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Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Ray Charles Royalty Battle Revived by 9th Cir.

PASADENA, Calif. (CN) - The Ray Charles charitable foundation scored a Ninth Circuit win Friday in its fight against the singer's children over copyrights to his hit songs.

Acting as the singer's sole beneficiary, the Ray Charles Foundation had filed the 2012 federal contract complaint in Los Angeles against seven of Charles' adult children.

Citing an agreement that prevented the children from seeking any further interest in their father's estate, the lawsuit complained about a notice of termination that the children had served music publisher Warner/Chappell Music.

The 51 songs at issue include Charles' 1954 breakout hit "I Got a Woman," and chart toppers "A Fool for You," "Mary Ann" and "What'd I Say."

Charles died aged 73 in 2004 at his Beverly Hills home. The master recordings of his songs are reportedly worth up to $25 million.

His foundation, which the singer created to provide financial support for the deaf, poor and youth outreach, is funded by royalties it gets from copyright owner Warner/Chappell.

Though a federal judge sided with the children in 2013 and the foundation's lawsuit for lack of standing, a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit reversed Friday, over five months since hearing oral arguments on the case.

The 31-page decision by Judge Morgan Christen notes that the appeal represents the intersection of Charles' "remarkable legacies in music and philanthropy."

Accepting "as true" the foundation's claim that the children's termination notices make it almost impossible for the foundation to continue to collect royalties until the court battle is resolved, Christen said the matter at issue is not premature.

It would also be impractical for the foundation to have to file a new lawsuit every time a termination date expired, the court found.

Even though the foundation does not have a legal right to challenge the termination notices as Charles' sole beneficiary, it is an interested party because the termination notices affect its right to collect royalties, Christen said.

"As the holder of legal rights and interests that will be truncated if the termination notices are valid, the foundation has standing to challenge whether the underlying works are subject to the termination provisions," the ruling states. "If the compositions are works made for hire, the termination statutes do not apply."

Charles had recorded songs for Atlantic Records and its subsidiary (and Warner/Chappell's predecessor) Progressive Music under a work-for-hire agreement. That meant the publisher owned the underlying compositions, while Atlantic retained ownership of the recordings.

Even if all the termination notices are valid, the foundation is entitled to receive a notice of when its rights to receive royalties on each song will end, the court found.

Judge David Sentell, sitting on the panel by designation from the D.C. Circuit, concurred in the reversal, as did Judge Andrew Hurwitz.

Charles' children involved in the case are Raenee Robinson, Ray Charles Robinson Jr., Sheila Robinson, David Robinson, Robert Robinson, Reatha Butler and Robyn Moffett.

Thir attorney Marc Toberoff told Courthouse News that his clients "respectfully disagree" with the court's opinion and may seek en banc review.

The foundation's attorney Mark Passin did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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