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(including by definition a dramatic or musical work, when printed and published), "whether the author is a British subject or not, which has been printed from type set up in Australia, or plates made therefrom, or from plates or negatives made in Australia, in cases where type is not necessarily used, and has ... been published in Australia before or simultaneously" (defined as within fourteen days) "with its first publication elsewhere"; and the copyright term is forty-two years from first publication in Australia or the life of the author or of the last surviving joint author and seven years thereafter, whichever the longer. Performing right and lecturing right subsist separately for a like period from first public performance or delivery in Australia simultaneously with first public performance or delivery elsewhere. But lecturing right ceases if a lecture is published as a book. The author is the first owner of copyright or performing right, except as employed for valuable consideration, and in the latter case may reprint an article from a periodical after one year. Copyright subsists in every artistic work "made in Australia, but the copyright of a portrait or photograph is with the person ordering it.

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A dramatic work includes a libretto or lyrical work Dramatic set to music or otherwise, "or other scenic or dramatic and musical composition"; a musical work is defined as "any combination of melody and harmony, or either of them, printed, reduced to writing or otherwise graphically produced or reproduced"—which seems to omit mechanical reproductions.

Copyright is a distinct and separable property Performing from performing right or the ownership of an right artistic work, and either right may be separately assigned under any conditions or limitations. Where a dramatic or musical work is published as a book,

Registration and license

New Zealand

notice of reservation of performing right must be printed thereon, in default of which the owner of the performing right cannot obtain damages from an infringer, but may obtain them from the owner of the copyright who has neglected after notice to print such reservation. The proprietor, tenant or occupier who permits a place to be used for an infringing performance shall be deemed an infringer. The owner of a performing right may himself issue notices in writing forbidding performance, disregard of which involves a specified fine.

Provision is made for a registrar and deputies, and for a general Copyright Office where shall be kept separate registers of literary copyrights, of fine art copyrights and of international and state copyrights. The owner of any copyright, performing or lecturing right may obtain registration by the deposit of two copies of the best edition of a book or one copy of an art work or photograph of it, and no suit can be maintained prior to such registration. In case, after the death of an author, the owner of the copyright or performing right withholds the work from the public, the Governor-General may grant a license for publication or performance.

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New Zealand, now a separate self-governing dominion, provided when a British colony, like the Australian colonies before their consolidation into the self-governing Commonwealth, by an Ordinance of 1842 for a copyright term of twenty-eight years or life, whichever the longer, and has since passed special acts, covering specific classes, 1877 to 1903, but seemingly no general code. Photographs are protected for five years from the taking. Telegraph dispatches were protected by the electric lines act of 1884. Local registration seems to be provided only, and then optionally, for the protection of plays, for which

purpose application with a copy of the play should be made at the Registry of Copyrights, Wellington, and if the play is printed a copy deposited in the Library of the General Assembly; and summary jurisdiction, with power of fine and imprisonment, is then given to the magistrates. To prevent importation, notice may be filed with the Minister of Customs in New Zealand, or through the London commissioners, as in the case of Australia.

In the other British islands of Australasia and the Australasia Pacific, Imperial copyright exclusively prevails, as a otherwise Fiji Islands' Ordinance of 1903, the only one passed

in any of the smaller islands, was disallowed by the

Crown.

British India provided a general copyright act in British India 1847, in line with preceding Imperial legislation, and under the press copyright act of 1867, somewhat modified the British Imperial law, especially providing for deposit of three copies in an office to be designated from time to time in the official gazette, within one month from publication, and the printing on each copy of the printer's and publisher's names. Quarterly publication of such titles is provided for as part of the official gazette. The general term is as in Great Britain, for life and seven years or forty-two years, whichever is longer, with variations for particular classes of works. Ceylon, Mauritius and Hong Kong have the like term and also provide for three deposit copies. In all these cases one copy is retained by the Secretary of State of the colony, one put at the disposition of the Governor and Council, and one after registration deposited in a designated public library. Straits Settlement (Singapore) provides for registration without deposit, in the office of Colonial Secretary. To prevent importation into British India, specific notice may be filed directly with

South Africa

Cape Colony

Natal

the Collectors of Customs at Bombay, Madras and Calcutta as well as through the London customs.

South Africa, the latest of the British self-governing dominions as organized in 1910 into a Union, has not yet adopted a general copyright code, which it may do under the precedent of Australia or after passage of the new British copyright code, by acceptance of that code or by independent legislation. Meantime its copyright relations are those of the former separate colonies, as the Cape Colony, Natal and other English colonies, following in the main English precedent, and the Transvaal and other Dutch colonies, following Holland precedent, including a requirement for printing within the country as a pre-requisite for copyright.

The Cape Colony, under acts of 1873, 1880, 1888 and 1895, provided local copyright for life and five years or thirty years, whichever the longer, four copies of a book or printed play first published in the colony to be deposited for registration by the printer within one month from delivery from the press, for registration with the Registrar of Deeds, these copies to be transmitted to designated libraries. Telegraph dispatches in newspapers were protected by the act of 1880, for 120 hours. Lists of copyrighted works are printed in the government gazette and thus communicated to the colonial customs authorities.

Natal, under acts of 1895, 1897 and 1898, provided local protection for the regular British term, two copies to be deposited with the Colonial Secretary for registration, within three months from publication. Messages by telegraph, pigeons and other special dispatch were protected by the act of 1895, for 72 hours. To protect a play, the title, if in manuscript, or a printed copy, must be registered precedent to local action. Probably failure to deposit in these colonies

does not forfeit copyright, and imperial provisions generally hold good.

The Transvaal, under local legislation of 1887, pro- Transvaal vided protection for fifty years from registration, receipt or for life, on condition of printing within the colony, and the deposit of three copies thus printed, within two months of publication, accompanied by the affidavit of the printer, without which formalities copyright was forfeited. A resolution of 1895 authorized waiver of the printing requirement in the case of countries having reciprocal relations. Reservation by printed notice was required to protect playright and right of translation; playright in a printed play was limited to ten years, but for an unpublished play was for life and thirty years. All these colonies, whether formerly British or Dutch, are probably now under Imperial copyright law, which would nullify local provisions incompatible with that law, pending the enactment of a South African general code.

Sierra Leone and the neighboring British colonies West coast on the west coast, as Gambia and the Gold Coast, are colonies under imperial copyright law, and passed local ordinances under the provisions of the British act of 1886, Sierra Leone having provided by Ordinance of 1887 for copyright for the usual British term with deposit of three copies in an office to be designated in the Sierra Leone Royal Gazette, and the other colonies having similiar provisions.

The Mediterranean islands of Malta and Cyprus, Mediterrain addition to imperial copyright, have local ordi- nean islands nances providing respectively for registration in an office notified in the government gazette, and deposit of three copies, within one month from publication. Gibraltar seems to be only under Imperial copyright.

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