reproduction of the sound accom
panying a copyrighted motion picture is an infringement of copyright
in the motion picture. This is true whatever the physical form of the
reproduction, whether or not the reproduction also includes visual
images, and whether the motion picture copyright owner had licensed
use of the soundtrack on records.
Under the existing title 17, "motion pictures" represent a broad
genus whose fundamental characteristic is a series of related images
that impart an impression of motion when shown in succession, in
cluding any sounds integrally conjoined with the images. Under this
concept the physical form in which the motion picture is fixedfilm,
tape, discs, and so forthis irrelevant, and the same is true whether
the images reproduced in the physical object can be made out with
the naked eye or require optical, electronic, or other special equipment
to be perceived. Thus, to take a specific example, if there is an un
authorized reproduction of the sound portion of a copyrighted tele
vision program fixed on video tape, a suit for copyright infringement
could be sustained under section 1(a) of title 17 rather than under the
provisions of this bill, and this would be true even if the television
producer had licensed the release of a commercial phonograph record
incorporating the same sounds.
FII;ST
SALE
DOCTRINE
CONSENT
TO MANUFACTURER UNDER
SECTION
1(E)
7
NEW
RIGHTS
NO
LIMITATION ON RIGHTS
I N OTHER
TYPES
OP WORKS
USES
Many public libraries and some school and college libraries have long
offered their patrons the service of lending sound recordings of music,
dramatic readings, language instruction and similar works in the same
manner in which they lend books, periodicals and other materials. Some
of these nonprofit libraries may require the payment of a small sum for
the use of relatively new recorded works which are, for a time, in heavy
demand. It is not the intention that the limitations on lending or rent
ing contained in proposed new Section 1 (f) reach out to apply to these
long-established practices by nonprofit libraries. When a library has
acquired ownership of a lawful recording, the "first sale doctrine" re
ferred to above leaves the library free to lend or otherwise dispose of
that recording.
H O M E RECORDING
OF COPYRIGHTED MUSIC
RECORDING
8
rights of copyright proprietors the right to reproduce the copyrighted
work if it be a sound recording. It is provided that the right does not
extend to the making or duplication of another sound recording that is
an independent fixation of other sounds, or to reproductions made by
transmitting organizations exclusively for their own use.
PUBLIC TELEVISION A N D
RADIO
AS
9
Section 1, the provisions of Section 2 of the bill are made effective
immediately upon enactment of S. 646.
Section 3 of the bill as amended provides that the effective date of
the legislation (other than Section 2) should be four months after
enactment and that the copyright law as amended by Section 1 should
apply only to sound recordings fixed, published, and copyrighted on
and after the effective date of the Act and before January 1,1975. The
four-month period following enactment and preceding the effective
date was requested by the Copyright Office in order to enable implemen
tation of the Act. The purpose of the provision limiting the applica
tion of Section 1 to sound recordings copyrighted before January 1,
1975, is spelled out under P U R P O S E OF T H E AMENDMENTS
above. As has been indicated, Section 2 of S. 646 is not subject to a
terminal date and is made effective immediately upon enactment. This
section amends Section 101 (e) of title 17 to make criminal sanctions
immediately available to prevent piracy of already existing record
ings of copyrighted musical works where the pirate does not pay the
statutory royalty to the holder of the musical copyright.
COST
TO T H E U N I T E D
STATES
VIEWS
Attached hereto and made part hereof are the reports of the Librar
ian of Congress and of the State, Justice, and Commerce Departments
expressing support of S. 646:
THE
LIBRARIAN
OF
CONGRESS,
EMANUEL,
CELLER,
11
10
use of inexpensive cassette and cartridge tape players, this trend seems
certain to continue unless effective legal means of combatting it can be
found. Neither the present Federal copyright statute nor the common
law or statutes of the various states are adequate for this purpose. The
best solution, an amendment of the copyright law to provide limited
protection against unauthorized duplication, is that embodied in
S. 646.
We also support in general the language of the bill amending title 17
of the United States Code. This amendatory language draws heavily
upon the language of the bill for general revision of the copyright law
now pending in the Senate (S. 644). An earlier version of the general
revision bill was reported favorably by your Committee in 1966 and
1967 (H.R. Rep. Nos. 2237 and 83) and was passed by the House of
Representatives on April 11,1967. The provisions of that bill dealing
with unauthorized duplication of sound recordings were the same in
substance as those of S. 646.
In favorably reporting S. 646, the Senate Judiciary Committee
adopted certain amendments, all of which were incorporated in the
bill as it passed the Senate, and all of which we favor. In particular,
we strongly support the addition of a new section 2, removing an
anachronistic and unfair limitation on the remedies available to owners
of copyrighted musical compositions against record pirates. This new
section 2 also is the same in substance as provisions included in the gen
eral revision bill passed by the House of Representatives on April 11,
1967.
We also endorse the interpretation of the bill, as stated in S. Rep.
No. 92-72 that "this limited copyright not grant any broader rights
than are accorded to other copyright proprietors under the existing
title 17." Under this interpretation, any act that would be considered
"fair use" of a recorded musical composition would be considered
"fair use" of the recording itself, and thus outside the reach of copy
right in the recording.
The most fundamental question raised by the bill is its relationship
to the program for general revision of the copyright law. As noted
above, the revision bill now pending in the Senate has parallel pro
visions, and if general revision were on the threshold of enactment,
S. 646 would be unnecessary. However, some fundamental problems
impeding the progress of general revision of the copyright law, notably
the issue of cable television, have not yet been resolved. We agree that
the national and international problem of record piracy is too urgent
to await comprehensive action on copyright law revision, and that the
amendments proposed in S. 646 are badly needed now. Upon enact
ment of the revision bill they would, of course, be merged into the
larger pattern of the revised statute as a whole.
I should also mention that the problem of record piracy is one of
immediate concern internationally, and that a draft treaty closely cor
responding to the content and purpose of S. 646 was adopted by a
Committee of Governmental Experts on March 5, 1971. This draft
convention will be the subject of an International Conference of States
to be convened in Geneva in October of this year. Favorable action on
the domestic bill will not only help our negotiators but also encourage
11
protection of our records against the growing menace of piracy in
other countries.
For the foregoing reasons, I recommend that your Committee give
S. 646 its favorable consideration.
Sincerely yours,
L.
QTJINCY
MTJMFORD,
Librarian of Congress.
DEPARTMENT
OF
STATE,
EMANUEL
CELLER,
12
The Office of Management and Budget advises that from the stand
point of the Administration's program there is no objection to the
submission of this report.
Sincerely,
DAVID
M.
ABSHIRE,
OFFICE
OF T H E DEPUTY
ATTORNEY
Relations.
GENERAL,
E M A N U E L CELLER,
13
Under the bill, sound recordings are defined as "works that result
from the fixation of a series of musical, spoken, or other sounds, but
not including sounds accompanying a motion picture." "Reproduc
tions of sound recordings" are defined as material objects in which
sounds other than those accompanying a motion picture are fixed and
include the parts of instruments serving to reproduce mechanically the
musical work, mechanical reproductions, and interchangeable parts,
such as discs or tapes for use in mechanical music-producing machines.
Copyright protection under the present Copyright Act (17 U.S.C. 1
et seq.) is extended prospectively to sound recordings. The exclusive
right created thereby is limited to the duplication in tangible form of
the specific recorded performance copyrighted: it does not include
imitation or simulation of that performance. The rights conferred are
limited in duration to twenty-eight years with the right of renewal
and extension for an additional twenty-eight years. 17 U.S.C. 24.
The bill does not apply retroactively and Section 3 expressly states
that it should not be construed as affecting in any way any rights with
respect to sound recordings fixed before the date of enactment. It
thus does not deal with recorded performances already in existence.
Instead it leaves to pending or future litigation the validity of state
common law or statutes governing the unauthorized copying of exist
ing recordings. The result of making this copyright authority prospec
tive only is to create at least one ambiguity.
The bill would not directly grant any copyright protection to exist
ing records since the new copyright in sound recordings would be
applicable only to recordings made after four months after enact
ment of the bill. However, since the bill provides that the amendment
to 17 U.S.C. 101(e) will take effect immediately upon enactment,
criminal sanctions would seem to be available to prevent further piracy
of existing recordings where copyrighted music was used and the
pirate does not pay the statutory royalty to the holder of the musical
copyright. Whether such criminal prosecution is possible depends on
the interpretation of the clause in Section 3 of the bill at page 5,
lines 13-16 which reads:
* * * nothing in title 17 of the United States Code shall
be applied retroactively or be construed as affecting in any
way any rights with respect to sound recordings fixed be
fore that date.
It should be made clear either by amendment or committee reports
whether the amendment to section 101(e) is intended to apply to the
manufacture, use, or sale after enactment of the bill of pirate record
ings of records made prior to enactment.
We believe that extending copyright to reproduction of sound re
cordings is the soundest, and in our interpretation of Sears and
Compco, the only way in which sound recordings should be protected.
Copyright protection is narrowly defined and limited in duration,
whereas state remedies, whose validity is still in doubt, frequently
create broad and unwarranted perpetual monopolies. Moreover, there
is an immediate and urgent need for this protection.
Xot only does the creative record industry have a legitimate interest
in protecting its substantial investment in the production and promo
tion of recorded performances, but such protection would also pre-
21
14
serve employment opportunities for performers and encourage their
future contributions to society's geneal fund of intellectual creations.
The competition provided by the pirate record industry does not
promote any of the traditional benefits of competition. Although the
pirate record companies may greatly undercut the prices charged by
the creative industry, their ability to do so results in large part from
the fact that they do not compensate the creative writers and artists
involved. Such practices discourage the investment of money and
talents in new performances and has the potential to gravely injure
creative recording.
The bill limits the exclusive right of the ownership of a copyright
in a sound recording "to the right to duplicate a sound recording in
a tangible form that directly or indirectly recaptures the actual sounds
fixed in the recording * * *." (Emphasis added.) It is clear from this
language that the exclusive right accorded by this bill does not extend
to the reproduction of the sounds themselves, as, for example, by
playing a sound recording over the radio.
In the case of a recording of music which is itself copyrighted, the
copyright granted to a sound recording by the bill would apparently
be subject to 17 U.S.C. 7. Section 7 provides that versions of copy
righted works produced with the consent of the copyright owner shall
be regarded as new works subject to copyright. This section, which
would prevent persons from obtaining a.copy right for an unauthorized
sound recording, seemingly creates an issue as to whether a record
manufacturer relying on the provisions of 17 U.S.C. 1(e) would
be entitled to copyright his recording since he need not have the express
consent of the copyright owner of the sheet music. This follows from
the provision in section 1(e) that, when the owner of a musical copy
right has permitted anyone to record his music, any other person may
make similar use of the musical work upon payment of a royalty of
two cents per recording. It is likely that a court would find acceptance
of the royalty to imply consent, nevertheless we believe that this am
biguity should be removed. We suggest an amendment of 17 U.S.C.
7 as follows:
.
Compilations or abridgments, adaptations, arrangements,
dramatizations, translations, or other versions of works in
the public domain or of copyrighted works when produced
with the consent of the copyright proprietor of such works
or, in the case of sound recordings, manufactured in com
pliance with section J, subsection (e), of this title, or works
republished with new matter, shall be regarded as new works
subject to copyright * * *. (material in italics is new).
Criminal prosecution of tape and record pirates under existing
copyright law is barred because (1) performers and recording com
panies are given no copyright in their sound recordings, and (2)
criminal action for infringement of the copyright on the underlying
musical composition is expressly prohibited by 17 U.S.C. 101(e). The
bill would eliminate both bars by giving a limited copyright in sound
recordings and amending 17 U.S.C. 101(e) to grant the copyright
interest in the musical composition the protection of criminal sanctions
against unauthorized recordings.
Subject to the suggestions made above, the Department of Justice
recommends enactment of this legislation.
15
The Office of Management and Budget advises that there is no
objection to the submission of this report from the standpoint of the
Administration's program.
Sincerely,
RlCHARD
G.
Deputy
STATEMENT
OF WILLIAM
N.
LETSON,
DEPARTMENT
SUBMITTED
OF
TO S U B C O M M I T T E E N O .
JUNE
GENERAL
General.
COUNSEL,
COMMERCE
3, HOUSE
10,
KLEINDHONST,
Attorney
JUDICIARY
COMMITTEE,
1971
16
facturers, not only in export sales, but in royalties. A proposed inter
national "Convention for the Protection of Phonograms Against Un
authorized Duplication" designed to remedy the international piracy
situation is scheduled for negotiation in Geneva, next October. Enact
ment of the bill would enhance the United States Delegation's nego
tiating position at this revision conference in efforts to achieve effective
international protection for sound recordings.
Accordingly, the Department of Commerce favors enactment of
S. 6 4 6 .
CHANGES
IN
EXISTING
LAW
COPYRIGHTS
(Act of July 30, 1947, ch. 391 ( 6 2 Stat. 6 5 2 ; 17 U . S . C . ) )
The changes made In sections 1, 5, 19, 20, and 26 of title 17 apply only to sound re
cordings fixed, published, and copyrighted on and after the effective date of S. 646 and
before Jan. 1, 1975.
17
(n) Sound
*
recordings.
*
18
reproduce mechanically the musical work," "mechanical reproduc
tions," and "interchangeable parts, such as discs or tapes for use in
mechanical music-producing machines" referred to in sections 1(e)
and 101 (e) of this title.
*.
101. Infringement
If any person shall infringe the copyright in any work protected
under the copyright laws of the United States such person shall be
liable:
(a)
INJUNCTION.
*
ROYALTIES
"*
FOR
*
USE
OF
*
MECHANICAL
REPRODUCTION
OF
used or permitted the use of the copyrighted work upon the parts of
musical instruments serving to reproduce mechanically the musical
work, then in case of infringement of such copyright by the unau
thorized manufacture, use, or sale of interchangeable parts, such as
discs, rolls, bands, or cylinders for use in mechanical music-producing
machines adapted to reproduce the copyrighted music, no criminal
action shall be brought, but in a civil action ah injunction may be
granted upon such terms as the court may impose, and the plaintiff
shall be entitled to recover in lieu of profits and damages a royalty as
provided in section 1, subsection (e), of this title: Provided also, That
whenever any person, in the absence of a license agreement, intends
to use a copyrighted musical composition upon the parts of instru
ments serving to reproduce mechanically the musical work, relying
upon the compulsory license provision of this title, he shall serve notice
of such intention, by registered mail, upon the copyright proprietor
at his last address disclosed by the records of the copyright office,
sending to the copyright office a duplicate of such notice; and in case
of his failure so to do the court may, in its discretion, in addition to
sums hereinabove mentioned, award the complainant a further sum,
not to exceed three times the amount provided by section 1, subsec
tion (e), of this title, by way of damages, and not as a penalty, and
also a temporary injunction until the full award is paid.]
(e) INTERCHANGEABLE PASTS FOB USE IN MECHANICAL
MUSICPBODUCINO MACHINES.Interchangeable
parts, such as discs or tapes
19
dealing with infringements of copyright and, in a case of willful in
fringement for profit, to criminal prosecution pursuant to section 104
of this title. Whenever any person, in the absence of a license agree
ment, intends to use a copyrighted musical composition upon the parts
of instruments serving to reproduce mechanically the musical work,
relying upon the compulsory license provision of this title, he shall
serve notice of such intention, by registered mail, upon the copyright
proprietor at his last address disclosed by the records of the copyright
office, sending to the copyright office a duplicate of such notice.