Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge RUTH BADER GINSBURG.
This case calls for interpretation of the “work made for hire” prescriptions of the Copyright Act of 1976 (1976 Act), 17 U.S.C.
*1487
§§ 101, 201 (1982).
1
The issue is novel in this circuit and has divided sister courts.
Compare Easter Seal Society for Crippled Children and Adults of Louisiana, Inc. v. Playboy Enterprises,
In the case at hand, the district court held the work for hire doctrine applicable and rested its judgment for the plaintiff on that doctrine. Following the path marked by the Fifth Circuit, we rule that case law on works made for hire developed under the Copyright Act of 1909 (1909 Act) no longer holds sway; in accord with
Easter Seal Society,
I.
Plaintiff-appellee in this case, the Community for Creative Non-Violence (CCNV), is a Washington, D.C.-based non-profit unincorporated association devoted to the welfare of homeless people. In the fall of 1985, CCNV decided to participate in the annual Christmas Pageant of Peace in D.C. by sponsoring a display that would drajm-atize the plight of the homeless. As the district court recounted, Mitch Snyder, CCNV’s agent and trustee (also named as a plaintiff-appellee in this action), and other CCNV members
conceived the idea for the nature of the display: a sculpture of a modem Nativity scene in which, in lieu of the traditional Holy Family, the two adult figures and the infant would appear as contemporary
homeless people huddled on a streetside steam grate. The family was to be black (most of the homeless in Washington being black); the figures were to be life-sized, and the steam grate would be positioned atop a platform “pedestal,” or base, within which special-effects equipment would be enclosed to emit simulated “steam” through the grid to swirl about the figures. They also settled upon a title for the work — “Third World America” — and a legend for the pedestal: “and still there is no room at the inn.”
Community for Creative Non-Violence v. Reid,
Snyder contacted James Earl Reid, a Baltimore sculptor and defendant-appellant herein; in the course of two telephone calls in October 1985, CCNV and Reid reached an agreement. Reid promised to sculpt the three human figures for “Third World America” and a shopping cart containing their meager belongings; he agreed to use a synthetic substance called “Design Cast 62” that could be tinted to resemble bronze. CCNV assumed responsibility for the steam grate and the pedestal. For a total outlay of approximately $7,000-$8,-000, CCNV engaged a cabinetmaker to construct the pedestal, obtained the special-effects equipment from a company in California, and acquired the chemicals needed to produce the simulated steam from Mobil Oil Company in New Jersey. The parties agreed that Reid’s portion of the sculpture would cost no more than $15,000, not counting the sculptor’s own services, which Reid donated to the venture; they further agreed that Reid’s work would be delivered to CCNV by December 12 for attachment to the base preparatory to display of the total creation in the Pageant. Neither party mentioned copyright.
Reid and his assistants worked on the figures for the sculpture throughout November and December, conferring from time to time with various CCNV members and making changes to the form and arrangement of the figures to accommodate *1488 CCNV’s requests. On December 24, 1985, Reid delivered his portion of “Third World America” to D.C. where it was joined to the steam grate pedestal and placed on display near the site of the Pageant. At that time, Reid received $3,000 from Snyder, the final installment of the $15,000 total payment due to him under the agreement.
In late January 1986, CCNV sent the entire sculpture to Reid so that he could repair damage to the foot of the male figure that occurred in the original transportation from Baltimore to D.C. The following month, CCNV began making plans to take the sculpture on a tour of several cities to raise money for the homeless. Reid objected to the planned tour insisting that the Design Cast 62 material was too delicate to withstand the ambitious itinerary; he urged CCNV to cast “Third World America” in bronze or to have a “master mold” made. CCNV declined to fund these additional undertakings but invited Reid to do so at his own expense.
In March 1986 CCNV asked Reid to return the sculpture; Reid refused. He filed a certificate of copyright registration for “Third World America” in his own name on March 20, 1986, 2 and announced his own plans to take the sculpture on an exhibition tour more moderate than the one CCNV had projected. Snyder filed a competing certificate of copyright registration in his name on May 21, 1986. 3 On June 2, 1986, CCNV commenced this litigation against Reid. The complaint sought return of the sculpture and a determination of copyright ownership. On July 25, 1986, the district court granted a preliminary injunction ordering Reid to return the sculpture to CCNV. On February 9, 1987, after a two-day bench trial, the district court declared “Third World America” a work made for hire whose copyright is owned exclusively by CCNV. Reid timely appealed that final decision.
II.
The 1976 Act prescribes that copyright ownership 4 “vests initially in the author or authors of the work,” and that “authors of a joint work are coowners of copyright in the work.” 17 U.S.C. § 201(a). As to a work made for hire, the Act provides that
the employer or other person for whom the work was prepared is considered the author for purposes of this title, and, unless the parties have expressly agreed *1489 otherwise in a written instrument signed by them, owns all of the rights comprised in the copyright.
17 U.S.C. § 201(b). “Work made for hire” is defined in the Act as
(1) a work prepared by an employee within the scope of his or her employment; or
(2) a work specially ordered or commissioned for use [1] as a contribution to a collective work, [2] as a part of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, [3] as a translation, [4] as a supplementary work, [5] as a compilation, [6] as an instructional text, [7] as a test, [8] as answer material for a test, or [9] as an atlas, if the parties expressly agree in a written instrument signed by them that the work shall be considered a work made for hire....
17 U.S.C. § 101 (numbers in brackets added). Our task is to determine where the contending parties fit within this statutory framework, specifically, is Reid an “author” of the sculpture “Third World America,” as that term is used in the section on ownership of copyright, § 201, or is CCNV the only party “considered the author”? The provision in § 101 defining “work made for hire” is key to this inquiry.
The first subpart of the § 101 “work made for hire” definition concerns work prepared in an “employment” setting; the second concerns works “specifically ordered or commissioned.” Does the distinction Congress made between “employment” in § 101(1) and “commissioned” work in § 101(2) mean, the Fifth Circuit asked in
Easter Seal Society,
A. The Second and Seventh Circuit Interpretation
The 1909 Act defined the word “author” to include an employer in the case of works made for hire, 17 U.S.C. § 26 (repealed 1976), but did not further delineate the “work made for hire” domain. Case law interpreting that Act treated expansively the relationships that qualified under the employer-employee rubric; a test of actual control by the commissioning party slackened to become a right to control (even if not exercised) standard. Ultimately, a firm presumption developed under which virtually “any person who paid another to create a copyrightable work” counted as the statutory “author” within the compass of the work for hire doctrine.
See Easter Seal Society,
Aldon Accessories noted the two subsections of the statutory (§ 101) “work made for hire” definition, and emphasized the first subsection: “a work prepared by an employee within the scope of his or her *1490 employment.” That subsection, according to the Second Circuit, retains in place prior case law ranking as “employees” whose labors yield works for hire “[independent] contractors who were actually sufficiently supervised and directed by the hiring party.” Id. 6 Under Aldon Accessories, if there is the requisite supervision and control, the commissioning party is deemed the author and sole owner of copyright in the work. 7
In more cryptic statement, Aldon Accessories addressed the second subsection of § 101’s “work made for hire” definition, the subsection delineating nine categories of “specially ordered or commissioned” works. Assuming the absence of the supervision-by-hiring-party ingredient, Aldon Accessories recognized that the independent contractor in these situations is sole author and copyright owner unless, as § 102(2) stipulates, “the parties expressly agree in a written instrument signed by them that the work should be considered a work made for hire.” Aldon Accessories did not home in on the case of the independent contractor who is not “sufficiently supervised and directed by the hiring party,” but whose commissioned work is not within the nine categories set out in § 101’s second subsection.
We pause here to observe that unlike the instant case, in which artist and commissioning party vie for ownership of a copyright, Aldon Accessories pitted the commissioning party (to boot, a genuinely creative participant) against a third-party in-fringer (and a blatant one at that). Plaintiff Aldon Accessories Ltd. (Aldon) was in the business of designing and marketing decorative objects. In 1977, one of Aldon’s two principals conceived of a novel line of statuettes depicting mythical creatures, notably, a Pegasus and a unicorn. Aldon first commissioned a Japanese firm to aid in the design of the figurines and to produce the creations in porcelain. Some two years later, Aldon commissioned a Taiwanese firm to produce brass versions of the statuettes. In 1980, Aldon filed certificates of copyright registration for the statuettes; Aldon listed itself as the author but indicated that the works were “made for hire.” In 1981 a buyer for Spiegel, Inc. (Spiegel) saw Aldon’s brass unicorn at a gift show. At the Spiegel buyer’s request, Aldon sent samples. By mid-1981, Spiegel was selling through its catalog brass unicorns identical to Aldon’s. Aldon sued Spiegel for copyright infringement.
On appeal from a judgment for Aldon, Spiegel argued that the statuettes could not be works made for hire under the 1976 Act because statuary does not fall into one of the nine categories enumerated in the second subsection of the § 101 definitional *1491 provision. Therefore Aldon could not be the author and copyright owner of the brass unicorn, Spiegel contended, and could not sue for copyright infringement. Understandably, Spiegel’s argument did not succeed.
The record in
Aldon
demonstrated the very active participation of Aldon’s principal every step of the way, from conception of the statuettes to “[standing] over the artists and artisans at critical stages of the process, telling them exactly what to do.”
Two years after the Second Circuit’s decision, the Seventh Circuit adopted the
Al-don Accessories
“sufficiently supervised and directed” test; in
Evans Newton Inc. v. Chicago Sys. Software,
The parties in
Evans Newton
had not “expressly agree[d] in a written instrument signed by them” that the work would constitute a “work made for hire,” 17 U.S.C. § 101, nor was a software program even in the § 101(2) catalog, and the court accepted the contractor’s assertion that work for hire status within § 101’s definition therefore turned on a characterization question: was the contractor an “employee”?
See
The evidence of “actual control” in
Evans Newton,
it has been observed, was less compelling than the showing of constant direction of the work in
Aldon Accessories. See Easter Seal Society,
*1492 B. The Fifth Circuit Interpretation
The Fifth Circuit panel in
Easter Seal Society
confronted and comprehensively explored this stated issue: “What effect, if any, did the Copyright Act of 1976 have on the ‘work for hire’ doctrine developed under the 1909 Act?”
The Fifth Circuit panel presented first a position it designates the “literal interpretation.” Summarily stated, that interpretation reads section 101
as a reflection of a simple dichotomy in fact between employees and independent contractors. In other words, a court should first determine — using agency law rules — whether or not the seller is an employee or an independent contractor. Then, the court should apply the statute. Section 101(1) applies to sellers who are employees. If the work was in the scope of employment, an agency-law employee is a copyright employee, and the employer is the “author.” Section 101(2) applies to independent contractors. All works by independent contractors — “work[s] specially ordered or commissioned” — are not works for hire unless the work comes within the nine narrow statutory categories and parties agree in a signed instrument. Section 101(2) is really statutory permission for certain kinds of independent contractors to give “authorship” to their buyers.
Id. at 329 (footnote omitted). 9 As the Fifth Circuit noted, the enumeration in subsection (2) affords telling support for the literal interpretation, for a common thread unites the nine precisely-defined categories: “All involve situations where, in addition to owning the copyrights in the works by contract, it would be very useful for [commissioning parties] to be able to become statutory ‘authors.’ ” Id. 10
We are particularly impressed by scholarly commentary on the legislative history of the 1976 Act and the almost unanimous support that commentary provides for the literal interpretation. See W. Patry, Lat-man’s The Copyright Law 122 (6th ed. 1986) (“Congress adopted the Copyright Office’s intent to limit the types of works created by independent contractors that could be deemed works made for hire to the specified examples given in the second subdivision of the statutory definition, ensuring that, contrary to some decisions construing Section 26 of the 1909 Act, works made for hire within the meaning of the ‘first’ definition would be limited to salaried or like employees and would not include independent contractors even if their work was closely supervised or controlled. The second subdivision of the ‘work made for hire’ definition was thus intended to be the exclusive provision governing works created by independent contractors.”) (footnote omitted); A. Latman, R. Gorman, & J.
*1493 Ginsburg, Copyright for the Eighties: Cases and Materials 242 (2d ed. 1985) (“[D]id the [Aldon Accessories ] court improperly blur an attempted statutory distinction between works created by ‘employees’ and ‘specially ordered or commissioned works/ a distinction designed by Congress to give commissioned persons greater copyright ownership rights than they had under the 1909 Act cases?”); Fidlow, The “Works Made for Hire” Doctrine and the Employee/Independent Contractor Dichotomy: The Need for Congressional Clarification, 10 Hastings Comm/ent L.J. 591 (1988); Hamilton, supra, at 1292-93 (“[F]rom a preliminary draft that excluded all commissioned works from the work-made-for-hire rubric, the copyright law revision developed into a final bill wherein only certain, specified categories of commissioned works could be considered as works made for hire.”) (footnote omitted); Litman, Copyright, Compromise, and Legislative History, 72 Cornell L. Rev. 857, 900-01 (1987); Note, The Freelancer’s Trap: Work for Hire Under the Copyright Act of 1976, 86 W. Va. L. Rev. 1305, 1321 (1984) (“With regard to works prepared on special order or commission, the ... definition [of the 1976 Act], which alters completely the status of commissioned works, represents a compromise which, in effect, spells out those specific categories of commissioned works that can be considered works made for hire under certain circumstances.”) (footnote omitted); see also 1 M. Nimmer & D. Nimmer, supra note 7, § 5.03[B][2][a], at 5-18 (apparently supporting the literal interpretation but attempting to reconcile contradictory cases); Angel & Tannen-baum, supra note 7, at 293 (writing in support of literal interpretation at time 1976 Act was enacted). But see O’Meara, “Works Made for Hire” Under the Copyright Act of 1976 — Two Interpretations, 15 Creighton L. Rev. 523 (1982) (supporting conservative interpretation discussed infra).
The Fifth Circuit referred next to the “conservative interpretation,” one that preserves in large part the work for hire doctrine developed under the 1909 Act.
See
The Fifth Circuit commented that the “[conservative] interpretation, unlike the ‘literal’ one, makes the nine narrow categories in § 101(2) completely mysterious.”
Easter Seal Society,
Finally, the Fifth Circuit examined as a “third view” the Aldon Accessories “actually sufficiently supervised and directed” test, discussed supra. Summarizing its examination, the Easter Seal Society court listed four problems with the Aldon Accessories approach:
(1) the [actual control] rule is unnecessary in cases where “work for hire” is raised by the defendant to question the validity of the plaintiffs copyright since any plaintiff who actually controls an independent contractor will be a co-author of the work; (2) it makes the outcome of “work for hire” analysis too fact-specific for each work and therefore less predictable by buyers and sellers; (3) it does not eliminate the need for a determination of employee versus independent contractor since the “actual control” test applies only to independent contractors; (4) it slides too easily into the vague and expansive “right to control” test, as the decision in Evans Newton may portend.
Id. at 334.
In settling on the literal interpretation as most consistent with the language, history, and policies of the 1976 Act, the
Easter Seal Society
court mentioned two factors that gave it pause. First, the Fifth Circuit panel underscored this § 201(b) language: “In the case of a work made for hire, the employer
or other person for whom the work was prepared
is considered the author for purposes of this title. ...” Under the literal interpretation, the
Easter Seal Society
court observed, those words are operative only as to the narrow class of non-employer commissioning parties “who can be authors by compliance with the requirements of § 101(2).”
Second, the Fifth Circuit expressed some doubt whether “Congress intended to radically revise ‘work for hire’ doctrine.” Id. (emphasis in original). We are less doubtful on that score as well. The legislative history, as cogent commentary recounts, see supra pp. 1492-93, reveals both a general concern that creators receive fair recompense and a specific decision, set down in § 101, to separate commissioned works from works made in an employment setting. See particularly Hamilton, supra, at 1290-94 (observing, inter alia, at 1293, that “the amount of deliberations that went into enumerating which types of commissioned works could be treated like employee-created works made for hire indicates that Congress intended for there to be a meaningful distinction between employee-created and commissioned works,” thus case law on works made in an employment context “could remain viable,” but 1909 Act precedent “relating to commissioned works could not”).
Satisfied that the literal interpretation is the one that best suits the 1976 Act, we hold that a copyrightable work of an independent contractor cannot be a work made for hire under the current Act unless that work falls within one of the specific categories enumerated in § 101(2) and “the parties expressly agree in a written instrument signed by them that the work shall be considered a work made for hire.” 17 U.S. C. § 101(2). It follows from this that “Third World America” does not qualify as a work made for hire, for Reid was an independent contractor and not an employee of CCNV within the rules of agency law; 11 furthermore, sculpture surely is not a category of commissioned work enumerated in § 101(2), and no written agreement existed between CCNV and Reid.
*1495 With the work for hire doctrine removed from the case, we turn to the proper resolution of this controversy.
III.
CCNV sought a declaration of copyright ownership. We have held that CCNV is not author of a work made for hire and see no other basis for a claim that CCNV is sole owner of copyright in “Third World America.” But neither does the existing record bear out Reid’s assertion that he is the exclusive owner of copyright in the work. The facts thus far found by the district court, however, indicate that “Third World America” may indeed qualify as a joint work. To guide the district court on remand, we set out here the relevant statutory prescriptions and relate them to the record as it now stands.
“Copyright in a work ... vests initially in the author or authors of the work.” 17 U.S.C. § 201(a); “[t]he ownership of a copyright may be transferred in whole or in part by any means of conveyance or by operation of law _” 17 U.S.C. § 201 (d)(1). Neither side contends that any conveyance or operation of law has effected a transfer of copyright ownership in the work in question, thus a determination of authorship of the sculpture will constitute simultaneously a determination of copyright ownership.
“Ownership of a copyright,” the 1976 Act states, “is distinct from ownership of any material object in which the work is embodied.” 17 U.S.C. § 202. “Transfer of ownership in any material object, including the copy ... in which the work is first fixed, does not of itself convey any rights in the copyrighted work embodied in the object; 12 nor, in the absence of an agreement, does transfer of ownership of a copyright ... convey property rights in any material object.” Id. Because material object and copyright do not travel together unless the parties so arrange, Reid’s transfer of the “Third World America” figures to CCNV left copyright ownership of the work unaffected.
“Copyright protection subsists ... in original works of authorship fixed in any tangible medium of expression....” 17 U.S.C. § 102(a) (§ 102(a)(5) lists as “[wjorks of authorship” “pictorial, graphic, and sculptural works”). The sculpture in question, it is evident, qualifies for protection as an “original work of authorship.”
See, e.g., Alfred Bell & Co. v. Catalda Fine Arts, Inc.,
The idea to be expressed in the work, as the district court indicated, remained constant from the time Snyder and fellow CCNV members first conceived it; the sculpture was to depict “homeless people huddled on a street-side steam grate.”
The 1976 Act defines a joint work as one “prepared by two or more authors with the intention that their contributions be merged into inseparable or interdependent parts of a unitary whole.” 17 U.S.C. § 101. “Third World America,” on the record thus far made, fits that description.
14
From the original conception of the work through its completion for display on Christmas Eve 1985, “the modern Nativity scene” appears to have been treated by those who labored to create it as a unitary whole.
See
Nor does it appear — again, we caution, from the current record — that the steam grate pedestal is so insignificant a contribution to the work of art that it fails to reflect the requisite “originality” and “authorship.” As we have already indicated, see supra p. 1495, the standard for determining whether a creation is an “original work of authorship” is not high. “It suffices if the author refrains from copying from prior works and contributes more than a minimal amount of creativity.” A. Latman, R. Gorman & J. Ginsburg, supra, at 29; see also 1 M. Nimmer & D. Nimmer, supra note 7, § 6.03, at 6-6 and § 6.17, at 6-18 (joint authors need not “work in physical propinquity”; their contributions need not be equal either quantitatively or qualitatively; though contribution of each must be more than de minimis, one may qualify as a joint author even if his contribution, “standing alone would not be copyrightable”). 15
Reid observed, in resisting joint work characterization, that “[cjopyright protection does not extend to utilitarian works and the base certainly has utilitarian and functional aspects.” Reply Brief at 17. The first part of this observation is more secure than the second. The 1976 Act defines “useful article” as one “having an intrinsic utilitarian function that is not merely to portray the appearance of the article _” 17 U.S.C. § 101 (emphasis added). The steam grate pedestal on which “Third World America’s” figures huddle surely was designed and constructed precisely “to portray the appearance of” an actual streetside grate.
Most prominently undercutting Reid’s claim of sole authorship, the district court
*1497
found that CCNV “was the motivating factor in the procreation of ‘Third World America,’ ” “conceived the idea in starkly specific detail,” and “directed enough of [Reid’s] effort to assure that, in the end, he had produced what [CCNV] not he, want-ed_”
In sum, were it not for the prevailing confusion over the work for hire doctrine,
18
this case — once more taking the record in its current state — might qualify as a textbook example of a jointly-authored work in which the joint authors co-own the copyright. We note in this regard Reid’s original and creative contribution to the figures; CCNV’s contribution to the steam grate pedestal added to its initial conceptualization and ongoing direction of the realization of “Third World America”; and the various indicia of the parties’ intent, from the outset, to merge their contributions into a unitary whole, and not to construct and separately preserve discrete parts as independent works.
See Strauss v. Hearst Corp.,
Reid observes that CCNV engaged others to construct the pedestal and supply its components; he asserts that “the Court has insufficient information before it to determine whether CCNV is in fact the ‘author’ of the base.” Reply Brief at 17. The possibility of joint authorship was not considered by the district court, and the record on contributions of participants oth-.
*1498
er than Reid and CCNV is limited. We do know, not only that CCNV engaged others, but that Reid himself was “assisted at various times by a dozen different people, all paid by him, from funds .... provided by CCNV.”
We address, finally, a peculiar feature of this case noted earlier, see supra note 4, one on which the parties’ presentations are cloudy. There is only one “copy” of the copyrighted work at issue, and that only existing copy is exclusively owned by CCNV. Joint authors co-owning copyright in a work “are deemed to be tenants in common,” with “each having an independent right to use or license the copyright, subject only to a duty to account to the other co-owner for any profits earned thereby.” W. Patry, supra, at 116 (footnotes omitted). In the absence of an agreement specifying otherwise, any profits earned are to be divided equally, “even where it is clear that [the] respective contributions to the joint work are not equal.” 1 M. Nimmer & D. Nimmer, supra note 7, § 6.08, at 6-20 (footnote omitted). But singular works of art, we recognize, do not fit comfortably into a scheme centrally concerned with reproduction of the underlying work. See Brenner, A Two-Phase Approach to Copyrighting the Fine Arts, 24 Bull. Copyright Soc’y 85, 85 (1976-77).
Reid, as we mentioned earlier, objected to CCNV’s travel plans for “Third World America,” and planned a more modest exhibition tour of his own.
See
If CCNV reproduces “Third World America” in any medium and profits thereby, however, an accounting would be due to Reid as a copyright owner. Independent of Reid’s ownership of the copyright, CCNV might be obliged to credit Reid as an author of the sculpture.
Cf. Smith v. Montero,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, we conclude that the district court incorrectly held the work for hire doctrine applicable to the dispute between Reid and CCNV over copyright in the sculptural work “Third World America.” We therefore reverse the judgment from which this appeal has been taken and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, particularly, for comprehensive consideration whether the sculpture called “Third World America” is a joint work and, if it is, for determination of the owners of copyright in the work.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The expression in the statute is "work made for hire." We employ here interchangeably the shorter term, “work for hire.”
. Beneath the title of the sculpture, which was molded into the human figure portion of the work, Reid had placed a copyright notice: "© James Earl Reid, Sculptor 85." This measure, which Reid took before the creation was displayed in D.C.,
see
. Snyder filed the certificate of copyright registration in his own name without mentioning CCNV. The district court indicated, however, that Snyder’s registration was as CCNV’s trustee.
See
.The dispute between CCNV and Reid concerns only ownership of copyright in "Third World America,” not ownership of the sculpture itself. See 17 U.S.C. § 202 (ownership of copyright is distinct from ownership of material object). Having paid Reid the agreed price of 115,000, CCNV owns the sculpture. Ownership of a particular copy of a copyrightable work — in this case the original "copy,” see 17 U.S.C. § 101 (”[t]he term ‘copies' includes the material object ... in which the work is first fixed”) — vests certain rights under the 1976 Act in that owner. Among these are the right to "sell or otherwise dispose of the possession of that copy" and the right to "display that copy publicly.” 17 U.S.C. § 109(a), (c). In light of this distinction between ownership of a particular copy and ownership of a copyright, Reid’s retention of the sculpture — the behavior that precipitated CCNV’s plea for a preliminary injunction— lacked legal foundation. Even if Reid had solely owned the ‘Third World America" copyright, CCNV's exclusive ownership of the sculpture itself would have left Reid with no right to possess that material object. See infra pp. 1498 -99.
. In
Brunswick Beacon, Inc. v. Schock-Hopchas Publishing Co.,
. Doubtless, the
Aldon Accessories
court intended to apply the "actually sufficiently supervised and directed” test only to determine whether independent contractors are employees. The copyrightable work of "regular or formal” employees is work made for hire without regard to the employer’s exercise of control.
See Easter Seal Society,
. The attribution under the work for hire doctrine of authorship as well as ownership of the copyright yields significantly more than would acquisition of copyright ownership alone. The copyright of a work made for hire on or after January 1, 1978 "endures for a term of seventy-five years from the year of its first publication, or a term of one hundred years from the year of its creation, whichever expires first.” 17 U.S.C. § 302(c). Ownership of copyright alone, which would occur upon an author’s grant of a transfer or license of copyright, leaves the author with a right to terminate the grant in 35 or 40 years. See 17 U.S.C. § 203(a)(3). Book publishers and motion picture producers had strongly opposed complete exclusion of commissioned works from work for hire treatment in the 1976 Act; their concern focused on the author’s termination right exercisable ”[i]n the case of any work other than a work made for hire," 17 U.S.C. § 203(a). See Hamilton, supra, 135 U. Pa. L.Rev. at 1292 (capping discussion with pointed observation that "the creator of a work made for hire ... could never terminate the employer's right to the work”). The consequences in foreign jurisdictions of recognizing the commissioned rather than the commissioning party as author also figured in the legislative debates. See Angel & Tannenbaum, Works Made for Hire Under S.22, 22 N.Y. L. Sch. L.Rev. 209, 213-14 (1976); see generally 1 M. Nimmer & D. Nimmer, Nimmer on Copyright § 5.03[A] (1985) (significance of work for hire status).
. Hamilton, supra, at 1302-03 & n. 118, suggests additional ways of viewing the Aldon Accessories situation. One might regard Aldon as sole author and owner of the copyright (Henry Moore, for example, engaging others to execute his fine art). The foreign producers thus could be seen as simply instrumental (Hamilton's analogy is the stenographer recording lines dictated by a poet). Or, the brass statuettes could be regarded as derivative of the porcelain works made in 1977 and thus subject to the 1909 Act, which remained in force until 1978, an act courts ever more certainly construed to sweep commissioned works broadly into the work for hire domain. See supra p. 1489; see also Hamilton, supra, at 1301 n. 112 (indicating that the Japanese and Taiwanese contractors might not have been positioned to assert protection in the U.S. against copiers of the statuettes).
. The Fifth Circuit employs the terms "buyer" and "seller” throughout its opinion. "A ‘buyer’ is the putative legal employer claiming ownership under the ‘work for hire' doctrine”; "a ‘seller’ is the person against whom a buyer claims, whether an employee or an independent contractor.”
Easter Seal Society,
. CCNV argues that Reid should be precluded from urging before this court the Fifth Circuit’s interpretation of the work for hire doctrine because he relied on the Second Circuit’s view of the doctrine before the district court. CCNV incompletely portrays the record. The Fifth Circuit decision in Easter Seal Society had not yet issued at the time of the district court’s decision in this case, but Reid in fact tendered to the district court an alternate position on all fours with the one thereafter announced in Easter Seal Society. In his Answer, for example, Reid asserted that "the sculpture is not a 'work for hire’ in that [Reid] was never an employee of [CCNV], and that under the [1976 Act] the subject matter of the work did not come within the purview of the designated categories of [17 U.S.C. § 101(2) ]_” Answer to Complaint for Declaratory Judgment ¶ 8. Similarly, in his Pre-Trial Statement, Reid maintained that he is not an employee, that no written agreement figures in this case, and that the work at issue does not fall within the nine categories enumerated in § 101(2). Defendant’s Pre-Trial Statement at 7-8. These passages, one need not strain to recognize, advance the "literal interpretation.”
. Reid, a fine artist, donated his services, worked in his own studio, and personally engaged assistants when he needed them. Creating sculptures was hardly “regular business" for CCNV. Given these matters of fact, see Restatement (Second) of Agency § 220 (1958), we think it evident that Reid was not CCNV’s employee, nor do we understand CCNV to contend otherwise.
. The 1976 Act thus definitively rejects the common law presumption,
see Pushman v. New York Graphic Soc., Inc.,
. In this regard, we reject the district court’s suggestion that Reid may have played a purely instrumental role in the creation of “Third World America.”
See
. Reid objects to our consideration of CCNV's suggestion that it is
“at the very least
joint owner of the copyright in the statute_” Brief for Appellee at 24 n. 15. Joint ownership, Reid maintains, was not urged before the district court. As we observed
supra
note 10, the Fifth Circuit decision in
Easter Seal Society
had not yet issued at the time of the district court's decision declaring CCNV sole owner of the copyright. Our adoption of the “literal interpretation” has so fundamentally changed the legal framework for this case that we deem it in order now to entertain CCNV's alternate joint authorship claim. We refrain, however, from ruling dispositively on the issue; instead, we accord Reid an opportunity to develop before the district court any factual or legal arguments he wishes to present in answer to CCNV’s alternate claim to joint authorship.
See Meehan v. Macy,
. If Nimmer is correct on the point that the contribution of a joint author need not be copyrightable "standing alone,” even CCNV’s choice of the title “Third World America” and the legend for the pedestal,
. The district court found, in particular, after hearing conflicting testimony, that the reclining, rather than standing or sitting, posture of the figures was CCNV’s idea, not Reid’s, and that it was also CCNV’s idea to use a shopping cart instead of suitcases or shopping bags as the repository for the homeless family’s belongings.
. Case law concerning joint authorship in relation to the idea/expression dichotomy is sparse largely because the broad scope of the work for hire doctrine under the 1909 Act tended to draw disputes in which one party claimed to be the creative motivating force in the production of a copyrightable work into the ambit of that doctrine. With the substantial cutback of the work for hire doctrine under the 1976 Act, more cases of this genre can be expected to appear under the joint authorship rubric.
.The
Easter Seal Society
court stated that the work for hire claim made in that case would probably have failed on any view of the 1976 Act. The tapes there in question had been "commissioned as part of an audiovisual work within the meaning of § 101(2),”
