Sample Case Against Jay-Z and Timbaland Dismissed For Lack of Specificty

HINES V. ROC-A-FELLA RECORDS, LLC No. 19-CV-4587 (JPO), 2020 WL 1888832 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 16, 2020)

Plaintiff Ernie Hines coauthored the soul single “Help Me Put Out The Flame” in the 1960s. Hines alleged that the sample from that song was used in two hip-hop songs without permission. Hines brought suit against four major record labels, as well as prominent artists Jay- Z and Timbaland. The court granted Defendant’s motion to dismiss. Defendants argued that Hines’s complaint did not specify the material from his song was copied in “Paper Chase”, co- authored by Jay-Z and Timbaland, or “Toe 2 Toe” which was authored by Timbaland. The Court agreed with Defendants that the complaint only contained broad allegations of similarity. Defendants also sought dismissal on grounds that the complaint failed to allege “whether and when the copyright ... was registered pursuant to statutory requirements.” The Court rejected the Defendants motion to dismiss on these grounds. However, the Court ruled in favor of Defendants’ motion to dismiss based on lack of specificity. The court also found that service of process had not been properly completed. Leave to amend was conditioned on Hines’s payment of the costs and attorney’s fees incurred by the Record Label Defendants in filing and defending their motions to dismiss.