Eminems Music Publisher Takes Apple to Court


Apple

Eight Mile Style LLC and a co-plaintiff, Martin Affiliated LLC, are suing Apple Inc., claiming they never authorized the use of 93 songs in a downloadable format on Apples popular iTunes service.

The non-jury trial is expected to start Thursday in the rappers hometown of Detroit, unless a settlement is reached Wednesday with the help of U.S. Magistrate Judge Virginia Morgan.

Eight Mile also is suing Aftermath Records, which controls the recordings in question, saying it didnt have the right to make deals on digital downloads.

Its unclear from court documents just how much money is at stake, but the plaintiffs claim Apple wrongfully gained $2.5 million through iTunes downloads, including $466,915 from “Lose Yourself,” Eminems biggest hit from the hip-hop film “8 Mile.” The publisher also believes it should get a share of Apples profit from the sale of iPods.

Eight Mile also claims Aftermath wrongfully collected $4 million off Eminems songs on iTunes.

Apple denies the allegations and says it has a valid agreement with Aftermath Records. Eight Mile has received royalties but says that doesnt mean it cant press ahead with a lawsuit.

The “acceptance of a single check containing mostly royalties for authorized uses, but also containing small and hidden royalties for unauthorized uses, cannot operate as a satisfaction of a claim,” Eight Miles lawyers said in a recent filing in federal court.

Eight Mile says it still retains ownership, including copyright, of the compositions inside Eminems recordings. If the case isnt settled, the trial before U.S. District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor will center on how to interpret contracts.

Eight Mile agreed in 1998 and 2003 that “Eminem would create master sound recordings embodying compositions, and that Aftermath would own those masters,” Apples attorneys said in a court filing.

“The parties also agreed that Aftermath and its distributors and licensees would have the exclusive right to exploit the masters embodying the Eminem compositions in any and all forms of media now known or hereinafter developed,” the lawyers said.

Howard Hertz, a lawyer for Eight Mile, declined to comment on the case Tuesday. A message seeking comment was left with Daniel Quick of the Apple/Aftermath legal team.

Its unknown if the rapper would attend a trial if there is one. Eminem, whose real name is Marshall Mathers, is not on the witness list.

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