Case 7: Legalease Ltd 2010

Argument

Pro-Action wrote to Mairead Keohane, Legalease Director of Operations, and Eduardo Reyes, Editor of In House Lawyer, in January 2010 asking that they explain their Standard Terms and Conditions. These give Legalease the right to reuse the commissioned artwork in any current or future Legalease publication, title, or website, when the fee offered may not be sufficient for these rights. Also that they may retain artwork, but accept no responsibility for it.

Pro-Action pointed out that additional rights in an illustration should only be assigned to the client with sufficient and fair remuneration to the artist, and that artwork should be returned.

We asked Legalease to respond to these points and questions in connection with their Standard Terms and Conditions::

One of the reasons the AOI was set up in 1973 was to ensure the return of artwork to the creator, and it is unacceptable that the practice of retaining artwork is still applied by Legalease.

Pro-Action suggested that a fairer standard contract provided by Legalease could increase Legalease’s access to illustrators they may wish to commission and would boost the organisation’s ethical standing..

Response

Pro-Action has received no response to date from Legalease.


Recommendation

Pro-Action advise all illustrators not to accept commissions under terms such as those requested in the Legalease Standard Terms and Conditions. See Argument section for points raised by Pro-Action over Legalease’s contract.

Pro-Action recommend that all illustrators should ask that a clause requesting additional usage for no payment be struck out, or negotiate a licence consisting of terms and fees priced on usage, territory and duration, i.e. so that the fee offered is sufficient to cover the rights requested.

AOI members may contact the association for further advice. Illustrators represented by an SAA member agent should contact their agent for additional advice..


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