Beyonce Loses Bid to Have ‘Formation’ Copyright Claim Tossed
Better keep those lawyers in formation, Beyonce.
The "Single Ladies" singer has lost a bid to have a lawsuit over her song
"Formation" dismissed, with a federal judge in Louisiana mostly denying the
singer's motion to dismiss in an order handed down Wednesday.
Beyonce was sued
in February for $20 million by the estate of Anthony Barre, a.k.a. rapper
Messy Mya.
The estate claims that "Formation" used Barre's voice without
authorization.
"Defendants used Mr. Barre's voice, performance and words from his
copyrighted works to create the tone, mood, setting and location of the New
Orleans-themed 'Formation,'" the lawsuit reads.
New Orleans-based Barre was shot and killed in 2010.
Beyonce's team filed a motion to dismiss under numerous arguments, including
a multi-pronged assertion that the use of the audio, culled from YouTube videos,
fell under the fair use doctrine.
However, Judge Nannette Jolivette Brown shot down that assertion in her order
this week, writing in part, "Here, the Court finds that Plaintiffs have alleged
sufficient facts in their amended complaint to support a finding at this stage
of litigation that the first factor could ultimately weigh against a finding of
fair use.
"Plaintiffs plausibly allege that Defendants did not 'add something new, with
a further purpose or different character,' but rather used unmodified audio
clips from Anthony Barre's YouTube videos as an illustrative example of New
Orleans culture through the voice and catchphrases of a well-known local
icon."
The small glimmer of light for Beyonce? The judge did agree to dismiss an
unjust enrichment claim brought by Barre's estate, finding that "there are other
remedies available at law to Plaintiffs such that Louisiana law precludes an
unjust enrichment claim here."
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