Title 28Judiciary and Judicial ProcedureRelease 119-73

§4001 Assumption of contractual obligations related to transfers of rights in motion pictures

Title 28 › Part PART VI— - PARTICULAR PROCEEDINGS › Chapter CHAPTER 180— - ASSUMPTION OF CERTAIN CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS › § 4001

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

When someone transfers the copyright in a movie that was made under a U.S. union contract, the buyer may have to take on the seller’s duty to pay leftover wages and give required notices that start after the transfer. The buyer must follow those payment and notice rules if the buyer knew (or should have known) the movie was covered by the union contract, or if a court confirms an arbitration award against the seller and the seller cannot pay the award within 90 days. "Knew or should have known" means actual knowledge, or public notice such as a recorded copyright document or a union website listing the movie (with verifiable dates) under certain timing rules, or other facts showing the union contract applied. Transfers that only give public performance rights to broadcasters or cable systems are generally excluded, unless those parties act like a distributor or producer. Pure security interests (like mortgages) and later transfers by the secured party are also excluded. A buyer who is required to make payments because of the rules can delay doing so while a genuine dispute between the union and the earlier seller is being resolved, but union claims keep accruing. If the seller failed to tell the buyer about the union obligations and the buyer is only hit with obligations because the seller couldn’t pay a court award, the seller must pay the buyer’s damages. Any dispute goes to U.S. district court, which can award costs and reasonable lawyer fees. The Comptroller General, with the Copyright Office, must study the industry causes and effects and report to Congress within 2 years after the chapter’s effective date.

Full Legal Text

Title 28, §4001

Judiciary and Judicial Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)(1)In the case of a transfer of copyright ownership under United States law in a motion picture (as the terms “transfer of copyright ownership” and “motion picture” are defined in section 101 of title 17) that is produced subject to 1 or more collective bargaining agreements negotiated under the laws of the United States, if the transfer is executed on or after the effective date of this chapter and is not limited to public performance rights, the transfer instrument shall be deemed to incorporate the assumption agreements applicable to the copyright ownership being transferred that are required by the applicable collective bargaining agreement, and the transferee shall be subject to the obligations under each such assumption agreement to make residual payments and provide related notices, accruing after the effective date of the transfer and applicable to the exploitation of the rights transferred, and any remedies under each such assumption agreement for breach of those obligations, as those obligations and remedies are set forth in the applicable collective bargaining agreement, if—
(A)the transferee knows or has reason to know at the time of the transfer that such collective bargaining agreement was or will be applicable to the motion picture; or
(B)in the event of a court order confirming an arbitration award against the transferor under the collective bargaining agreement, the transferor does not have the financial ability to satisfy the award within 90 days after the order is issued.
(2)For purposes of paragraph (1)(A), “knows or has reason to know” means any of the following:
(A)Actual knowledge that the collective bargaining agreement was or will be applicable to the motion picture.
(B)(i)Constructive knowledge that the collective bargaining agreement was or will be applicable to the motion picture, arising from recordation of a document pertaining to copyright in the motion picture under section 205 of title 17 or from publication, at a site available to the public on-line that is operated by the relevant union, of information that identifies the motion picture as subject to a collective bargaining agreement with that union, if the site permits commercially reasonable verification of the date on which the information was available for access.
(ii)Clause (i) applies only if the transfer referred to in subsection (a)(1) occurs—
(I)after the motion picture is completed, or
(II)before the motion picture is completed and—
(aa)within 18 months before the filing of an application for copyright registration for the motion picture under section 408 of title 17, or
(bb)if no such application is filed, within 18 months before the first publication of the motion picture in the United States.
(C)Awareness of other facts and circumstances pertaining to a particular transfer from which it is apparent that the collective bargaining agreement was or will be applicable to the motion picture.
(b)For purposes of this section, the exclusion under subsection (a) of transfers of copyright ownership in a motion picture that are limited to public performance rights includes transfers to a terrestrial broadcast station, cable system, or programmer to the extent that the station, system, or programmer is functioning as an exhibitor of the motion picture, either by exhibiting the motion picture on its own network, system, service, or station, or by initiating the transmission of an exhibition that is carried on another network, system, service, or station. When a terrestrial broadcast station, cable system, or programmer, or other transferee, is also functioning otherwise as a distributor or as a producer of the motion picture, the public performance exclusion does not affect any obligations imposed on the transferee to the extent that it is engaging in such functions.
(c)Subsection (a) shall not apply to—
(1)a transfer of copyright ownership consisting solely of a mortgage, hypothecation, or other security interest; or
(2)a subsequent transfer of the copyright ownership secured by the security interest described in paragraph (1) by or under the authority of the secured party, including a transfer through the exercise of the secured party’s rights or remedies as a secured party, or by a subsequent transferee.
(d)A transferee on which obligations are imposed under subsection (a) by virtue of paragraph (1) of that subsection may elect to defer performance of such obligations that are subject to a bona fide dispute between a union and a prior transferor until that dispute is resolved, except that such deferral shall not stay accrual of any union claims due under an applicable collective bargaining agreement.
(e)Nothing in this section shall expand or diminish the rights, obligations, or remedies of any person under the collective bargaining agreements or assumption agreements referred to in this section.
(f)If the transferor under subsection (a) fails to notify the transferee under subsection (a) of applicable collective bargaining obligations before the execution of the transfer instrument, and subsection (a) is made applicable to the transferee solely by virtue of subsection (a)(1)(B), the transferor shall be liable to the transferee for any damages suffered by the transferee as a result of the failure to notify.
(g)Any dispute concerning the application of subsections (a) through (f) shall be determined by an action in United States district court, and the court in its discretion may allow the recovery of full costs by or against any party and may also award a reasonable attorney’s fee to the prevailing party as part of the costs.
(h)The Comptroller General, in consultation with the Register of Copyrights, shall conduct a study of the conditions in the motion picture industry that gave rise to this section, and the impact of this section on the motion picture industry. The Comptroller General shall report the findings of the study to the Congress within 2 years after the effective date of this chapter.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

References in Text

The

Effective Date

of this chapter, referred to in subsecs. (a) and (h), is Oct. 28, 1998. See

Effective Date

of 1998 Amendment note set out under section 108 of Title 17, Copyrights.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

28 U.S.C. § 4001

Title 28Judiciary and Judicial Procedure

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73