One of the world's most recognisable songs, Happy Birthday to You, has been brought into the public domain after a US judge ruled Warner/Chappell Music did not own a valid copyright to the work.

The highly anticipated ruling came in a putative class-action lawsuit filed in 2013 by several artists against Warner/Chappell, the music publishing arm of Warner Music Group.

The lawsuit sought the return of millions of dollars in fees the company had collected over the years.

In order to make his ruling, US District Judge George H King had to delve into the song's long and complicated history, which began in 1893 with the publication of a melody called Good Morning to All in a kindergarten songbook written by a Kentucky woman named Mildred Hill and her sister Patty.

That melody eventually came to be sung with the familiar Happy Birthday lyrics, which Patty also claimed to have written, according to court records.

Warner's copyright originated with the Hill sisters' publisher, the Clayton F Summy Co, later known as Birch Tree and acquired by Warner in 1988. Summy had obtained registrations to Happy Birthday in 1935, according to court papers.

"Defendants ask us to find that the Hill sisters eventually gave Summy Co the rights in the lyrics to exploit and protect, but this assertion has no support in the record," King wrote in his 43-page opinion.

"The Hill sisters gave Summy Co the rights to the melody, and the rights to piano arrangements based on the melody, but never any rights to the lyrics," he added.

Warner could not be immediately reached for comment.

"Happy Birthday is finally free after 80 years," Randall Newman, an attorney for the artists including filmmakers working on a documentary about the song, told the Los Angeles Times.

"Finally, the charade is over. It's unbelievable."

The case garnered attention from around the world, not only because the tune is so commonly performed, but because many were not aware it was still under copyright, let alone purportedly owned by a major corporation.

People who sing Happy Birthday in their homes or at private gatherings have typically never been at risk of a lawsuit.

However, when the song has been used for commercial purposes, such as in films, Warner has enforced its rights, taking in an estimated $2 million in royalties for such uses each year.

Loading...

Reuters