Contract between a consumer and the owner of a movie theatre

From: <ALRAGUENEA[_at_]aol.com>
Date: Mon, 06 Jan 2003 13:54:34 -0500


Hi all,

I am currently writing a doctorate thesis regarding the applicable law to the contract of making available a work to the public on the Internet (Comparative law analysis, U.S., European and French law).

Within this job research, I am trying to figure out what may be a possible analogy between the act of making a work available on the Internet and the act of communicating a work in the real world.

In particular, I am trying to analyze the legal relationship between the owner of a movie theatre and a consumer buying a ticket to see a movie. (I assume that the owner of the movie theatre has the exclusive right to perform the work and is the person se lling the ticket to the consumer - please correct if I am wrong).

Would it be possible to consider that there is a contract between the owner of the movie theatre and the consumer and if so, how would you characterize this agreement (contract of services, sale of goods, license, etc.) under U.S. contract law, and in par ticular the law of the State of California?

I thank you in advance for your answers and suggestions.

Alan Ragueneau

PS: I am aware my question may look odd but the preliminary step under European International private law is the precise characterizion of matter at bar to determine what is the applicable law to any issue arising out of this matter. Received on Mon Jan 06 2003 - 18:56:55 GMT

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