Contracting with Minors - Copyright Implications

Entering into contracts with minors in connection with entertainment-related project can be risky - many jurisdictions legislate particular rules which govern when a contract with a minor will be enforceable against that minor (for previous Signal coverage on the topic, see here), and failure to abide by those rules can imperil the contract.  One area, of particular interest to entertainment lawyers, which has historically been under-analyzed is how child authors are (or should be) treated by copyright law.  Where you're dealing with very young children (say, under the age of 8), the issues become even more acute: to what extent can a child that young meaningfully be said either to have engaged in an act of artistic creation or to have entered into a binding contract?

Julie Cromer Young has written "From the Mouths of Babes: Protecting Child Authors from Themselves" (112 West Virginia Law Review 431 (2010) (hat tip: Media Law Prof Blog), one of the first articles of which I'm aware that explores in detail the interface between copyright, contracts and child authors.  From the abstract:

This article begins by examining the practical ability or inability of the, "infant author," to achieve and exploit the full rights of copyright, given that the Copyright Office itself seems to recognize that any rights given to infant authors are tempered by contract laws. Section II reviews the contractual doctrine of infancy and its effect upon a child author's protection under copyright law. Section III examines the specific problem of minors contracting regarding their copyrights, especially online contracts. Section IV explores the issue as currently framed, reviewing potential solutions already suggested and noting their inherent problems. Section V examines the recent decision in A.V. v. iParadigms, noting potential flaws in the court's rationale. Section VI explores some of these problems, including constitutional rights that support the creative process but which may be limited in a child's setting, and suggests a measure that Congress could take to ensure that these rights are born with the child's work and mature as quickly as rights for a work authored by an adult.

While Young is writing primarily about US law, the issues and analysis should be of interest to entertainment lawyers in all jurisdictions.

Contracting with Minors - Further Comparative Approaches

In the inimitable Law Law Land style (no, seriously, not capable of being imitated... I've tried), Brian Berman explores, from the perspective of California law, various issues about engaging actors who are minors: Hailee Steinfeld Owns Hollywood…But Who Owns Hailee Steinfeld?

Contracting with minors often exposes one of the larger gaps between Canadian and US entertainment law practice: US producers and lawyers are sometimes startled to learn that, at least in the Province of Ontario, no statute exists which creates a pre-determined process to have a court affirm that a contract entered into with a minor is enforceable (British Columbia, by contrast, does have such a statutory procedure in place).  I canvassed the differences in the law and practice in California, New York, British Columbia and Ontario in my article "A Minor Conundrum: Contracting with Minors in Canada for Film and Television Producers", originally published in 29 Hastings Comm. & Ent. L.J. 45 (2006-2007), and a copy of which is available here.

Contracting with Minors - A Comparative Approach

Recent news that the voice actor behind "Dora the Explorer" has filed suit against the producers of the show on the basis that the contract signed by the actor (who is a minor) is "unconscionable" offers a chance to review an area of entertainment law which is drastically different on either side of the Canada/US border.  Diane Krausz and Jennifer Bellusci offer some thoughts on how the lawsuit has been framed in legal terms and a brief overview of New York State law on contracting with minors in "Dora Explores a Minor Platform", while Rachel Valadez explores some of the non-legal (but still important for lawyers) strategic considerations behind the handling of the lawsuit in "Lessons From the Legal Saga of Dora the Explo(rer/iter/ited".  A comprehensive review of the law of contracting with minors for film and TV productions in New York, California, Ontario and British Columbia can be found in my article "A Minor Conundrum: Contracting with Minors in Canada for Film and Television Producers", originally published in 29 Hastings Comm. & Ent. L.J. 45 (2006-2007), and a copy of which is available here.