I’m a
Nigerian author. Presently, I am writing my second book. The book is titled, Buhari:
100 Days in London and Other Stories
. But there is a problem. I discovered
3 other writers who have written articles that are similar to the title of my
book. In fact, when I contacted one of the writers about this, he emphatically
told me that he was about to finish a book with a similar title. And just as I
tried to think it through, a Nigerian movie also with almost identical title
popped up in a TV advert. I badly want to use this title. For protection, can I
copyright the title of my book?

Answer 

The
answer is NO.

Copyright
law does not protect titles of books or titles of other literary works. Also,
titles of both artistic and musical works are not copyrightable. (This may
partly explain why so many books out there have the same titles and no one is
getting into any legal troubles.)

The reason is that copyright protects only eligible works.

Eligible works are not only required to be artistic works (paintings),
broadcasts (radio programs), cinematographic works (films), literary works
(books), musical works (songs), or sound recordings (soundtracks, excluding
films) but also required to meet 2 vital conditions.

These 2 conditions are as follows:

1.     Sufficient effort has been expended on making the work
to give it an original character
;
and

2.     The work has been fixed in any definite medium of
expression now known or later to be developed, from which it can be perceived,
reproduced or otherwise communicated either directly or with the aid of any
machine or device.

The
two conditions above are prescribed in section 1(2) of the Nigerian Copyright
Act.


Therefore, titles do not meet the first statutory condition above: sufficient
effort expended on making the work to give it an original character
.

In
some other parts of the word, this is similarly described as a
significant amount of original expression. 
Expressions as short as
book titles do not qualify as sufficient effort. This is why you can
neither stop the writers using identical or similar titles with yours nor
protect your title under copyright. Copyright law says you need to do better
than that!

But this doesn’t give you or any person the right to title artistic,
literary, or musical works just about any existing title.

For instance, your book cannot be titled Buhari: 100 Days in London and
Other Stories
if that title is another person’s trademark. In other words,
if the producers of the film 100 Days in London have trademarked the
film title, you are prohibited from using any identical or similar titles for
your book. (Yes, some titles qualify for trademark protection, either because
those titles are to be used in connection with business or have become so well
– known they are distinctively connected to a particular author or
publisher. This is more so with series and popular titles. Think the
series Harry Potter or the popular book Chicken Soup for
the Soul
. Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart—though with a title
which is not original to the author—may qualify for trademark protection
considering how well known the book has become globally. (Even Google honoured the author with a doodle recently.)

So the point is this:

Once
a book becomes a bestseller or becomes so successful it is recognized as a
distinctive brand, the author or publisher may trademark the title.
And once trademarked, the title is out of bounds to any person.


Consider this.

If
you can come up with a title that is not already in use—particularly in
the genre your book falls into—you may consider that title instead. As an
author, you need to keep your publications away from avoidable controversies.
You also don’t want to confuse your audience.

You wish to consider your options closely? For competent guidance, you may consult
an IP lawyer or law firm for professional advice and assistance.

IP
ABC
Source – Infusion Lawyers