The Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s order vacating the jury’s damages award for copyright infringement and granting judgment as a matter of law to Katy Perry and other defendants. Plaintiffs, Christian hip-hop artists, filed suit alleging that a repeating instrumental figure in one of Katy Perry’s songs copied a similar ostinato in one of plaintiffs’ songs.
The panel held that copyright law protects musical works only to the extent that they are original works of authorship. In this case, the trial record compels the panel to conclude that the ostinatos at issue consist entirely of commonplace musical elements, and that the similarities between them do not arise out of an original combination of these elements. Therefore, the jury’s verdict finding defendants liable for copyright infringement was unsupported by the evidence. View “Gray v. Hudson” on Justia Law