Banksy Street Art
Banksy Street Art
Banksy Street Art
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Introduction
2293
7 See id.
8 Id.
9 Id.
10 Johnston, Banksy Breaks Cover (cited in note 6).
11 Sarah Lyall, Borough Searches for Missing Boy, Last Seen on Wa
Feb 28, 2013), archived at http://perma.cc/CLV5-4YEQ.
12 Id.
13 Id.
14 See id.
15 See Lyall, Borough Searches for Missing Boy (cited in note 11).
16 Id.
17 Jamie Wetherbe, ' Missing Banksy Mural Fetches $1.1 Million at Auction (LA
Times, June 4, 2013), archived at http://perma.cc/85FF-HUGS.
18 See Eric Wooters Yip, What Is Street Art? Vandalism , Graffiti or Public
Part I (Art Radar, Jan 21, 2010), archived at http://perma.cc/ETH6-F785.
not street art. When someone cares enough to file suit over own
ership of some visual work, that work will likely be valuable ar
Nevertheless, works of street art tend to share a few commo
traits: as the Mobile Lovers and Slave Labour disputes illus-
trate, street art is generally produced in urban settings, placed
on property without the property owner's permission, and dis-
played where the public can see it.
Though Banksy's work - which consists mostly of spray-
paint murals - may currently be the world's most recognizable
street art, street artists produce a diverse array of work. For ex-
ample, Shepard Fairey, the artist behind President Barack
Obama's Hope posters, has worked in many mediums; during
one period, he repeatedly pasted posters of Andre the Giant to
the sides of buildings.19 The artist known as Invader creates tile
mosaics that look like characters from his Atari-game namesake
and affixes them to walls with grout.20 The artist TEJN uses
bike locks to fasten sculptures to other people's property.21
Banksy may be the hot street artist of the moment, but there are
many others, working in many styles and mediums and placing
their art in locations of all kinds.22
If street art was already ubiquitous, it has recently also be-
come extremely valuable. Street art has entered the art world's
mainstream, with Banksy pieces regularly selling for more than
$1 million.23 After its return to Mr. Stinchcombe, Mobile Lovers
sold, bringing in $670,000 for the Boys' Club.24 Similarly, Slave
Labour ultimately sold at a London auction for approximately
$1.1 million.26 Other works have sold for even more, with one
Jean-Michel Basquiat piece going for over $16 million in a 2012
auction.26 Though neither the Mobile Lovers nor the Slave Labour
19 See Dale Eisinger, The Art Evolution of Shepard Fairey (Complex, Sept 30,
2013), archived at http://perma.cc/Q2EA-2CJ5.
20 See Jaime Rojo and Steven Harrington, Street Art Tile 'Invasion' of New York Cut
Short (Huffington Post, Nov 6, 2013), archived at http://perma.cc/JSN6-KFSW.
21 See TEJN, TEJN: Art , archived at http://perma.cc/ZZ2W-V3HL.
22 See, for example, Sebastian Buck, The 50 Greatest Street Artists Right Now
(Complex, Mar 22, 2011), archived at http://perma.cc/W7ZT-8TAM.
23 See lowpro, Viewpoints : Top 25 Most Expensive Banksy Works Ever (Arrested
Motion, Sept 21, 2011), archived at http://perma.cc/38EU-E3ZW.
24 Benjamin Sutton, Sale of Banksy's Mobile Lovers for $670,000 Saves Youth Club
(Artnet News, Aug 26, 2014), archived at http://perma.cc/HP45-MP3X.
25 See Allan Kozinn, Disputed Banksy Work Brings $1.1 Million at Auction (NY
Times, June 3, 2013), archived at http://perma.cc/4KFS-7L6T.
26 Mila Pantovich, The Most Expensive Street Art : From Basquiat to Banksy
(JustLuxe, Jan 9, 2013), archived at http://perma.cc/8UFL-SYM7.
27 Much street art is produced in the United States. See Joe Coscarelli, The Banksy
Tour of New York City: Interactive Map (NY Media, Oct 31, 2013), archived at
http://perma.cc/9SUR-L9TD.
28 Terry v Lock, 37 SW3d 202, 206 (Ark 2001). See also 1 Am Jur 2d Abandoned,
Lost, and Unclaimed Property § 12 at 20 (2005).
29 1 Am Jur 2d Abandoned, Lost, and Unclaimed Property § 27 at 37 (cited in
note 28). See also, for example, Smith v Purvis , 474 S2d 1131, 1132 (Ala App 1985).
2. Abandoned property.
Doctrinally, "[pjroperty is said to be 'abandoned' when it is
thrown away, or its possession is voluntarily forsaken by the
owner, in which case it will become the property of the first oc-
cupant."32 The primary doctrinal difficulty in applying the law of
abandonment to street art is determining whether street artists
voluntarily forsake their work in the required manner. Professor
Lior Strahilevitz argues that abandonment has two elements.33
First, there must be a transfer of the property in question.34 Sec-
ond, that transfer must be unilateral.36
Street artists' general behavior toward their work indicates
intent to transfer. As discussed above, it seems exceedingly un-
likely that most street artists leave their work on other people's
property with the intention of reclaiming it.36 Prohibitions on
trespass and vandalism give them strong incentives not to do so.
Hence, street artists probably expect their art to end up in
someone else's hands, either to be displayed, sold at auction, or de-
stroyed. Legal authority links such behavior with abandonment,
30 Terry , 37 SW3d at 207. See also 1 Am Jur 2d Abandoned, Lost, and Unclaimed
Property § 14 at 22 (cited in note 28).
31 1 Am Jur 2d Abandoned, Lost, and Unclaimed Property § 14 at 22 (cited in
note 28).
32 Terry , 37 SW3d at 206. See also 1 Am Jur 2d Abandoned, Lost, and Unclaimed
Property § 24 at 32 (cited in note 28).
33 Lior Jacob Strahilevitz, The Right to Abandon , 158 U Pa L Rev 355, 360 (2010).
3* Id.
35 Id.
3® See Part II.A.l.
37 See Routh Wrecker Service, Ine v Wins, 847 SW2d 707, 709 (Ark 1993).
38 Scholars debate whether one must obtain the transferee's consent in order to
abandon property. See, for example, Strahilevitz, 158 U Pa L Rev at 360 (cited in
note 33) (arguing that abandonment does not "require that a third party assume owner-
ship of the property or agree to do so"); Eduardo M. Peñalver, The Illusory Right to
Abandon , 109 Mich L Rev 191, 200 (2010) (contending that the common law disallows
the abandonment of land interests without the consent of a transferee).
39 Peñalver, 109 Mich L Rev at 198 (cited in note 38). See also Strahilevitz, 158 U
Pa L Rev at 370-71 (cited in note 33) (noting that gift giving, unlike abandonment, car-
ries the decision cost of determining the recipient).
40 See Strahilevitz, 158 U Pa L Rev at 376-77 (cited in note 33).
41 Courts have long made such determinations of ownership in contexts other than
street art. See, for example, Haslém v Lockwood, 37 Conn 500, 506 (1871) (considering
who owned animal manure that had been abandoned by the animals' owners); Eads v
Brazelton, 22 Ark 499, 499 (1861) (deciding, years after a shipwreck, which claimant
owned cargo submerged in the Mississippi River).
45 Bader v Digney, 864 NYS2d 606, 608 (NY App 2008). See also, for example,
Schenker v Moodhe , 200 A 727, 728 (Md 1938); Thomas v Houston , 106 SE 466, 467 (NC
1921). See also 38 Am Jur 2d Gifts § 14 at 771 (2010).
46 See, for example, In re Estate of Lamplaugh, 708 NW2d 645, 651-52 (Neb 2006)
("Ordinarily, actual delivery is necessary where the subject of the gift is capable of man-
ual delivery.").
47 See, for example, Anagnostou v Stifel , 562 NYS2d 490, 491 (NY App 1990); Es-
tate of Bridges v Mosebrook , 662 SW2d 116, 121 (Tex App 1983).
48 See 2 Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 6.2
(2003) (discussing the legal rules surrounding the various types of people to whom one
might give a gift).
49 See Victoria Carrington, I Write, Therefore I Am: Texts in the City , 8 Visu
Commun 409, 416 (2009). See also Eisinger, The Art Evolution of Shepard Fairey (cit
in note 19).
50 See Etan Smallman, How Do You Remove a Banksy Mural ? (Independent, Feb
20, 2014), archived at http://perma.cc/4PUY-DN2R.
What should the law say about this? If, for example, a
spray-paint mural has been clearly abandoned on someone's
wall and someone other than the building owner finds it, does
the finder become the owner of the artwork and part of the un-
derlying building? If not, what does the finder's ownership
amount to, assuming the landowner would prefer not to have his
building used as the finder's permanent gallery space?
The law of accession might be used to resolve some of these
ambiguities. Doctrinally, "[a]ccession generally signifies the ac-
quisition of title to personal property by its conversion into an
entirely different thing by labor bestowed on it or by its incorpo-
ration into a union with other property."61 So, if accession gov-
erned ownership of some artwork, that work and the property to
which it was attached would be treated as a new unitary proper-
ty. In order to avoid stickiness problems, the new unitary prop-
erty might then be allocated to the owner of the property on
which the art was placed. The only other party who would be a
plausible candidate for ownership under the accession regime is
the artist. However, "[a] willful trespasser generally acquires no
rights in the property of another by any change made in such
property due to the trespasser's labor or skill ... as a party can
obtain no right nor derive any advantage from his or her own
wrong."52 Thus, if no one other than the building owner ever has
a chance to take title to the art, then no transfer of any portion
of the underlying building can be at issue.
But when does one property become so incorporated into an-
other that it triggers accession? As the case law reveals, the dis-
tinction is difficult to parse. For example, the law of accession is
implicated when a new radiator is installed into a car53 but not
by the installation of a new set of tires.64 Similarly, the law of
accession applies when rain and sun combine to form plants,
with ownership of those plants falling to the landowner.55 By
contrast, when nature conspires such that privately held land
produces wild animals, ownership of those animals is governed
51 1 Am Jur 2d Accession and Confusion § 1 at 497 (2005). See also Omaha Stand-
ard, lne v Nissen , 187 NW2d 721, 724 (Iowa 1971).
52 1 Am Jur 2d Accession and Confusion § 5 at 502 (cited in note 51). See also, for
example, Kirby Lumber Co v Temple Lumber Co , 83 SW2d 638, 646 (Tex 1935).
53 See Lincoln Bank & Trust Co v Netter , 253 SW2d 260, 261 (Ky 1952).
54 See Austrian Motors, Ltd v Travelers Insurance Co. 275 SE2d 702, 706 (Ga Add 1980).
55 See Thomas W. Merrill, Accession and Original Ownership , 1 J Legal Analysis
459, 465 (2009).
56 See Pierson v Post , 3 Cai R 175, 177-78 (NY 1805). See also Merrill, 1 J Legal
Analysis at 470 n 12 (cited in note 55).
57 See Smallman, How Do You Remove a Banksy Mural? (cited in note 50).
58 Merrill, 1 J Legal Analysis at 460-61, 493 (cited in note 55).
59 See id at 461.
D. Equitable Division
Like accession, equitable division is a doctrine best applied
when doing so will resolve some legal, factual, or policy problem.
Unlike accession, however, a court's power to exercise equitable
division is not limited by confusing doctrinal tests. Equitable di-
vision refers to a court's ability to divide ownership rights in a
single piece of property among those with competing claims.60
Perhaps the most famous case in which a court chose to exercise
its power of equitable division is Popov v Hayashi.61 That case
arose out of a dispute over Barry Bonds's record- setting seventy-
third home run ball of the 2001 Major League Baseball season.62
Bonds clobbered the ball into the stadium's arcade and Alex
Popov reached up to catch it.63 The ball hit Popov's basebal
glove, and Popov may or may not have had full control of it when
he was tackled by the surrounding crowd.64 During the ensuin
struggle, Patrick Hayashi was able - without engaging in an
wrongful assaults - to recover and walk away with the ball.65
The court treated the ball as having been abandoned upon bei
hit, thus becoming the property of whoever possessed it first.
Faced with ambiguous facts surrounding first possession, the
court found Popov and Hayashi to have equally plausible claim
of ownership, writing that it would be "unfair" to either party if t
ball were awarded to just one person.67 To overcome both factu
«8 Id at *8.
69 See R.H. Helmholz, Equitable Division and the Law of Finders , 52 Fordham L
Rev 313, 315 (1983).
70 Keron v Cashman, , 33 A 1055, 1056-57 (NJ Chanc 1896).
71 See Helmholz, 52 Fordham L Rev at 324-25 (cited in note 69). See also 1 Am Jur
2d Abandoned, Lost, and Unclaimed Property § 30 at 39 (cited in note 28).
72 Arnold v Producers' Fruit Co , 61 P 283, 284-85 (Cal 1900).
73 Lorusso v Acapesket Improvement Association, Ine , 564 NE2d 360, 367 (Mass
1990). See also Burke v Commonwealth , 186 NE 277, 279 (Mass 1933); Allen v Wood , 152
NE 617, 620-21 (Mass 1926).
7* 8 F 159 (D Mass 1881).
™ Id at 159-60.
76 Helmholz, 52 Fordham L Rev at 322-25 (cited in note 69). See also, for example,
Popov , 2002 WL 31833731 at *8 (applying equitable division to property that had been
abandoned, rather than lost or mislaid).
77 See Helmholz, 52 Fordham L Rev at 314 (cited in note 69).
78 See notes 28-29 and accompanying text.
79 See notes 30-31 and accompanying text.
80 See notes 29-30 and accompanying text.
81 See Helmholz, 52 Fordham L Rev at 313 (cited in note 69).
82 Id at 317. See also Edward R. Cohen, The Finders Cases Revisited , 48 Tex L Rev
1001, 1006 (1970) ("[T]here is no fundamental difference between deliberately placing an
object on a surface and unintentionally forgetting and leaving it there, and deliberately
placing an object in your pocket and unintentionally having it leave your possession
through a hole.").
83 This example was modified from the facts of McAvoy v Medina , 11 Allen 548
(Mass 1866).
1. Doctrinal fit.
93 For example, the city of Chicago runs a program whereby citizens can request
removal of "graffiti," and the city will send a "'blast' truck" to power wash the area on
which the "graffiti" has been placed. Graffiti Removal Program (City of Chicago), ar-
chived at http://perma.cc/Y6D4-JT6Y.
94 See, for example, Post Staff Report, City ' Cleans Up' after Banksy Art (NY Post,
Oct 17, 2013), archived at http://perma.cc/7SZ2-CUA8.
95 Cave Painting by Banksy (Stencil Revolution), archived at http://perma.cc/JXW9-PPYU.
96 Lindsay Bates, Bombing, Tagging, Writing : An Analysis of the Significance of
Graffiti and Street Art *79 (unpublished master's thesis, University of Pennsylvania,
Jan 1, 2014), archived at http://perma.cc/ZXE9-628J.
97 See Coscarelli, The Banksy Tour of New York City (cited in note 27).
98 See, for example, Lyall, Borough Searches for Missing Boy (cited in note 11) (
menting the efforts of the Haringey citizens to keep Slave Labour in their neighborho
99 See Strahilevitz, 158 U Pa L Rev at 416-17 (cited in note 33) (suggesting
abandonment may be a more effective doctrinal mechanism than adverse possessi
cause land to flow to the highest-value user in situations in which a property
wishes to lose her property interest in land).
100 A high- value user need not be willing to pay millions for an artist's work. Ra
the relevant high-value user here is merely someone who values a work more
than the sum of the underlying-property owner's subjective valuation and the tr
tion costs of any sale.
103 See, for example, State v Shack, 277 A2d 369, 373-74 (NJ 1971) (recognizing that
"[a] man's right in his real property of course is not absolute" and "find[ing] it unthinka-
ble that the farmer-employer can assert a right to isolate the migrant worker in any re-
spect significant for the worker's well-being").
104 Fairey's contract to produce the President Obama's now-iconic Hope images is an
example of a legitimate production. See William Booth, Obama's On-the-Wall Endorse-
ment (Wash Post, May 18, 2008), archived at http://perma.cc/6K86-7H5C.
105 See Spider-Man (Peter Parker) (Marvel), archived at http://perma.cc/KDZ9-VPT5.
106 It is worth noting that these considerations apply with equal strength to the ef-
fects of possible ownership regimes on rates of vandalism.
107 Strahilevitz, 158 U Pa L Rev at 374-75 (cited in note 33).
108 See id.
109 See, for example, Benjamin v Lindner Aviation, Ine, 534 NW2d 400, 406 (Iowa 1995).
found on private land.110 But it is not clear that these facts alone
imply that the employment of an abandonment regime will sig
nificantly increase the rate of trespass. First, one of street art
ists' goals is for their work to be seen, so they are likely to pla
works such that they can be viewed without trespassing into th
darkest recesses of private property. Hence, finders will likely be
able to discover street art without any trespass at all. Second,
trespass remains a civil and sometimes criminal offense in mos
jurisdictions. If finders of street art hope to recover and, per
haps, legitimately sell the work that they find, they will face the
additional challenge of simultaneously maintaining their ano-
nymity for the purposes of avoiding prosecution. This problem
will be especially difficult for potential sellers of very sticky
street art. For example, it would be nearly impossible to excise
spray-paint mural from a wall without alerting the buildin
owner. Therefore, finders of street art are likely to be more d
terred by legal prohibitions against trespass than are street ar
ists. These considerations give little reason to think that t
governance of street-art ownership by any regime that incenti
izes finders to search for valuable art will have a significant ef
fect on trespass rates.
110 Consider the placement of Slave Labour. See Lyall, Borough Searches for Miss-
ing Boy (cited in note 11) (describing how Slave Labour was stenciled on the wall o
store). Also consider the placement of the various works that Banksy produced durin
his New York City residency. See note 97 and accompanying text; Alice Vincent, et a
Banksy Better Out Than In Map: See Where the Street Artist Has Painted (Telegrap
July 1, 2015), archived at http://perma.cc/AM6M-7G7U.
111 See US Const Amend V.
112 gee John A. Borron Jr, 1 Simes & Smith: The Law of Future Interests § 313
(Thomson/West 3d ed 2002).
113 See Max Gibbons, Comment, Of Windfalls and Property Rights: Palazzolo and
the Regulatory Takings Notice Debate , 50 UCLA L Rev 1259, 1283 (2003) (arguing that
"free alienation of property is efficient most of the time").
114 See Gerald Korngold, For Unifying Servitudes and Defeasible Fees : Property
Law's Functional Equivalents , 66 Tex L Rev 533, 570 (1988) (arguing that recording sys-
tems "minimize transaction costs by keeping ownership information current").
115 See 66 Am Jur 2d Records and Recording Laws § 40 at 102-03 (2011) (outlining
the purpose of recording statutes in the American system).
1. Doctrinal fit.
1. Doctrinal fit.
2. Public policy.
As should be clear by this point, the public policy concerns
surrounding street-art ownership are varied and complex. How-
ever, as the above discussions illustrate, the real difficulty in
this area is finding a balance between two kinds of values. First,
133 This Comment takes no position on what the proper percentage would be. It is
noteworthy, however, that under the German system, finders of lost property are usually
entitled to a finder's fee of just 5 percent of the found property's value. Bürgerliches
Gesetzbuch [BGB] (the German Civil Code, as amended Jan 2, 2002) § 971. This amount
has presumably proved to be enough to incentivize finders.
was attached would not have to worry that the property might
remain subject to some third-party interest. The finder's interest in
the art would terminate with any sale, and the finder's subsequent
claim for payment would be against her former co-owner alone.
134 See, for example, Lorusso v Acapesket Improvement Association, Ine , 564 NE2d
360, 367-68 (Mass 1990).
135 See Merrill I. Schnebly, Restraints upon the Alienation of Legal Interests: 7, 44
Yale L J 961, 961 (1935) ("Since an early date in the history of the English common law,
it has been thought socially and economically desirable that the owner of a present fee
simple in land, or of a corresponding absolute interest in chattels, should have the power
to transfer his interest.").
136 Popov , 2002 WL 31833731 at *8.
137 See id at *8-9.
138 See 6 Am Jur 2d Assignments §§ 5, 12, 88 (2008).
Conclusion