More than half a century after Jimi Hendrix moved to England to form rock’s preeminent transatlantic power trio with a couple of Brits, bassist Noel Redding and drummer Mitch Mitchell, there’s a new lawsuit concerning his estate and holding his remaining assets.
Rolling Stone’s recent article, “Jimi Hendrix Experience (Heirs’ Lawsuit) Headed Back to England,” reports that the legal action seeks to stop Redding’s and Mitchell’s heirs from seeking to expand their copyright claims.
In essence, it’s a lawsuit about lawsuits.
Since the Redding and Mitchell estates filed a suit in the United Kingdom a month before Experience Hendrix and Sony, which a British appeals court allowed, Judge Ronnie Abrams ruled that the claims should go through the UK courts first.
In December 2021, British attorney Lawrence Abramson sent a letter to Sony, claiming that Mitchell’s and Redding’s estates were owed performance royalties for some 3 billion streams — “such streaming figures and sales is estimated to be in the millions of pounds.”
Experience Hendrix and Sony responded by filing a suit in the US District Court in the Southern District of New York in January, asking for “a declaratory judgment of ownership and non-infringement” — essentially for a judge to say, “Stand down because everything’s above board.” The rhythm section’s heirs filed a lawsuit in the UK in February.
Experience Hendrix, the LLC holding the Hendrix Estate, and Sony’s backup were contracts that Redding and Mitchell signed in 1973 and ’74, promising not to sue the Hendrix estate and release it from legal claims. However, the heirs to the rhythm section say that those agreements no longer bind them. The veracity of that claim is essentially what each side’s lawyers have been disputing for the last year as they decide on the best venue for their respective lawsuits.
“The London High Court’s lengthy decision finding jurisdiction over the English action underscores the appropriateness of that forum, and the merits of that action are now in litigation in English courts,” Judge Abrams wrote. “This action is hereby stayed pending the resolution of defendants’ action in England.”
“I think it is fair to see that we were pleased, but not altogether surprised, at the decision,” Abramson, a lawyer for the Mitchell and Redding estates, tells Rolling Stone. “The case will now be proceeding in the UK as we always expected that it would.”
An attorney for Experience Hendrix told Billboard, “We’re going to pursue our rights in the UK, and when the case in the UK is resolved, we’re going to pursue our rights in the US.”
The Jimi Hendrix Experience formed in 1966 and disbanded in June 1969 when Redding quit. Mitchell continued playing with Hendrix off and on through Hendrix’s death in September 1970. Redding died in May 2003, leaving his estate to his partner, Deborah McNaughton, whose sisters inherited the estate upon her death. Mitchell’s daughter, Aysha, inherited his estate when he died in November 2008.
Reference: Rolling Stone (May 19, 2023) “Jimi Hendrix Experience (Heirs’ Lawsuit) Headed Back to England”
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