In a 3-0 decision, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals said Flame, whose given name is Marcus Gray, did not
deserve damages for copyright infringement over a musical
pattern he said Perry, 37, borrowed from his song "Joyful
Noise."
The Pasadena, California-based court said the eight-note
pattern, known as an ostinato, consisted "entirely of
commonplace musical elements" that lacked the "quantum of
originality" needed for copyright protection.
A Los Angeles jury had in July 2019 awarded Flame and two other
plaintiffs $2.79 million, including $550,000 from Perry and
$1.29 million from her label Capitol Records, part of Universal
Music Group.
But the trial judge, U.S. District Judge Christina Snyder, set
aside that verdict the following March, saying Perry did not
infringe any independently protectable musical elements.
Snyder ruled one week after the 9th Circuit decided in favor of
Led Zeppelin in a similar case concerning the opening guitar
riff to its song "Stairway to Heaven."
The appeals court agreed that the "Dark Horse" jury verdict
should not stand.
"If we were to hold otherwise, it is hard to believe that any
collection of pitches arranged in a flat rhythm could fail to
meet the originality threshold," Circuit Judge Milan Smith
wrote.
Michael Kahn, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said his clients were
considering their legal options.
He said not granting "Joyful Noise" protection "runs contrary to
a series of simple and clearly distinctive 8-note opening
melodies" as in Dave Brubeck's "Take Five," the Rolling Stones'
"Satisfaction" and Beethoven's Fifth Symphony.
Perry's lawyer did not immediately respond to requests for
comment. Christine Lepera, a lawyer for Capitol and Perry's
producers Cirkut, Dr. Luke and Max Martin, said they were "very
pleased" with the decision.
"Dark Horse" appeared on Perry's 2013 album "Prism," and spent
four weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 in 2014.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Jonathan
Oatis)
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