Settlement
over 'Happy Birthday' copyright puts song in public
domain
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[December 10, 2015]
By Andrew Chung
(Reuters) - A settlement
has been reached in a U.S. lawsuit with Warner/Chappell
Music over the copyright to "Happy Birthday to You" that
will put one of the world's most recognizable songs in
the public domain, according to court papers released on
Wednesday and a source close to the case.
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Terms of the deal were not disclosed in court papers
announcing the settlement, but it puts an end to the
class-action lawsuit filed in 2013 by a group of artists and
filmmakers who had sought a return of the millions of dollars in
fees the company had collected over the years for use of the
song.
Once the settlement is finalized, the song will be in the public
domain, the source said. That means it will be free for all to
use without fear of a lawsuit.
In September, Chief U.S. District Judge George King in Los
Angeles ruled that Warner/Chappell, the music publishing arm of
privately owned Warner Music Group, did not own a copyright to
the Happy Birthday lyrics.
"While we respectfully disagreed with the court's decision, we
are pleased to have now resolved this matter," Warner/Chappell
said in a statement. An attorney for the artists, Mark Rifkin,
said in an email they were pleased with the settlement but
declined to provide further details.
The case garnered attention from around the world not only
because the tune is so commonly performed, but because many
people were not aware it was still under copyright, let alone
purportedly owned by a major corporation.
The song has a complicated history reaching back to the 1893
publication of "Good Morning to All," a children's song written
by a Kentucky woman named Mildred Hill and her sister, Patty.
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That melody eventually came to be sung with the familiar Happy
Birthday lyrics.
Warner contended its copyright to the lyrics came through the Hill
sisters' publisher that it had acquired. But King said that
publisher never got the rights to the lyrics and so neither did
Warner.
People who sing Happy Birthday in their homes or at private
gatherings have typically never been at risk of a lawsuit. But when
the song has been used for commercial purposes, such as in films,
Warner has enforced its rights, and took in an estimated $2 million
in royalties for such uses each year.
The case is Good Morning To You Productions Corp et al v.
Warner/Chappell Music Inc, in the U.S. District Court for the
Central District of California, No. 13-cv-4460.
(Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and
Alexia Garamfalvi)
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