Jackson Brumley v. Albert Brumley & Sons, Inc. , 727 F.3d 574 ( 2013 )


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    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 13a0229p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    JACKSON S. BRUMLEY; ALBERT E. BRUMLEY, X
    -
    -
    JR.; THOMAS R. BRUMLEY; BILLY J.
    POCKRUS; W.J. BRUMLEY; KRISTI BRUMLEY          -
    -
    No. 12-5386
    LAXTON; MARK BRUMLEY; KERI BRUMLEY
    ,
    >
    Plaintiffs-Appellees, -
    PILCHER;
    -
    -
    -
    v.
    -
    -
    -
    ALBERT E. BRUMLEY & SONS, INC.;
    -
    INTEGRATED COPYRIGHT GROUP, INC.;
    -
    ROBERT B. BRUMLEY,
    Defendants-Appellants. N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Tennessee at Nashville.
    No. 3:08-cv-01193—Aleta Arthur Trauger, District Judge.
    Argued: March 15, 2013
    Decided and Filed: August 15, 2013
    Before: KEITH, MARTIN, and COLE, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Barry I. Slotnick, LOEB & LOEB LLP, New York, New York, for
    Appellants. Jennifer A. Lawson, LAWSON LAW OFFICE, PLLC, Nashville,
    Tennessee, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Barry I. Slotnick, Jonathan N. Strauss, LOEB
    & LOEB LLP, New York, New York, for Appellants. Jennifer A. Lawson, LAWSON
    LAW OFFICE, PLLC, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellees.
    1
    No. 12-5386        Brumley, et al. v. Albert Brumley & Sons, Inc., et al.          Page 2
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge. “Some glad morning when this life is
    o’er / I’ll fly away / To a home on God’s celestial shore / I’ll fly away”—these are the
    opening lines of Albert Brumley, Sr.’s hit gospel song, “I’ll Fly Away.” Unfortunately,
    Brumley Sr.’s death would lead to a familial dispute concerning ownership of the Song’s
    copyright.
    In 1975, Brumley Sr. assigned his interests in the Song’s copyright to his sons
    Robert and William, and in 2006, Brumley Sr.’s four other children sought to terminate
    the 1975 Assignment. Robert refused to recognize the termination as valid, and the
    Brumley heirs sued Robert in district court. Robert claimed that the termination was
    invalid for two reasons: (1) Brumley, Sr. was not the statutory author of the Song; and
    (2) a 1979 assignment of interests in Brumley, Sr.’s songs by Brumley, Sr.’s widow
    prevented the Brumley heirs from later exercising their termination rights. The district
    court conducted a jury trial on the statutory-author issue, and the jury determined that
    Brumley Sr. was indeed the statutory author of the Song. Following the jury trial, the
    district court considered Robert’s legal challenge to the Brumley heirs’ exercise of their
    termination rights and held that the assignment by Brumley Sr.’s widow did not prevent
    the Brumley heirs from exercising their termination rights.
    Robert appeals the jury determination as well as the district court’s legal
    determination. Regarding the jury trial, Robert appeals two evidentiary rulings that the
    district court made prior to the trial: (1) it admitted the transcript and recording of a
    1977 conversation between Brumley Sr. and Brumley, Jr., one of the plaintiffs; and (2) it
    excluded two articles discussing Brumley, Sr.’s employment status at the time that he
    composed the Song. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s
    evidentiary ruling concerning the 1977 conversation, we REVERSE the district court’s
    evidentiary ruling regarding the two articles, and REMAND the case for further
    No. 12-5386        Brumley, et al. v. Albert Brumley & Sons, Inc., et al.          Page 3
    proceedings.    We refrain from reaching Robert’s appeal of the district court’s
    determination that the Brumley heirs validly exercised their termination rights.
    I.
    Brumley, Sr. began writing and composing “I’ll Fly Away” in 1928 or 1929, and
    on September 15, 1932, the Hartford Music Company secured the initial copyright in the
    Song by publishing it in a songbook titled, “The Wonderful Message.” In the 1940s,
    Brumley, Sr. formed a music-publishing company, Albert E. Brumley & Sons, to hold
    title to and exploit his own copyrights. In 1947, he purchased all of Hartford’s assets,
    including the copyright in the Song. Brumley, Sr. renewed the copyright registration for
    the Song in 1960, and he continued to hold full rights in the Song through Brumley &
    Sons.
    On December 18, 1975, Brumley, Sr. sold his interest in Brumley & Sons to
    William and Robert for $100,000. On December 31, 1975, Brumley, Sr. and his wife,
    Goldie, also executed a Bill of Sale that purported to sell personal property and an
    “Attached list of Copyright songs,” to William and Robert. The list of songs does not
    appear in the record; nonetheless, it is undisputed that, as part of those transactions,
    Brumley, Sr. conveyed the publishing and exploitation rights in the Song to William and
    Robert. On November 15, 1977, Brumley, Sr. died, survived by Goldie and their six
    children. Brumley, Sr. bequeathed all of his property, including his interests in any
    copyrights, to Goldie. On May 17, 1979, Goldie executed another Bill of Sale, wherein
    she maintained that she was the “sole and rightful owner” of all of Brumley, Sr.’s songs
    and she purported to “grant, sell, assign, and transfer” to Brumley & Sons her rights in
    Brumley, Sr.’s songs for $1.00. The Agreement also conveyed to Brumley & Sons the
    rights to renew copyrights and “all rights to obtain renewals or copyrights in the future
    upon Works written or composed by [Brumley Sr.].” In 1986, Robert bought out
    William’s share of Brumley & Sons for $240,000 plus interest, leaving Robert as the
    sole owner. Goldie died on July 10, 1988.
    On or about April 14, 2006, the other four Brumley children (Jackson S.
    Brumley, Albert E. Brumley, Jr., Betty Brumley Pockrus, and Thomas Brumley)
    No. 12-5386        Brumley, et al. v. Albert Brumley & Sons, Inc., et al.           Page 4
    delivered a timely Notice of Termination of Transfers and Licenses to Brumley & Sons,
    intending to terminate the 1975 transfer of rights in the Song from Brumley, Sr. to
    William and Robert. The effective date of the Termination Notice purports to be April
    14, 2008, and the U.S. Copyright Office recorded the Termination Notice on July 13,
    2006. Robert Brumley’s efforts to resist the Termination Notice form the basis of this
    lawsuit.
    On December 16, 2008, the Brumley heirs sued Robert Brumley, Brumley &
    Sons, and Integrated Copyright Group, Inc. after Robert’s refusal to recognize the
    validity of the Termination Notice. Currently, the Brumley heirs consist of Brumley
    Sr.’s surviving children—Jackson S. Brumley and Albert E. Brumley, Jr.—and the
    surviving heirs of his deceased children—Thomas Brumley’s surviving spouse, Betty
    Brumley Pockrus’s surviving spouse, and William Brumley’s four surviving children.
    At the district court, Robert argued that the Termination Notice was invalid for two
    reasons. First, he argued that Goldie exercised her termination rights by assigning her
    rights in the 1979 Bill of Sale, preventing the Brumley heirs from later exercising their
    termination rights. Section 304(d) of the Copyright Act provides that heirs can only
    exercise termination rights on a pre-1978 transfer one time. 17 U.S.C. § 304(d).
    Second, Robert claimed that Brumley, Sr. was an employee of the Hartford Music
    Company at the time that he created the Song and that the Song was a “work made for
    hire.” The Copyright Act’s termination provisions do not apply to works made for hire.
    17 U.S.C. § 304(c).
    Before the trial, the district court made evidentiary rulings related to the work-
    made-for-hire issue that are pertinent to this appeal and our decision today. First, Robert
    filed a motion in limine to exclude from evidence a recording and transcript of a 1977
    conversation between Brumley, Sr. and Brumley, Jr. The conversation contains the
    following exchange:
    Brumley, Sr.: That’s where I got started in the Hartford – that’s where I
    got started in the Hartford Musical Institute, which is defunct now.
    Albert, Jr.: And which you own now, the old Hartford copyrights?
    No. 12-5386        Brumley, et al. v. Albert Brumley & Sons, Inc., et al.          Page 5
    Brumley, Sr.: Yea, I sold some of the songs including “I’ll Fly Away”
    and two others for three dollars.
    The district court denied Robert’s motion and admitted the recording and transcript into
    evidence. During the pretrial conference on the motion, the district court acknowledged
    that the conversation was hearsay, but nevertheless admitted it into evidence pursuant
    to the residual exception to the hearsay rule found in Federal Rule of Evidence 807.
    Second, the Brumley heirs filed a motion in limine seeking to exclude from
    evidence a number of newspaper and magazine articles, among other things, as
    inadmissible hearsay. Robert argued that the district court should admit the articles
    under the “ancient documents” exception to the hearsay rule found in Federal Rule of
    Evidence 803(16). The district court granted the motion in part, excluding the articles
    from evidence. Two of the articles—Brumley is Ozark’s Country/Gospel Songmaster,
    by Paul Stubblefield, Music City News, April 1977 and Albert E. Brumley Folk
    Composer, by Bill Malone, Bluegrass Unlimited, July 1986—provided statements that
    Brumley, Sr. was a salaried employee of Hartford during the time that he wrote the
    Song.
    The district court bifurcated the trial. There was a jury trial from November
    16–18, 2010, solely on the issue of whether the Song was a work made for hire. At the
    close of the Brumley heirs’ case, Robert asked the district court to rule in his favor on
    the work-made-for-hire issue as a matter of law, but the district court denied the motion.
    The jury concluded that Brumley, Sr. was the statutory author of the Song, meaning that
    the Song was not a work made for hire as that term is used in section 304(c) of the Act
    and that Brumley, Sr.’s heirs have termination rights under section 304(d).
    Following the jury trial, remaining for the district court’s consideration was
    Robert’s legal challenge to the Brumley heirs’ Termination Notice on the grounds that
    Goldie’s 1979 Bill of Sale constituted the one and only legitimate exercise of
    termination rights. The district court held that Goldie’s 1979 assignment did not
    constitute an exercise of termination rights and it recognized the Brumley heirs’
    Termination Notice as valid. Robert filed this interlocutory appeal, seeking this court’s
    No. 12-5386        Brumley, et al. v. Albert Brumley & Sons, Inc., et al.          Page 6
    review of the district court’s determination regarding the validity of the Termination
    Notice. Robert also seeks review of the district court’s aforementioned evidentiary
    rulings, and of the district court’s denial of his motion for judgment as a matter of law.
    II.
    We begin by addressing Robert’s challenge to the district court’s evidentiary
    rulings. The trial court’s evidentiary rulings are reviewed for abuse of discretion.
    United States v. Taplin, 
    954 F.2d 1256
    , 1258 (6th Cir. 1992). Reversal is appropriate
    when the trial court “applies the incorrect legal standard, misapplies the correct legal
    standard, or relies upon clearly erroneous findings of fact.” United States v. Martinez,
    
    430 F.3d 317
    , 326 (6th Cir. 2005) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    The Brumley heirs sought to introduce the recording and transcript of a
    1977 conversation between Brumley, Sr. and Albert Brumley, Jr.               During the
    conversation, Brumley, Sr. claims that he sold the Song to Hartford for three dollars.
    Robert sought to exclude the recording and transcript as hearsay. The district court
    admitted the evidence on the grounds that it fell under the residual hearsay exception
    found in Rule 807. Rule 807 allows the admission of a hearsay statement that does not
    fall under the exceptions to hearsay found in Rules 803 and 804 if the statement meets
    four criteria: (1) the statement has equivalent circumstantial guarantees of
    trustworthiness, (2) the statement is offered as evidence of a material fact, (3) the
    statement is more probative on the point for which it is offered than any other evidence
    that the proponent can obtain through reasonable efforts, and (4) admitting the statement
    will best serve the purposes of the Rules of Evidence and the interests of justice. Fed.
    R. Evid. 807; United States v. Gomez-Lemos, 
    939 F.2d 326
    , 329 (6th Cir. 1991). Robert
    argues that the district court erred in admitting the recording and transcript because the
    conversation lacked the circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness equivalent to those
    in the enumerated hearsay exceptions.
    In support of his argument, Robert relies on language from the Supreme Court’s
    decision in Idaho v. Wright, 
    497 U.S. 805
    (1990). Specifically, Robert says that the
    No. 12-5386        Brumley, et al. v. Albert Brumley & Sons, Inc., et al.           Page 7
    Supreme Court has stated that the theory underlying the federal hearsay exceptions is
    that “if the declarant’s truthfulness is so clear from the surrounding circumstances that
    the test of cross-examination would be of marginal utility, then the hearsay rule does not
    bar admission of the statement at trial.” 
    Wright, 497 U.S. at 820
    . However, the Supreme
    Court made this statement in the context of a discussion of the “particularized guarantees
    of trustworthiness” required under the Confrontation Clause.                
    Id. at 814–15.
    Incriminating statements that are admissible under exceptions to the hearsay rule are not
    admissible under the Confrontation Clause unless the statements meet particularized
    guarantees of trustworthiness.     
    Id. The Supreme
    Court’s requirement that the
    truthfulness of a statement be so clear that the test of cross-examination be of marginal
    utility is specific to the Confrontation Clause; thus, the requirement is inapplicable in
    this case.
    There is a lack of Sixth Circuit case law on the residual exception’s
    trustworthiness requirement outside of the context of the Confrontation Clause, but we
    believe that there are a numbers of factors indicating that the statements from the
    1977 conversation have the requisite guarantees of trustworthiness. First, the statements
    should be considered more reliable than not given that Brumley, Sr. and Brumley, Jr. are
    father and son and not strangers. Second, there is no indication that Brumley, Sr. lacked
    capacity at the time that he gave the statement. One may argue that Brumley, Sr.’s
    memory might have been impaired due to the lapse of time between the Song’s
    publication and the statement, but it is just as reasonable to assume that Brumley, Sr.
    would have accurately recalled the circumstances surrounding the creation of his most
    successful song despite the lapse of time. Third, Robert has not alleged that Brumley,
    Sr. was an untruthful person. Fourth, the statement is clear and unambiguous. Finally,
    the fact that Brumley, Jr. recorded the conversation adds an element of formality, which
    suggests that Brumley, Sr. may have given his statements added consideration. The
    district court did not abuse its discretion and err in admitting into evidence the
    statements from and transcript of the 1977 conversation.
    No. 12-5386        Brumley, et al. v. Albert Brumley & Sons, Inc., et al.           Page 8
    The Brumley heirs sought to prevent Robert from introducing into evidence two
    articles: 1) Paul Stubblefield’s article, Brumley is Ozark’s Country/Gospel Songmaster,
    published in the April 1977 edition of Music City News; and 2) Bill Malone’s article,
    Albert E. Brumley Folk Composer, published in the July 1986 edition of Bluegrass
    Unlimited. Both articles claimed that Brumley, Sr. was a salaried employee of Hartford
    at the time that he wrote the Song. Robert sought to introduce the evidence under the
    “ancient documents” exception to the hearsay rule. See Fed. R. Evid. 803(16).
    As an initial matter, the Brumley heirs conceded that the articles are self-
    authenticating “newspapers and periodicals” pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence
    902(6). The district court found that the statements fall within the ancient documents
    exception because they are more than twenty years old and are authenticated. See Fed.
    R. Evid. 902(6). The district court also acknowledged that “the content of the document
    is a matter of evidentiary weight left to the sole discretion of the trier of fact,” and,
    therefore, the factual accuracy of the statement is not pertinent when considering
    whether the hearsay exception applies. United States v. Kalymon, 
    541 F.3d 624
    , 633
    (6th Cir. 2008). Finally, the district court noted that the challenged statements within
    the articles do not contain a potential “hearsay within hearsay” problem because the
    statements are simply the assertions of the articles’ authors and do not quote or attribute
    statements to anyone else.
    Still, the district court excluded the evidence based on its discretion under Rule
    403, which states that otherwise relevant and admissible evidence may be excluded “if
    its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice,
    confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay,
    waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.” Fed. R. Evid. 403. The
    district court relied on an evidence treatise to support its determination that the
    circumstances must show that Stubblefield and Malone could have had personal
    knowledge of Brumley, Sr.’s employment relationship with Hartford. The district court
    found that the articles did not meet this standard because “[t]here is no clear indication
    No. 12-5386         Brumley, et al. v. Albert Brumley & Sons, Inc., et al.            Page 9
    in these articles as to how the authors acquired the information that they used to make
    representations regarding Brumley’s employment status at the relevant time.”
    First, the Sixth Circuit has never employed such a requirement in determining
    whether to admit evidence under the ancient documents exception. Second, it is clear
    where the authors acquired the relevant information. It is apparent from the context of
    the Stubblefield article that Stubblefield interviewed Brumley, Sr., and the notes section
    at the conclusion of Malone’s article lists all of Malone’s sources, which include
    Brumley, Sr. and Eugene M. Bartlett, former President of Hartford. Finally, the district
    court’s determination that there is an absence of need for the evidence is not well
    supported. The district court points to other evidence on the issue, including excerpts
    from Brumley, Jr.’s book, I’ll Fly Away: The Life of Albert E. Brumley, which stated that
    Brumley, Sr. served as a salaried staff writer at Hartford at the time that he wrote the
    Song. Brumley, Jr., however, testified at trial that the statement in his book was
    erroneous. Moreover, the 1977 interview between Brumley, Sr. and Brumley, Jr. is the
    only source, other than the articles, that involves commentary from parties with personal
    knowledge of Brumley, Sr.’s employment status with Hartford at the time that he wrote
    the Song. The evidentiary weight to be given to the challenged content in the articles
    should have been left to the discretion of the jury; therefore, the district court abused its
    discretion in excluding the articles from evidence.
    Because we find that the district court erred in excluding the articles from
    evidence, we refrain from reaching the remaining issues that Robert raised on appeal.
    We AFFIRM the district court’s introduction of the 1977 conversation into
    evidence, REVERSE the district court’s exclusion of the Stubblefield and Malone
    articles, and REMAND for further proceedings.