Termination Rights, Royalty Distributions, Ownership Transfers, Disputes, and the Music Modernization Act, 65908-65927 [2023-20922]
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65908
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 185 / Tuesday, September 26, 2023 / Proposed Rules
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Rhea Efthimiadis, Assistant to the
General Counsel, by email at meft@
copyright.gov or telephone at 202–707–
8350.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Copyright Office
37 CFR Part 210
[Docket No. 2022–5]
Termination Rights, Royalty
Distributions, Ownership Transfers,
Disputes, and the Music Modernization
Act
U.S. Copyright Office, Library
of Congress.
ACTION: Supplemental notice of
proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Copyright Office is
issuing a supplemental notice of
proposed rulemaking to update its
October 25, 2022 proposed rule
regarding the applicability of the
derivative works exception to
termination rights under the Copyright
Act to the new statutory mechanical
blanket license established by the Music
Modernization Act. This supplemental
notice modifies the proposed rule and
expands its scope in light of comments
received in response to the previous
notice. In addition to addressing the
applicability of the derivative works
exception, the supplemental proposed
rule addresses other matters relevant to
identifying the proper payee to whom
the mechanical licensing collective
must distribute royalties. Among other
things, the Office proposes adopting
regulations addressing the mechanical
licensing collective’s distribution of
matched historical royalties and
administration of ownership transfers,
requests to designate alternative royalty
payees, and related disputes. The Office
invites public comments on the
supplemental proposed rule.
DATES: Written comments must be
received no later than 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time on October 26, 2023.
Written reply comments must be
received no later than 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time on November 13, 2023.
ADDRESSES: For reasons of governmental
efficiency, the Copyright Office is using
the regulations.gov system for the
submission and posting of public
comments in this proceeding. All
comments are therefore to be submitted
electronically through regulations.gov.
Specific instructions for submitting
comments are available on the
Copyright Office’s website at https://
copyright.gov/rulemaking/mmatermination. If electronic submission of
comments is not feasible due to lack of
access to a computer or the internet,
please contact the Copyright Office
using the contact information below for
special instructions.
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SUMMARY:
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I. Background
The Copyright Office (‘‘Office’’) issues
this supplemental notice of proposed
rulemaking (‘‘SNPRM’’) subsequent to a
notice of proposed rulemaking
(‘‘NPRM’’) published in the Federal
Register on October 25, 2022, pursuant
to the Orrin G. Hatch-Bob Goodlatte
Music Modernization Act (‘‘MMA’’).1 In
the NPRM, the Office proposed
regulations regarding the applicability
of the derivative works exception
(‘‘Exception’’) to termination rights
under the Copyright Act to the statutory
mechanical blanket license established
by the MMA (‘‘blanket license’’).2 This
SNPRM assumes familiarity with the
prior NPRM and the public comments
received in response to the NPRM.3
A. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
The Office commenced this
proceeding in response to the adoption
by he Mechanical Licensing Collective
(‘‘MLC’’) of a termination dispute policy
that conflicted with prior guidance
given by the Office and that embodied
an erroneous application of the
Exception.4 As a result of the MLC’s
adoption of this policy, the Office
concluded it was necessary to revisit the
termination issue more directly and to
1 87
FR 64405 (Oct. 25, 2022).
2 Id.
3 The NPRM stemmed from a previous
rulemaking proceeding, discussed in detail in the
NPRM, that involved multiple rounds of public
comments through a notification of inquiry, 84 FR
49966 (Sept. 24, 2019), a notice of proposed
rulemaking, 85 FR 22518 (Apr. 22, 2020), and an
ex parte communications process. Guidelines for ex
parte communications, along with records of such
communications, including those referenced herein,
are available at https://www.copyright.gov/
rulemaking/mma-implementation/ex-partecommunications.html. All rulemaking activity,
including public comments, as well as educational
material regarding the MMA, can currently be
accessed via navigation from https://
www.copyright.gov/music-modernization.
Comments received in response to the NPRM are
available at https://copyright.gov/rulemaking/mmatermination/. References to those public comments
are by party name (abbreviated where appropriate),
followed by ‘‘Initial Comments,’’ ‘‘Reply
Comments,’’ or ‘‘Ex Parte Letter,’’ as appropriate.
4 87 FR 64405, 64407. The Office disagrees with
the MLC’s suggestions to the contrary. See, e.g.,
MLC Initial Comments at 2–3; MLC Reply
Comments at 1–2. As explained more fully in the
NPRM, the Office’s ultimate conclusion in the prior
proceeding was that ‘‘it seems reasonable for the
MLC to act in accordance with letters of direction
received from the relevant parties, or else hold
applicable royalties pending direction or resolution
of any dispute by the parties.’’ 87 FR 64405, 64407
(quoting 85 FR 58114, 58132 (Sept. 17, 2020)).
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squarely resolve the question of how
termination law intersects with the
blanket license.5 The NPRM explained
that the Office ‘‘seeks to provide clarity
concerning the application of the
Exception to the blanket license,’’ as
‘‘[d]oing so would provide much needed
business certainty to music publishers
and songwriters’’ and ‘‘would enable the
MLC to appropriately operationalize the
distribution of post-termination
royalties in accordance with existing
law.’’ 6 The NPRM contained a detailed
discussion of the procedural
background leading to this rulemaking,7
the Office’s regulatory authority,8 and
legal background about the Copyright
Act’s termination provisions and the
Exception.9
The Office then analyzed the
application of the Exception in the
context of the blanket license and
preliminarily concluded ‘‘that the
MLC’s termination dispute policy is
inconsistent with the law.’’ 10 It
explained that ‘‘[w]hether or not the
Exception applies to a [digital music
provider’s (‘‘DMP’s’’)] blanket license
(and the Office concludes that the
Exception does not), the statute entitles
the current copyright owner to the
royalties under the blanket license,
whether pre- or post-termination.’’ 11
This means that ‘‘the post-termination
copyright owner (i.e., the author, the
author’s heirs, or their successors, such
as a subsequent publisher grantee) is
due the post-termination royalties paid
by the DMP to the MLC.’’ 12
Consequently, the Office proposed a
rule to clarify the appropriate payee
under the blanket license to whom the
MLC must distribute royalties following
a statutory termination.13 Because the
Office concluded that the MLC’s
termination dispute policy is contrary to
law, it also proposed to require the MLC
to immediately repeal its policy in
full.14 The Office further proposed to
require the MLC to adjust any royalties
distributed under the policy within 90
days to make copyright owners whole
for any distributions the MLC made
based on ‘‘an erroneous understanding
and application of current law.’’ 15
5 87
FR 64405, 64407.
(‘‘Moreover, without the uniformity in
application that a regulatory approach brings, the
Office is concerned that the MLC’s ability to
distribute post-termination royalties efficiently
would be negatively impacted.’’).
7 Id. at 64406–07.
8 Id. at 64407–08.
9 Id. at 64408–10.
10 Id. at 64410–11.
11 Id. at 64411.
12 Id.
13 Id. at 64411–12.
14 Id. at 64412.
15 Id.
6 Id.
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After publication of the NPRM, the
MLC said that it voluntarily ‘‘suspended
its [termination dispute policy] pending
the outcome of the [Office’s] rulemaking
proceeding’’ and ‘‘will hold all royalties
for uses of musical works that are
subject to statutory termination claims
beginning with the October [2022] usage
period, which would have been
distributed in January 2023.’’ 16 To the
Office’s knowledge, the MLC continues
to hold such royalties at present.
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B. The NPRM Comments
The Office received over 40 public
comments in response to the NPRM.
These comments reflect the views of
hundreds of interested parties,
including songwriters, music publishers
and administrators, record labels, public
interest groups, academics, and
practitioners. Most commenters,
including multiple music publishers
and administrators, generally supported
the proposed rule.17 While some
commenters raised concerns with
certain aspects of the NPRM,18 the
National Music Publishers’ Association
(‘‘NMPA’’) was the only commenter to
oppose the proposed rule more
broadly.19
NMPA explained that it ‘‘has serious
concerns regarding (i) the impermissible
retroactive effect of the NPRM, (ii) the
statutory authority underlying the broad
legal analysis contained in the NPRM
that would appear to have effect beyond
the limited issue of whether the
16 The MLC, Policies, https://www.themlc.com/
dispute-policy (last visited Sept. 20, 2023).
17 See, e.g., Authors All. et al. Initial Comments
at 1–3; BMG Rights Mgmt. Initial Comments at 1–
2; BMG Rights Mgmt. Reply Comments at 1;
ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 2, 6–8;
Fishman & Garcia Initial Comments at 1–4; Gates
Reply Comments at 1; Howard Initial Comments at
1–2; Howard Reply Comments at 2–3; King,
Holmes, Paterno & Soriano LLP Initial Comments at
1; Landmann Initial Comments at 1; Miller Initial
Comments at 1; North Music Grp. Reply Comments
at 2–3; NSAI Initial Comments at 3; Promopub
Initial Comments at 1–2; Promopub Reply
Comments at 1–2; Recording Academy Reply
Comments at 2–3; Rights Recapture Initial
Comments at 1; SGA et al. Initial Comments at 1–
2, 5; SONA et al. Initial Comments at 2–3; SONA
et al. Reply Comments at 3; Songwriters Reply
Comments at 1; Wixen Music Publ’g Initial
Comments at 1–2.
18 See, e.g., CMPA Initial Comments at 1–2
(requesting that the rule not affect previously
distributed royalties); A2IM & RIAA Reply
Comments at 1–2 (agreeing with parts of the Office’s
termination analysis, but requesting that the Office
limit its analysis to those parts to ensure that the
analysis and rule are strictly limited to the context
of the blanket license); MPA Reply Comments at 2–
5 (taking no position on the proposed rule, but
expressing ‘‘significant concerns with portions of
the NPRM supporting the proposed rule to the
extent they could be read to limit the application
of the [Exception] beyond the Section 115 blanket
license’’).
19 See generally NMPA Initial Comments; NMPA
Ex Parte Letter (Feb. 6, 2023).
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Exception applies to the Blanket
License, and (iii) whether the Proposed
Rule may constitute an unconstitutional
taking in violation of the Fifth
Amendment.’’ 20 Notwithstanding these
concerns, NMPA stated that it ‘‘supports
what it believes to be the ultimate goal
of the Proposed Rule: to provide that the
post-termination copyright owner of a
musical composition shall receive posttermination royalties under the Blanket
License for any sound recordings
created pre- or post-termination.’’ 21
Several commenters, including the
MLC, sought additional guidance from
the Office on various related issues not
directly addressed by the NPRM.
Examples include the following:
• Application of the Exception to
other types of statutory mechanical
licenses; 22
• Application of the Exception to
voluntary licenses; 23
• Procedures for carrying out the
proposed corrective royalty adjustment
to remedy prior distributions by the
MLC based on an erroneous
understanding and application of the
Exception.24
• Procedures concerning notice,
documentation, timing, and other
matters relating to the MLC’s
implementation of a termination
notification; 25 and
• Procedures concerning termination
disputes and related confidential
information.26
The MLC emphasized the importance
of the Office providing guidance on
these topics, explaining that it is
‘‘essential to processing royalties in
connection with statutory termination
claims’’ and ‘‘would provide important
20 NMPA Initial Comments at 2; see also NMPA
Ex Parte Letter at 2 (Feb. 6, 2023).
21 NMPA Initial Comments at 1; see also NMPA
Ex Parte Letter at 2 (Feb. 6, 2023); CMPA Initial
Comments at 1 (‘‘CMPA concurs with what it
believes the USCO’s intent is, under the Proposed
Rule.’’).
22 See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 6; MLC
Reply Comments at 2; ClearBox Rights Initial
Comments at 6; ClearBox Rights Reply Comments
at 2; Howard Initial Comments at 5; King, Holmes,
Paterno & Soriano LLP Initial Comments.
23 See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 4–6; MLC
Reply Comments at 2; ClearBox Rights Initial
Comments at 6; ClearBox Rights Reply Comments
at 2; Howard Initial Comments at 5; Rights
Recapture Initial Comments.
24 See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 6–8;
ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 3–4; ClearBox
Rights Ex Parte Letter at 2–4 (June 28, 2023);
Howard Initial Comments at 6; Promopub Initial
Comments at 2; Promopub Reply Comments at 3;
North Music Grp. Reply Comments at 2.
25 See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 10–11;
ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 8; ClearBox
Rights Reply Comments at 5–6; Howard Initial
Comments at 3–5; Howard Reply Comments at 2–
3; SGA et al. Initial Comments at 2, 6–8.
26 See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 11–14;
ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 6.
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guidance to parties involved in
termination claims.’’ 27
II. Supplemental Proposed Rule
While the Office is still considering
the comments submitted in response to
the NPRM, in light of the requests for
further guidance and other comments
received, the Office is issuing this
SNPRM modifying the proposed rule,
providing additional detail, and
expanding its scope. The Office seeks
public comments on the revised
proposal and will consider all
comments received in response to both
the NPRM and SNPRM when issuing its
final rule.
As discussed below, in addition to the
Exception, the supplemental proposed
rule addresses other matters germane to
identifying the proper payee to whom
the MLC must distribute royalties.
These matters include issues related to
the distribution of matched historical
royalties, the MLC’s administration of
terminations and related disputes, other
types of ownership transfers, and
requests to designate alternative royalty
payees. While commenters’ requests for
additional guidance largely pertain to
termination-related issues, the requests
and other comments lead the Office to
believe that a more comprehensive set
of regulations would be beneficial to the
MLC, publishers, songwriters, and the
wider music industry. The accurate
distribution of royalties is a core
objective of the MLC. Adopting the
supplemental proposed rule would
establish standards and settle
expectations for all parties with respect
to such distributions. This SNPRM is,
thus, a natural extension of the NPRM
and continues to ‘‘ultimately reflect[]
the Office’s oversight and governance of
the MLC’s reporting and payment
obligations to copyright owners.’’ 28
The Office begins with two
introductory notes about some of the
terminology used below. First, under
the MMA, the MLC must hold, for a
designated minimum time period,
royalties associated with reported uses
of sound recordings embodying musical
works for which the copyright owners of
such musical works (or shares of such
works) have not been identified or
located.29 Such works (or shares) are
‘‘unmatched.’’ 30 At the end of the
statutory minimum holding period,
accrued royalties for musical works (and
shares) that remain unmatched become
eligible for distribution by relative
27 MLC Initial Comments at 9–10; see also MLC
Reply Comments at 2.
28 See 87 FR 64405, 64408.
29 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(H)(i).
30 Id. at 115(e)(35).
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market share to copyright owners
identified in the MLC’s records, at
which point they become ‘‘unclaimed
royalties.’’ 31
Second, the MMA contains an
optional limitation on liability for
unlicensed uses of musical works made
by DMPs prior to January 1, 2021 (the
‘‘license availability date’’).32 To be
eligible for this limitation on liability,
DMPs had to engage in good-faith,
commercially reasonable efforts to
identify, locate, and pay musical work
copyright owners for covered uses of
their works and had to accrue and hold
royalties for uses of any unmatched
musical works.33 If a musical work
remained unmatched as of January 1,
2021, the DMP had to transfer all
accrued royalties to the MLC along with
a cumulative statement of account.34
Such royalties are ‘‘historical
unmatched royalties.’’ When the MLC
matches the musical work (or share) to
which historical unmatched royalties
are attributable, they become ‘‘matched
historical royalties.’’
A. Rulemaking Authority
The Office relies on the same
authority for the supplemental proposed
rule as it did for the original proposed
rule, which is discussed in detail in the
NPRM.35 The Office is continuing to
evaluate comments submitted on this
topic 36 and welcomes further comments
on its authority to adopt the
supplemental proposed rule, including
with respect to the proposed corrective
royalty adjustment discussed in Part
II.H below.
B. Termination and the Exception
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1. Analysis Regarding Blanket Licenses
While many commenters agree with
the Office’s legal analysis in the NPRM
regarding the application of the
31 Id. at 115(d)(3)(J)(i), (e)(34). The MLC has
publicly confirmed that it does not have ‘‘any such
[market-share] distribution planned in the coming
year,’’ as it ‘‘is focused on matching uses and
identified rightsholders, and . . . has not yet turned
to the evaluation of what remaining royalties might
be appropriate for a market share distribution, let
alone begun the process to effectuate such a
distribution, which will occur with significant
public notice and transparency as Congress
intended.’’ Five Years Later—The Music
Modernization Act: Hearing Before the Subcomm.
on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the internet of
the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, Responses to
Questions for the Record, 118 Cong. 2–3 (2023)
(statement of Kris Ahrend, CEO, Mechanical
Licensing Collective), https://docs.house.gov/
meetings/JU/JU03/20230627/116155/HHRG-118JU03-20230627-SD013.pdf.
32 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(A).
33 Id. at 115(d)(10)(B).
34 Id.
35 87 FR 64405, 64407–08.
36 See NMPA Initial Comments at 4–10, 12–13;
NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 2–4 (Feb. 6, 2023).
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Exception to blanket licenses,37 other
commenters raise some concerns.38 The
Office is continuing to evaluate these
comments, but for purposes of this
SNPRM, the Office continues to propose
a rule that relies on the preliminary
analysis and conclusions regarding the
Exception, as detailed in the NPRM.
Therefore, the Office does not propose
to revise the portion of the proposed
rule that would make clear (1) that the
Exception is inapplicable to blanket
licenses, and (2) that the Exception does
not affect copyright ownership.39 The
Office, however, proposes to further
clarify that because the Exception is
inapplicable to blanket licenses, the
Exception does not affect the identity of
the applicable royalty payee either.40
The Office proposes this clarification in
light of the distinction that can exist
between the copyright owner and the
royalty payee.41
2. Requests for Additional Guidance
Various commenters, including the
MLC, request guidance from the Office
regarding the application of the
Exception to voluntary licenses 42 and
other types of statutory mechanical
37 See, e.g., A2IM & RIAA Reply Comments at 2;
Authors All. et al. Initial Comments at 2–3; BMG
Rights Mgmt. Initial Comments at 2; ClearBox
Rights Initial Comments at 6–7; Fishman & Garcia
Initial Comments at 1–4; King, Holmes, Paterno &
Soriano LLP Initial Comments at 1; North Music
Grp. Reply Comments at 2; Recording Academy
Reply Comments at 2; SGA et al. Initial Comments
at 2, 5; SONA et al. Initial Comments at 2–3.
38 See NMPA Initial Comments at 2–3; NMPA Ex
Parte Letter at 2–3 (Feb. 6, 2023); MPA Reply
Comments at 2–5; see also A2IM & RIAA Reply
Comments at 2; Fishman & Garcia Initial Comments
at 4.
39 The Office does not mean to suggest that
someone could theoretically be construed as the
copyright owner based on the Exception. See
Howard Initial Comments at 5. Rather, the point of
the proposed language is to make that impossibility
clear.
40 The Office makes this proposal based on Linda
Edell Howard’s suggestion to change the proposed
rule to refer to ‘‘any claim to any rights or revenue.’’
Id.
41 Termination causes copyright ownership to
revert to the author (or heirs). After termination, the
Exception only permits a pre-termination derivative
work to ‘‘continue to be utilized under the terms of
the [terminated] grant.’’ 17 U.S.C. 203(b)(1),
304(c)(6)(A); see H.R. Rep. No. 94–1476, at 127
(1976), reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5659, 5742–
43 (explaining that ‘‘termination means that
ownership of the rights covered by the terminated
grant reverts’’ to the author or heirs, and describing
the Exception as a ‘‘limitation on the rights of a
copyright owner under a terminated grant’’)
(emphasis added); Mills Music, Inc. v. Snyder, 469
U.S. 153, 173 (1985) (stating that ‘‘[t]he purpose of
the Exception was to preserve the right of the owner
of a derivative work to exploit it, notwithstanding
the reversion’’) (emphasis added) (internal citations
and quotation marks omitted).
42 See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 4–6; MLC
Reply Comments at 2; ClearBox Rights Initial
Comments at 6; ClearBox Rights Reply Comments
at 2; Howard Initial Comments at 5; Rights
Recapture Initial Comments at 1.
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licenses beyond the blanket license,43
which the Office did not directly
address in the NPRM. With respect to
non-blanket statutory mechanical
licenses, the MLC says that guidance is
necessary to enable it to accurately
match works (and shares) associated
with historical unmatched royalties.44
Regarding voluntary licenses, the MLC
explains that guidance is necessary
because it must match and identify
ownership for works used under
voluntary licenses so that royalties for
uses of such works can be deducted
from DMP blanket license royalties.45
The Office notes that the MLC must also
do the same for uses under individual
download licenses.46
The Office agrees that further official
guidance on these issues is required.
While some commenters express
concern with the Office opining on
issues beyond the blanket license,47 the
Office is persuaded that doing so is
necessary to enable the MLC to
accurately carry out its core statutory
function to match and distribute
royalties to copyright owners.
i. Matched Historical Royalties 48
The Office is inclined to conclude
that the Exception does not apply to any
matched historical royalties. Historical
unmatched royalties were paid to the
MLC by DMPs as one of the
requirements for the statutory limitation
on liability for pre-2021 unlicensed uses
and not pursuant to the terms of any
pre-2021 voluntary or statutory
license.49 Instead, where a DMP could
not identify and locate an applicable
copyright owner, the statute directed the
DMP to accrue and hold royalties at the
statutory license rate and ultimately
transfer such accrued royalties to the
MLC if they remained unmatched as of
January 1, 2021.50 Likewise, the MLC’s
distribution of historical unmatched
43 See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 6; MLC
Reply Comments at 2; ClearBox Rights Initial
Comments at 6; ClearBox Rights Reply Comments
at 2; Howard Initial Comments at 5; King, Holmes,
Paterno & Soriano LLP Initial Comments at 1.
44 MLC Initial Comments at 6.
45 Id. at 4–6 (citing 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(G)).
46 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(G)(i)(I)(bb). An ‘‘individual
download license’’ is ‘‘a compulsory license
obtained by a record company to make and
distribute, or authorize the making and distribution
of, permanent downloads embodying a specific
individual musical work.’’ Id. at 115(e)(12).
47 See A2IM & RIAA Reply Comments at 2; MPA
Reply Comments at 2–5; NMPA Ex Parte Letter at
2–3 (Feb. 6, 2023).
48 As discussed below in Parts II.D and E, the
MLC’s market-share-based distributions of
unclaimed royalties, including historical
unmatched royalties that may become unclaimed
royalties, are beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
49 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10); 37 CFR 210.10; see
generally 86 FR 2176 (Jan. 11, 2021).
50 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(B)(iv); see 37 CFR 210.10.
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royalties is governed by the statute.
Historical unmatched royalties that
remain unmatched long enough to
become unclaimed royalties are eligible
to be distributed by relative market
share,51 and historical unmatched
royalties that become matched historical
royalties are to be distributed to the
‘‘copyright owner.’’ 52
Terms of any pre-2021 license,
including as those terms might
otherwise apply through the Exception,
appear to have no bearing on how the
MLC must distribute matched historical
royalties.53 This is because the accrual
and transfer of historical unmatched
royalties to the MLC and distribution of
any such royalties by the MLC are
governed by statute and the Office’s
regulations. Even if the Exception
applied to a pre-2021 license, it would
not affect the statutory directive that the
MLC must distribute matched historical
royalties to the ‘‘copyright owner.’’ 54
The Office tentatively believes that,
based on these facts, the Exception does
not apply to matched historical
royalties.
ii. Pre-2021 Statutory Mechanical
Licenses
Under the MMA’s provisions
governing the transition to the new
blanket licensing regime, most pre-2021
statutory mechanical licenses do not
appear to have continued in effect after
the license availability date.55 Section
115(d)(9)(A) provides that ‘‘[o]n the
license availability date, a blanket
license shall, without any interruption
in license authority enjoyed by such
[DMP], be automatically substituted for
and supersede any existing compulsory
license previously obtained under
51 17
U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(J).
at 115(d)(3)(I)(ii).
53 To be clear, as the Office previously explained,
a pre-2021 agreement can, however, affect the
calculation of the accrued royalties required to be
transferred to the MLC to be eligible for the
limitation on liability. See 86 FR 2176, 2195 (‘‘Only
‘accrued royalties’ for uses of unmatched works
must be transferred to the MLC, and these may not
necessarily be the same as the royalties that would
otherwise be attributable to such usage under the
statutory rate in the absence of any voluntary
agreements that may extinguish or alter such
royalty obligations for certain uses of certain
works.’’); see also 37 CFR 210.10(c)(5)(i). The Office
further notes that it expresses no opinion at this
time as to whether the Exception may have any
bearing on the calculation of relative market share
for distributions of historical unmatched royalties
that become unclaimed royalties. The distribution
of unclaimed royalties is beyond the scope of this
proceeding.
54 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(I)(ii); see id. at 203(b)(1),
304(c)(6)(A). This result would not necessarily bar
a party from seeking to recover unpaid royalties, at
the statutory rate, for pre-2021 unlicensed uses from
a relevant DMP, even if the DMP is shielded by the
limitation on liability. Id. at 115(d)(10)(A).
55 Id. at 115(d)(9)(A)–(B).
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52 Id.
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[section 115] by the [DMP].’’ 56 That
provision then has an exception, where
the substitution does not apply ‘‘to any
authority obtained from a record
company pursuant to a compulsory
license to make and distribute
permanent downloads.’’ 57 Section
115(d)(9)(B) adds that, except as
provided in section 115(d)(9)(A), ‘‘on
and after the license availability date,
licenses other than individual download
licenses obtained under [section 115] for
covered activities prior to the license
availability date shall no longer
continue in effect.’’ 58 Read together,
with respect to covered activities, it
appears that only record companies’
pre-2021 individual download licenses
and the authority obtained from them by
DMPs survived the license availability
date.59 Because all other pre-2021
statutory mechanical licenses to engage
in covered activities are no longer in
effect pursuant to their own terms (i.e.,
the statutory text), any application the
Exception may or may not have had
while they were in force seems to have
no bearing on the MLC’s distribution of
royalties for post-2021 usage.60 The
application of the Exception to both preand post-2021 individual download
licenses is discussed in the next section.
iii. Individual Download Licenses
The Office tentatively believes that its
legal analysis in the NPRM for blanket
licenses applies similarly to individual
download licenses. First, as a type of
statutory mechanical license, the
analysis contained in Parts V.A.1
(discussing that the blanket license
cannot be terminated) and V.A.3
(discussing that applying the Exception
to the blanket license would lead to an
extreme result) of the NPRM fully
applies to individual download licenses
for the same reasons as for blanket
licenses.61 Second, the analysis under
56 Id.
at 115(d)(9)(A).
57 Id.
58 Id. at 115(d)(9)(B). ‘‘Covered activity’’ means
‘‘the activity of making a digital phonorecord
delivery of a musical work, including in the form
of a permanent download, limited download, or
interactive stream, where such activity qualifies for
a compulsory license under [section 115].’’ Id. at
115(e)(7).
59 See H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 10 (2018)
(‘‘Because the new blanket license replaces the
previous work-by-work compulsory license, the
compulsory licenses obtained under notices of
intent served on musical work copyright owners
prior to the availability of the blanket license will
no longer be valid.’’); S. Rep. No. 115–339, at 10
(2018) (same); Report and Section-by-Section
Analysis of H.R. 1551 by the Chairmen and Ranking
Members of Senate and House Judiciary
Committees 8 (2018) (‘‘Conf. Rep.’’), https://
www.copyright.gov/legislation/mma_conference_
report.pdf (same).
60 See 17 U.S.C. 203(b)(1), 304(c)(6)(A).
61 See 87 FR 64405, 64410–11.
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Part V.A.2 of the NPRM (discussing that
derivative works generally are not
prepared pursuant to the blanket
license) also applies to the extent no
sound recording derivative is actually
prepared pursuant to the individual
download license.62 In such cases, for
the same reasons discussed in Part
V.A.2 of the NPRM, the individual
download license ‘‘is not part of any
preserved grants that make the
Exception applicable.’’ 63 If sound
recording derivatives are prepared
pursuant to an individual download
license, then the Exception still would
not apply.64 As explained in Part V.A.1
of the NPRM, a self-executing statutory
license, like an individual download
license, cannot be terminated in the first
place.65 Third, the analysis contained in
Part V.B of the NPRM is essentially the
same for individual download licenses
as for blanket licenses.66 The only
difference is that the relevant terms of
the individual download license
providing for payment to the ‘‘copyright
owner’’ is in a different location from
the relevant provisions about blanket
licenses.67
Based on the foregoing, the
supplemental proposed rule provides
that the Exception would not apply to
individual download licenses for
purposes of the MLC’s efforts under
section 115(d)(3)(G)(i)(I)(bb) and 37 CFR
210.27(g)(2)(ii).
iv. Voluntary Licenses
The application of the Exception to
voluntary licenses requires
consideration of additional questions in
light of the variety of licenses that may
exist. Because DMP voluntary licenses
are not statutory mechanical licenses,
parts of the Office’s analysis in the
NPRM specific to the nature of the
blanket license as self-executing and to
the particular text of section 115 (i.e.,
Parts V.A.1, V.A.3, and V.B) do not
apply to them.68 The analysis contained
in Part V.A.2 of the NPRM, however,
would generally apply ‘‘where no sound
recording derivative is prepared
62 See
id.
id.
64 See id.
65 See id.
66 See id. at 64411.
67 Under the statute, a notice must be served on
the ‘‘copyright owner’’ to obtain an individual
download license and payments must be made in
accordance with section 115(c)(2)(I). 17 U.S.C.
115(b)(2)(A), (3). Under section 115(c)(2)(I),
royalties must be paid in accordance with the
Office’s regulations. Id. at 115(c)(2)(I). Under the
Office’s regulations, individual download licenses
are subject to the same payment regulations as other
non-blanket statutory mechanical licenses. 37 CFR
210.11. Under those regulations, payment is to be
made to the ‘‘copyright owner.’’ Id. at 210.6(g).
68 See 87 FR 64405, 64410–11.
63 See
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pursuant to a DMP’s [voluntary]
license.’’ 69 In many cases, for the
reasons discussed in the NPRM, ‘‘that
[voluntary] license is not part of any
preserved grants that make the
Exception applicable.’’ 70
There may, however, be some
situations where the result is different,
such as where a DMP’s voluntary
license is a ‘‘pass-through’’ license.71 In
such cases, even if no sound recording
derivative is prepared pursuant to the
DMP’s voluntary license, the pretermination copyright owner may still
be entitled to post-termination royalties
for uses made pursuant to such a
license. The contractual payment terms
between a DMP and a record company
pursuant to a voluntary pass-through
license could be preserved by the
Exception along with other terms that
are part of the same direct chain of
successive grants providing authority to
utilize the relevant sound recording
derivatives (e.g., those among the
songwriter, music publisher, and record
company).72
Additionally, and in contrast to
blanket and other statutory mechanical
69 See id. The Office emphasizes that, as noted
above, even though it is relying on the preliminary
analysis and conclusions detailed in the NPRM for
purposes of this SNPRM, it is continuing to
evaluate the comments concerning its legal analysis
of the Exception. The Office welcomes further
comments and legal discussion and, in particular,
invites comments on the jurisprudence of the
Second Circuit, including the decisions in Woods
v. Bourne Co., 60 F.3d 978 (2d Cir. 1995) and Fred
Ahlert Music Corp. v. Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.,
155 F.3d 17 (2d Cir. 1998).
70 See id. (referring generically to any DMP
‘‘musical work licenses’’ throughout the analysis).
71 When the copyright owner of a musical work
authorizes a record company (or someone else) to
prepare a sound recording derivative of the musical
work, the musical work copyright owner can also
provide the record company with authority to
engage in what is often referred to as ‘‘passthrough’’ licensing. See U.S. Copyright Office,
Copyright and the Music Marketplace 131–32
(2015), https://copyright.gov/policy/
musiclicensingstudy/copyright-and-the-musicmarketplace.pdf (discussing pass-through licensing
and describing it as ‘‘mimic[king] the traditional
physical model, where record labels ship product
to stores and report sales back to publishers’’); 86
FR 12822 (Mar. 5, 2021) (discussing prior
rulemaking activity involving pass-through
licenses). Such authority would allow the record
company, to the extent permitted by its license with
the musical work copyright owner, to license the
rights it possesses in the underlying musical work
to a third party, e.g., a DMP, as a part of utilizing
the sound recording embodying that musical work.
Thus, a DMP could potentially enter into a
voluntary license with the record company instead
of the musical work copyright owner for uses of the
musical work. This is similar to how individual
download licenses operate, whereby ‘‘record labels
[can] obtain and pass through [section 115]
mechanical license rights [to DMPs] for individual
permanent downloads.’’ H.R. Rep. No. 115–651 at
4; S. Rep. No. 115–339 at 4; Conf. Rep. at 3; see 17
U.S.C. 115(b)(3).
72 See 17 U.S.C. 203(b)(1), 304(c)(6)(A); Mills
Music, Inc., 469 U.S. at 163–69.
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licenses that cannot be terminated, if
sound recording derivatives are in fact
prepared by a DMP pursuant to a
voluntary license before its termination,
the Exception might apply to the extent
of the voluntary license’s terms. The
Exception could allow the DMP’s sound
recording derivatives to ‘‘continue to be
utilized under the terms of the
[voluntary license] after its
termination.’’ 73
In sum, unlike statutory mechanical
licenses, there are an innumerable
variety of voluntary licenses and related
underlying agreements that either
currently exist or that could exist in the
future. Consequently, the Office is
inclined to conclude that it would not
be prudent to attempt to craft a rule
trying to account for how the Exception
may or may not apply in every possible
situation. Even if the Office could craft
such a rule, it would be challenging, if
not impossible, for the MLC to evaluate
each and every voluntary license to
determine the Exception’s applicability
based on whatever regulatory criteria
the Office might adopt. Accordingly, the
Office believes that the MLC should not
exercise independent judgment
regarding the application of the
Exception to a voluntary license or its
underlying grant of authority.74
Instead of tasking the MLC with
making such an evaluation, the Office
proposes that the MLC only act as
directed pursuant to either: (1) a notice
from the copyright owner entitled to
receive royalties from the MLC under
the Office’s regulations that designates
an alternative royalty payee (such
notices are discussed in Part II.F.1.iv
below); or (2) the resolution of a dispute
with respect to the applicability of the
Exception to the relevant voluntary
license or its underlying grant of
authority. Under the supplemental
proposed rule, the MLC’s
implementation of the Exception
through its efforts under section
115(d)(3)(G)(i)(I)(bb) and 37 CFR
210.27(g)(2)(ii), to confirm uses of
musical works subject to voluntary
licenses and deduct corresponding
amounts from royalties that would
otherwise be due under the blanket
license, would therefore depend on how
the MLC is directed to act. In the
absence of any such direction, the Office
proposes that the Exception would not
apply to the MLC’s aforementioned
efforts.
73 See
17 U.S.C. 203(b)(1), 304(c)(6)(A).
The MLC, Dispute Policy: Musical Work
Ownership, sec. 1.2 (Feb. 2021) (‘‘The Collective
does not judge or resolve Conflicts or Disputes, or
participate in the substantive resolution of Conflicts
or Disputes.’’).
74 See
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The first type of direction the MLC
may receive, from the copyright owner,
is intended to accommodate situations
where that owner may have
contractually agreed to an alternative
payment arrangement such that the
MLC should act as if the Exception
applies. The second type of direction
the MLC may receive, pursuant to the
resolution of a dispute, follows legal
precedent holding that the pretermination copyright owner has the
burden of proving that the Exception
applies.75 This approach would place
the burden on the pre-termination
copyright owner to initiate a dispute
regarding the application of the
Exception. As discussed below, after
initiating a dispute, the MLC would
hold relevant royalties and interest
pending its resolution. If the resolution
of the dispute—whether through
settlement or adjudication—requires the
MLC to apply the Exception, then the
MLC would be required to act as
directed (see Part II.G.4 below
discussing the resolution of disputes).
C. The Copyright Owner at the Time of
the Use Versus the Copyright Owner at
the Time of the Payment
To codify its preliminary conclusion
that the statute entitles the ‘‘current
copyright owner’’ to the royalties under
the blanket license, the Office proposed
in the NPRM that the copyright owner
of the musical work as of the end of the
monthly reporting period is the one who
is entitled to the royalties and any other
related amounts (e.g., interest),
including any subsequent adjustments,
for the uses of the work during that
period.76 The NPRM explained the
Office’s reasoning for its proposal and
sought comments on it, including
whether some other point in time might
be appropriate.77 The Office refers to the
approach proposed in the NPRM as
distributing royalties to ‘‘the owner at
the time of the use.’’
75 Woods, 60 F.3d at 993–94; see Mills Music, Inc.
v. Snyder, 469 U.S. at 188 & n.20 (White, J.,
dissenting) (‘‘In attempting to claim for itself the
benefits of the [Exception], [the pre-termination
copyright owner] bears the burden of proof.’’); see
also Norman J. Singer & Shambie Singer,
Sutherland Statutes & Statutory Construction sec.
47.11 (7th ed. 2014 & Supp. 2022) (explaining that
‘‘all courts do agree that those who claim the benefit
of an exception have the burden of proving that
they come within the limited class for whose
benefit the exception was established,’’ and
collecting cases).
76 87 FR 64405, 64411–12. The Office further
explained that by ‘‘uses,’’ the Office means the
covered activities engaged in by DMPs under
blanket licenses as reported to the MLC. Id. at
64412.
77 Id. at 64412 (citing to sections 115(c)(1)(C) and
501(b)).
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Commenters largely agree with the
proposed approach.78 NMPA and the
Church Music Publishers Association
(‘‘CMPA’’) propose a different approach.
Instead of distributing royalties to the
owner at the time of the use, they
suggest that royalties should be
distributed to the copyright owner as of
the date of the MLC’s relevant
distribution—regardless of when the
related use occurred.79 The Office refers
to this approach as distributing royalties
to ‘‘the owner at the time of the
payment.’’ NMPA and CMPA state that
this approach is better for terminating
songwriters because they would be the
owner at the time of the payment for
any post-termination adjustments to
pre-termination periods.80 NMPA and
CMPA refer to distributing royalties to
the owner at the time of the payment as
‘‘industry practice,’’ 81 though NMPA
later commented that ‘‘under current
industry practice, once an ownership
transfer occurs, the party receiving
subsequent adjustment payments for
usage of a musical work that occurred
prior to the transfer is typically handled
pursuant to the agreement between the
previous owner and the new owner of
the work.’’ 82 The MLC adds that, ‘‘as is
standard in the industry, royalties from
general reprocessing are normally paid
to the current copyright owner,
regardless of the usage month at
issue.’’ 83
Regardless of whatever the industry
norm may be under voluntary
agreements, the Office remains inclined
to believe that the owner at the time of
the use is the more appropriate payee
under the blanket license, absent an
agreement to the contrary. While the
right to royalties can be assigned via
contract independently of ownership in
78 See, e.g., ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at
8 (‘‘Attempting to identify, calculate and pay
royalties by a specific day of the month in which
the musical work was streamed based on the actual
termination date would be administratively
cumbersome and ripe for disputes.’’); Howard
Initial Comments at 3; King, Holmes, Paterno &
Soriano LLP Initial Comments at 1; Miller Initial
Comments at 1; NSAI Initial Comments at 3; SGA
et al. Initial Comments at 2, 5.
79 NMPA Initial Comments at 5–6; CMPA Initial
Comments at 2.
80 NMPA Initial Comments at 6; CMPA Initial
Comments at 2.
81 NMPA Initial Comments at 6 (explaining that
‘‘any adjustments or other payments made after an
ownership transfer are paid to the new owner of the
composition, including for usage that occurred
prior to the transfer’’); CMPA Initial Comments at
2.
82 NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 3 (Feb. 6, 2023); see
also id. at 4 (‘‘NMPA’s draft legislation would have
required the copyright owner at the time of the
usage to be paid for subsequent adjustments.’’).
83 MLC Initial Comments at 9 n.9.
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the copyright,84 that has no bearing on
who the proper payee is where no such
agreement exists. In response to the
claim that distributing royalties to the
owner at the time of the payment
benefits terminating songwriters, the
Office notes that it is not seeking to
adopt a rule that is limited to the
termination context. The Office is
proposing a rule to govern all MLC
distributions under the blanket license,
including in contexts where ownership
may be transferred by means other than
statutory termination.85
While the statute does not explicitly
address whether the proper payee is the
owner at the time of the use or the
owner at the time of the payment,
various statutory provisions support the
Office’s view. Under section
115(c)(1)(C), the payable royalties under
the blanket license are for ‘‘every digital
phonorecord delivery of a musical work
made under [the blanket] license.’’ 86
Thus, where the statute refers to
distributing royalties to the ‘‘copyright
owner,’’ it most logically means the
copyright owner at the time that the
applicable digital phonorecord delivery
is made.87 This understanding is
supported by sections 115(d)(4)(E)(ii)(II)
and 501(b). Under section
115(d)(4)(E)(ii)(II), where a DMP’s
blanket license is terminated by the
MLC, ‘‘[s]uch termination renders the
making of all digital phonorecord
deliveries of all musical works (and
shares thereof) covered by the blanket
license for which the royalty . . . has
not been paid actionable as acts of
infringement under section 501.’’ 88
Section 501(b) provides that ‘‘[t]he legal
or beneficial owner of an exclusive right
under a copyright is entitled . . . to
institute an action for any infringement
of that particular right committed while
he or she is the owner of it.’’ 89 Read
together, it appears that, absent an
agreement to the contrary,90 the
84 See, e.g., William F. Patry, 6 Patry on
Copyright, sec. 21:19 (2023) (‘‘An agreement to
share royalties, or even assigning all rights to
royalties is not a ‘transfer of copyright’; instead, it
is merely a right to proceeds flowing from
exploitation of an exclusive right.’’).
85 See ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 4 (June
28, 2023) (stating that ‘‘the same rules should apply
for songs which have ownership transferred in
methods other than through terminations’’ and that
‘‘if a song is sold from one person to another, the
person who owns the work at the end of the
reporting period should be entitled to the
royalties’’).
86 17 U.S.C. 115(c)(1)(C).
87 See, e.g., id. at 115(d)(3)(G)(i)(I)–(III), (d)(3)(I).
88 Id. at 115(d)(4)(E)(ii)(II).
89 Id. at 501(b).
90 Courts have held that a ‘‘ ‘copyright owner can
assign its copyright but, if the accrued causes of
action are not expressly included in the assignment,
the assignee will not be able to prosecute them.’
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copyright owner who can sue a DMP for
infringement due to non-payment of
royalties under the blanket license is the
copyright owner at the time the
infringement was committed—i.e., at
the time of the use. It, therefore, seems
reasonable to the Office for that owner
to be the one to whom such royalties are
paid by the MLC.91
The Office’s conclusion that the
owner at the time of the use is the more
appropriate payee under the statutory
mechanical license is not a new one. It
reached the same conclusion under the
pre-MMA version of the statute almost
a decade ago.92 There, the Office
determined that while ‘‘[t]he
transactions transferring copyright
ownership may provide for a different
result as a matter of private contract,’’
‘‘absent such an arrangement, any
underpayment or overpayment
stemming from the reconciliation of
final performance royalty payments may
properly be attributable to the copyright
owner at the time of the relevant use of
the statutory license.’’ 93
With respect to private agreements,
the Office is inclined to agree with
NMPA that it is important ‘‘to allow
parties to agree by contract to a different
payment arrangement and provide
letters of direction to the MLC pursuant
to those agreements.’’ 94 Therefore, the
supplemental proposed rule would only
establish the owner at the time of the
use as the default payee—i.e., the proper
payee to whom the MLC must distribute
royalties and any other related amounts
under the blanket license in the absence
of an agreement to the contrary. As
discussed below in Part II.F, the
. . . In the event that accrued claims are not
expressly included in the assignment, ‘the assignor
retains the right to bring actions accruing during its
ownership of the right, even if the actions are
brought subsequent to the assignment.’ ’’ John Wiley
& Sons, Inc. v. DRK Photo, 882 F.3d 394, 404 (2d
Cir. 2018) (quoting ABKCO Music, Inc. v.
Harrisongs Music, Ltd., 944 F.2d 971, 980 (2d Cir.
1991)); see also NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 5 (Feb. 6,
2023) (explaining that ‘‘who has the right to sue for
infringement for activity occurring prior to the
ownership change’’ would ‘‘be addressed by private
contract’’).
91 The Office declines to propose the changes
suggested by ClearBox Rights to (1) omit the word
‘‘monthly’’ before ‘‘reporting period’’ in case DMPs
report semi-monthly, and (2) to clarify that the
relevant reporting period is the ‘‘period of the
[DMP’s] actual activity, and not the . . . period in
which the MLC received and/or distributed the
royalties.’’ ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 4–5
(June 28, 2023). Regarding the first suggestion, the
statute does not contemplate semi-monthly
reporting. 17 U.S.C. 115(c)(2)(I), (d)(4)(A)(i). On the
second suggestion, the Office believes the
supplemental proposed rule is sufficiently clear, as
it refers to the period ‘‘in which such musical work
is used.’’
92 79 FR 56190, 56193 (Sept. 18, 2014).
93 79 FR 56190, 56193.
94 NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 4. (Feb. 6, 2023).
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supplemental proposed rule is designed
to accommodate and give effect to
contractual payment arrangements that
deviate from this default rule.
D. Unclaimed Royalties
Commenters raise various questions
about the MLC’s distribution of
unclaimed royalties.95 With respect to
the market-share-based distributions of
unclaimed royalties, the Office proposes
to clarify that the reporting and payment
regulations in § 210.29 do not apply, as
that section governs MLC distributions
of royalties for matched works.96
Beyond this clarification, the Office
views the market-share-based
distributions of unclaimed royalties as
beyond the scope of this proceeding.
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E. Matched Historical Royalties
Similarly, commenters raise questions
about the proposed rule and matched
historical royalties.97 Here, the Office
proposes to clarify that § 210.29 does
apply and the MLC must report and
distribute matched historical royalties
in the same manner and subject to the
same requirements that apply to the
reporting and distribution of blanket
license royalties. To avoid any
confusion, the Office proposes to further
clarify that matched historical royalties
should be treated as accrued royalties
distributable under § 210.29(b)(1)(ii).
They would need to be included in
applicable royalty statements and
separately identified and broken out
from blanket license royalties so
copyright owners can easily ascertain
the nature and source of the payment
made to them by the MLC. The Office
proposes this approach because, at least
based on the current record, it generally
sees no reason to treat the reporting and
distributing of matched historical
royalties and blanket license royalties
differently.
This would include the payee
proposal discussed in Part II.C above,
whereby the MLC would distribute
royalties to the copyright owner at the
time of the use, as opposed to the owner
at the time of the payment. Despite this
proposal, the Office is inclined to agree
with NMPA that, given the age of some
of the historical usage, there likely will
be greater difficulty in identifying and
locating historical copyright owners,
95 See, e.g., ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at
4–5; ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 5 (June 28,
2023); NMPA Initial Comments at 6 n.10; North
Music Grp. Reply Comments at 2; McAnally &
North Ex Parte Letter at 6–7 (Mar. 14, 2023).
96 With this clarification, the supplemental
proposed rule removes as redundant the reference
to section 115(d)(3)(J) proposed in § 210.29(b)(4)(i)
of the NPRM.
97 See, e.g., NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 4 (Feb. 6,
2023); CMPA Initial Comments at 2.
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and that requiring the MLC to pay the
owner at the time of the use ‘‘may result
in lower match rates and lower payouts
of historic unmatched royalties, even
where the current copyright owner is
known, because the MLC may have
possibly incomplete or unreliable
historical ownership data.’’ 98 The
Office also recognizes Congress’s clear
interest in generally ‘‘reduc[ing] the
incidence of unclaimed royalties.’’ 99
Therefore, it seeks comments regarding
whether it should consider drawing a
distinction between matched historical
royalties and blanket license royalties
when it comes to the royalty payee. For
example, the MLC could be permitted to
distribute matched historical royalties to
the copyright owner at the time of the
payment when the owner at the time of
the use cannot be located and identified.
The Office further seeks comments on
whether it has the authority to adopt
such a distinction or any other approach
commenters may wish to propose. For
example, would it be appropriate to
consider works matched to the owner at
the time of the payment, rather than the
owner at the time of the use, as being
‘‘matched’’ within the meaning of the
statute, or does the statute require that
such works be considered ‘‘unmatched’’
and subject to eventual market-sharebased distributions?
F. Ownership Transfers and Other
Changes to the Royalty Payee
Several commenters, including the
MLC, seek additional guidance from the
Office on procedures concerning notice,
documentation, timing, and other
matters relating to the MLC’s
implementation of a termination
notification.100 Having considered these
comments, the Office agrees that further
guidance would be helpful to
stakeholders. Specifically, the Office
proposes to adopt regulations governing
the MLC’s administration of all transfers
of copyright ownership and other
changes to the royalty payee entitled to
distributions from the MLC. The Office
believes such a rule will help establish
standards and settle expectations for all
parties with respect to such
distributions.
Under the supplemental proposed
rule, current § 210.30—addressing a
temporary exception to certain DMP
reporting requirements with a deadline
that passed over two years ago—would
NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 4 (Feb. 6, 2023).
Public Law 115–264, tit. I, sec. 102(f)(1),
132 Stat. at 3722; 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(H)(i).
100 See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 10–11;
ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 8; ClearBox
Rights Reply Comments at 5–6; Howard Initial
Comments at 3–5; Howard Reply Comments at 2–
3; SGA et al. Initial Comments at 2, 6–8.
be repealed and replaced with an
entirely new § 210.30. Under paragraph
(b) of the newly proposed § 210.30, the
MLC would be prohibited from taking
any action to implement or give effect
to a change in the royalty payee unless
it receives a notice about the change that
complies with the requirements of
proposed paragraph (c) or is acting in
connection with the resolution of a
dispute under proposed paragraph
(f).101 Where the requirements of
proposed paragraph (c) are satisfied, the
MLC would be required to implement
and give effect to the change in payee
in accordance with the provisions of
proposed paragraph (d).
1. Notice of a Change to the MLC
Under proposed paragraph (c), the
MLC would need to be appropriately
notified in writing about any change in
the royalty payee. The supplemental
proposed rule would establish detailed
and tailored notice requirements based
on the type of payee change. Several of
the proposed requirements—such as
those about submission and receipt,
certification and signature, and the
identification of the relevant parties and
musical works—are similar to the
regulations governing the notices of
license that DMPs must submit to the
MLC to obtain a blanket license.102
Those requirements seem to be working
in the DMP context and there are
sufficient parallels between the two
types of notices that the Office proposes
to adopt them here. The Office
encourages the MLC to develop an
electronic form to assist submitters in
completing notices about a change in
payee.
i. Transfers of Copyright Ownership
Other Than by Will or Operation of Law
Proposed paragraph (c)(1) addresses
the requirements for a change in payee
due to a transfer of copyright ownership
other than by will or operation of law.
Accordingly, these requirements would
apply to a contractual assignment of the
copyright in the relevant musical work,
but not a reversion of the copyright
resulting from the statutory termination
of a prior grant concerning the work.
The Office proposes that notices for the
transfers covered by paragraph (c)(1)
must include: (1) all relevant dates
required for the MLC to properly
implement and give effect to the
transfer; (2) information identifying the
98 See
99 See
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101 Proposed paragraph (f) is discussed below in
Part II.G.4.
102 See 37 CFR 210.24(b), (b)(8), (c), (d). The
Office’s rationale for originally adopting those
requirements can be found in the record of that
proceeding. 85 FR 22518, 22519–21; 85 FR 58114,
58116–18.
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transferor (i.e., the prior musical work
copyright owner); (3) information
identifying the transferee (i.e., the new
musical work copyright owner); and (4)
either (i) an identification satisfactory to
the MLC of any applicable catalog
exclusions from the transfer (which may
state that there are no such exclusions,
and that, therefore, the whole catalog is
subject to the transfer) or (ii) a list of all
transferred musical works identified by
appropriate unique identifiers.
The Office further proposes that the
required notice must be submitted and
signed by the transferor or its
representative certifying the accuracy of
the information provided. This proposal
is intended to reduce both the
possibility of fraudulent notices and the
effort required by the MLC to verify
transfer claims where notice of the
transfer is provided solely by a
purported transferee.
Where there are multiple transferors
or transferees, the notice would also
need to identify any applicable
ownership shares for the transferred
works. Where there are multiple
transferors, the notice would be
effective only as to those transferors
whose information is provided in the
notice and whom have signed and
certified the notice. Where there are
multiple transferees, the notice would
be effective only as to those transferees
whose information is provided in the
notice.
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ii. Transfers of Copyright Ownership by
Statutory Termination
Proposed paragraph (c)(2) addresses
the requirements for a change in payee
due to a transfer of copyright ownership
resulting from an effective termination
under section 203 or 304. The Office
proposes that the required notice for
this type of payee change must include
the following requirements: (1) a copy of
the statutorily required notice of
termination submitted to the Office for
recordation; 103 (2) a copy of the
statement of service submitted to the
Office for recordation, if one was
submitted; 104 (3) either (i) proof that the
notice of termination was recorded in
the Office before the effective date of
termination, or (ii) if the Office has not
yet recorded the notice, proof that the
notice was submitted to the Office for
recordation, so long as proof of timely
recordation is delivered to the MLC at
a later date; 105 and (4) information
103 See
37 CFR 201.10(f)(1)(i)(A).
id. at 201.10(f)(1)(i)(B).
105 See 17 U.S.C. 203(a)(4)(A), 304(c)(4)(A) (‘‘A
copy of the notice shall be recorded in the
Copyright Office before the effective date of
termination, as a condition to its taking effect.’’).
104 See
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identifying the terminating party (i.e.,
the new musical work copyright owner).
With respect to the first three items,
the supplemental proposed rule would
make clear that it is not necessary to
provide the MLC with official Copyright
Office certifications for this information.
If the MLC has good reason to doubt the
authenticity of the information
provided, it should seek verification
from the Office. Where the
supplemental proposed rule refers to
providing proof of recordation or proof
of submission for recordation, the Office
means more than a declaration by the
terminating party or its representative.
Adequate proof of timely recordation
could be demonstrated by either
providing the MLC with a copy of the
certificate of recordation or the record as
reflected in the Office’s online public
catalog. Adequate proof of submission
to the Office for recordation could take
the form of courier tracking or a delivery
confirmation, a return receipt from the
Office,106 or some other communication
from the Office confirming receipt.107
The MLC requests the inclusion of
additional information and
documentation.108 The Office declines
to propose these additional
requirements. It agrees with other
commenters that the MLC’s requests
exceed what is necessary to effectuate a
statutory termination under the law.109
The Office also shares commenters’
concerns about the ability of terminating
parties to provide some of what the
MLC requests.110 The Office continues
to ‘‘remain convinced that the required
contents of the notice [of termination]
must not become unduly burdensome to
grantors, authors, or their successors,
and must recognize that entirely
legitimate reasons may exist for gaps in
106 See
37 CFR 201.10(f)(2)(iii).
of submission would not need to include
proof of proper fee payment to the Office because
an incorrect fee can be remedied without affecting
the relevant date of recordation. Id. at 201.10(f)(3).
108 MLC Initial Comments at 11 (proposing,
among other things, documents sufficient to
‘‘identify the grants that the post-termination
claimant claims have been terminated by the
relevant termination notice’’ and to ‘‘show that the
post-termination claimant or its assignor owns the
termination interest’’).
109 ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 5–6;
Howard Reply Comments at 2–3; see 17 U.S.C. 203,
304(c); 37 CFR 201.10; U.S. Copyright Office,
Compendium of U.S. Copyright Office Practices,
sec. 2310.3(D)(1)(c) (3d ed. 2021) (‘‘In most cases,
the party issuing the notice of termination may not
have a copy of the grant that is being terminated
or may not have access to a copy. For these reasons,
the terminating party does not need to identify the
location of the grant, offer to produce a copy of the
grant, or attach a copy of the grant to the notice.’’).
110 Howard Reply Comments at 2–3 (describing
the MLC’s proposal as ‘‘a list of documents that will
be impossible for an author or his/her statutory
heirs to provide’’); see ClearBox Rights Reply
Comments at 5–6.
107 Proof
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their knowledge and certainty.’’ 111 The
intent of the Office’s proposal is to
generally provide the MLC with the
necessary information to process the
termination without unduly burdening
terminating parties.112
The Office appreciates that part of the
MLC’s proposal is geared at
‘‘maintaining basic fraud protection and
avoiding unnecessary disputes.’’ 113
While the Office supports those aims, it
is concerned that the MLC’s proposed
measures could result in legitimate
terminating parties being unable to
exercise their rights because they are
unable to provide the information the
MLC seeks. Instead, the Office proposes
a notice and dispute process as an
alternative means of achieving the
MLC’s stated goals in this context.
Evaluating and potentially disputing a
termination on the merits is the duty of
the pre-termination copyright owner,
not the MLC. The proposed notice and
dispute process (discussed in more
detail below) would provide the pretermination copyright owner with an
opportunity to dispute a termination
before the MLC would be required to
implement it, thereby reducing the
likelihood of the MLC acting on a
fraudulent notice.114
Nevertheless, the Office recognizes
that a valid notice of termination might
not provide the MLC with sufficient
information to process and implement
the ownership change. In those cases,
the Office proposes that the MLC should
111 42 FR 45916, 45918 (Sept. 13, 1977); see id.
at 45917 (‘‘[T]he preparation of notice of
termination will be occurring at a time far removed
from the original creation and publication of a work
and, in many cases, will involve successors of
original authors having little, if any, knowledge of
the details of original creation or publication.’’); id.
at 45918 (recognizing that ‘‘it will commonly be the
case that the terminating author, or [other
terminating party], will not have a copy of the grant
or ready access to a copy’’).
112 For example, the Office’s regulations
governing the content of statutory notices of
termination already provide for an identification of
each: (1) grant, 37 CFR 201.10(b)(1)(iv), (b)(2)(v); (2)
pre-termination copyright owner, 37 CFR
201.10(b)(1)(ii), (b)(2)(ii), (d)(2); (3) terminating
party, 37 CFR 201.10(b)(1)(vii), (b)(2)(vii), (c)(2)–(3);
(4) work, 37 CFR 201.10(b)(1)(iii), (b)(2)(iv); and (5)
effective date of termination, 37 CFR
201.10(b)(1)(v), (b)(2)(vi).
113 MLC Initial Comments at 11.
114 The Office also notes that with respect to
fraud, federal law prohibits (and may punish with
fine or imprisonment), ‘‘in any matter within the
jurisdiction of the executive, legislative, or judicial
branch of the Government of the United States,’’ the
making of any ‘‘knowingly and willfully’’
‘‘materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement
or representation’’ or the provision of ‘‘any false
writing or document knowing the same to contain
any materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent
statement or entry.’’ 18 U.S.C. 1001(a)(3). This
provision applies to submissions to the Office,
including where a notice of termination is
submitted for recordation.
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engage in best efforts to identify the
minimum necessary information,
including through correspondence with
both the terminating party and pretermination copyright owner (or their
respective representatives). This may be
a better approach than requiring
terminating parties to provide
additional information to the MLC at the
outset that they may not readily have
and which may not be needed to
implement the change.
Similar to other transfers, the Office
proposes that the required notice must
be submitted and signed by either the
terminating party or the pre-termination
copyright owner (or their respective
representatives) certifying the accuracy
of the information provided.115 The
Office agrees with ClearBox Rights that
a terminating party should not be ‘‘held
hostage’’ by needing to wait for a pretermination copyright owner’s
acknowledgement that the termination
is valid and effective before the MLC
can act on the notice.116 At the same
time, however, the Office believes that
pre-termination copyright owners must
have a fair opportunity to dispute the
validity of a termination where the MLC
is notified of the payee change
unilaterally by the terminating party.
Therefore, if the notice to the MLC is
submitted by the terminating party, the
Office proposes additional requirements
similar to those suggested by ClearBox
Rights.117 First, the MLC would be
required to inform the pre-termination
copyright owner about the notice within
15 days of receiving either the notice or
the last piece of information necessary
for the MLC to implement the change,
whichever is later. Second, after being
so notified, a pre-termination copyright
owner who disputes the termination
would have 30 days to initiate its
dispute with the MLC. Third, if the pretermination copyright owner does not
initiate a dispute within the allotted
time, then the MLC would be required
to implement and give effect to the
ownership transfer resulting from the
termination in accordance with the
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115 The
Office declines to propose Linda Edell
Howard’s suggestion to require the pre-termination
copyright owner to be the one to notify the MLC
of the termination. Howard Initial Comments at 4.
While the supplemental proposed rule would
permit the pre-termination owner to provide the
notice, the Office does not propose to require that
they be the one to provide it, in part, because it is
not clear what the remedy for noncompliance
would be.
116 ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 8; see
also ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 6; Howard
Reply Comment at 3 (‘‘[T]he default should be
reversion of rights and royalties to the termination
owners and the burden placed on the publisher to
bring suit to challenge a Notice before the MLC
could ignore one.’’).
117 See ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 6.
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proposed implementation requirements
discussed in Part II.F.2 below. The
supplemental proposed rule would
make clear that even if the pretermination copyright owner misses the
regulatory deadline and the MLC
implements the change, nothing
prevents that owner from disputing the
termination with the MLC at a later date
or challenging the termination in court.
The purpose of the proposal is not to
limit a pre-termination copyright
owner’s right or ability to oppose a
purported termination, but rather to
help ensure that the implementation of
a terminating party’s notification to the
MLC is not unduly delayed by a pretermination copyright owner’s
inaction.118
Where there are multiple terminating
parties or pre-termination copyright
owners, the notice would need to
identify any applicable ownership
shares for the works subject to the
termination. Where there are multiple
terminating parties, the notice would be
effective only as to those terminating
parties whose information is provided
in the notice. Also, the Office proposes
that where there are multiple
terminating parties, a notice that is
signed and certified by any one of them
would be sufficient as to all terminating
parties. The Office invites comments on
this proposal.
iii. Other Transfers of Copyright
Ownership
Proposed paragraph (c)(3) addresses
changes in payees due to any other type
of ownership transfer, such as a transfer
by will or through intestate succession.
For these types of changes, the Office
declines to propose any specific
requirements at this time, but welcomes
comments on whether it should adopt
any. Under the supplemental proposed
rule, such changes would be subject to
any additional reasonable notice
requirements established by the MLC.
iv. Designating an Alternative Royalty
Payee
The last type of payee change covered
under proposed paragraph (c) involves
the circumstance where the copyright
owner entitled to receive royalties from
the MLC under the Office’s
regulations 119 designates an alternative
royalty payee to whom the MLC must
118 See ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 8
(‘‘There is very little incentive for the pretermination owner to send an acknowledgement,
and even if they don’t have an issue with doing so,
administratively it could take them weeks, months,
or in some cases, years.’’).
119 This would include regulations governing
both blanket license royalties and matched
historical royalties.
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distribute the royalties instead. This
part of the supplemental proposed rule
would apply where there is no transfer
of copyright ownership. Instead, it
addresses the situation where the
regulatorily entitled copyright owner
might voluntarily elect or be compelled
by private agreement to request that the
MLC distribute the royalties to someone
else—e.g., a party contractually entitled
to such royalties. The Office proposes
this process as the means by which the
supplemental proposed rule would
accommodate and give effect to
contractual payment arrangements that
deviate from the proposed default payee
rules discussed above.120
The proposed notice requirements for
this type of payee change are similar to
the requirements for contractual
ownership transfers discussed above.
The Office proposes that the required
notice must include: (1) all relevant
dates required for the MLC to properly
implement and give effect to the
request; (2) information identifying the
copyright owner entitled to receive
royalties from the MLC under the
Office’s regulations; (3) information
identifying the current royalty payee if
different from such copyright owner
(i.e., the previously designated royalty
payee who is being superseded by a new
designated payee); (4) information
identifying the designated royalty payee
(i.e., the new payee designated by the
relevant copyright owner to receive
royalty distributions from the MLC that
would otherwise be paid to such owner
under the Office’s regulations); and (5)
either (i) an identification satisfactory to
the MLC of any applicable catalog
exclusions from the request (which may
state that there are no such exclusions,
and that, therefore, the whole catalog is
subject to the request) or (ii) a list of all
musical works subject to the request
identified by appropriate unique
identifiers.
The Office proposes that the required
notice must be submitted and signed by
the copyright owner entitled to receive
royalties from the MLC or its
representative certifying the accuracy of
the information provided. Where there
are multiple copyright owners or
designated royalty payees, the notice
would also need to identify any
applicable ownership shares for the
relevant works. Where there are
multiple copyright owners, the notice
would be effective only as to those
owners whose information is provided
in the notice and whom have signed and
120 See NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 4 (Feb. 6, 2023)
(requesting that the rule ‘‘allow parties to agree by
contract to a different payment arrangement and
provide letters of direction to the MLC pursuant to
those agreements’’).
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certified the notice. Where there are
multiple designated royalty payees, the
notice would be effective only as to
those payees whose information is
provided in the notice.
In addition to the foregoing, the Office
proposes to adopt the Songwriters Guild
of America et al.’s (‘‘SGA et al.’s’’)
proposal for the scenario where the
MLC is asked by the terminating party
to implement an agreement directing the
MLC to pay post-termination royalties to
the pre-termination copyright owner.121
SGA et al. states that, without additional
safeguards, it ‘‘will inadvertently open
the door to . . . acts of contractual
overreaching by publishers,’’ and that
the ‘‘execution of ‘anticipatory [letters of
direction]’ as part of publishing
agreements has become common
practice.’’ 122 Based on the current
record, the proposal seems to be a
reasonable safeguard, even if there is no
such overreach at present.
Consequently, the Office proposes
that where the relevant copyright owner
is the terminating party and the
designated royalty payee is the pretermination copyright owner, the
following additional notice
requirements should apply: (1) the
notice must be signed after the effective
date of termination; (2) the notice must
acknowledge the deviation from the
standard royalty payee under the
Office’s regulations; and (3) the notice
must provide that neither the notice nor
the distribution of royalties by the MLC
in accordance with the notice prejudices
the legal rights of either party.
v. Multiple Changes
The Office proposes that where
multiple ownership transfers occur
prior to providing notice of the change
to the MLC, a compliant notice for each
transfer in the chain must be delivered
to the MLC. For example, where there
is a termination followed by an
assignment of the copyright in the
musical work, both a notice for the
termination and a notice for the
subsequent assignment would need to
be provided. Similarly, the Office
proposes that where an ownership
transfer and a request to designate or
change an alternative royalty payee are
related, a compliant notice for both the
121 SGA
et al. Initial Comments at 2, 6–8.
at 2, 7–8 (‘‘[T]he coerced signing by an
author of such [a letter of direction] concerning the
disposition by the MLC of post-termination
royalties—as a pre-condition set by the publisher
for execution of the underlying publishing
agreement with such author—is easily within the
future scope of imaginable, attempted publisher
overreach should the Proposed Rulemaking be
adopted without amendment.’’); see also Howard
Reply Comments at 2 (agreeing with SGA et al.’s
proposal and the reasons behind it).
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122 Id.
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transfer and request must be delivered
to the MLC. For example, where there
is an assignment of the copyright in the
musical work that includes a
contractual right for the new owner to
also be entitled to future royalty
distributions for periods predating the
transfer, both a notice for the
assignment and a notice for the
designation of the alternative royalty
payee would need to be provided.
The Office proposes these
requirements to assist the MLC in
verifying claimed changes in payees and
to further the MLC’s duty to maintain an
accurate public database of musical
works and their owners. This includes
tracking historical changes in
ownership.123
2. Implementation of a Change by the
MLC
Proposed paragraph (d) sets out how
the MLC would need to implement and
give effect to a change in payee.
i. Timing
The Office agrees with the MLC that
some amount of processing time must
be given between the time when the
MLC receives the notice and the time by
which the change must be
implemented.124 As the MLC
requests,125 and based on the Office’s
current rules governing its processing of
DMP voluntary licenses,126 the Office
proposes to give the MLC at least 30
days to operationalize a payee change.
The supplemental proposed rule
contains two scenarios of general
applicability. The first covers where the
MLC receives a compliant notice before
the start of the first monthly reporting
period to begin after the relevant change
is effective. In such cases, the MLC
would need to implement and give
effect to the change beginning with the
first distribution of royalties for that
reporting period.127
123 37
CFR 210.31(f).
Initial Comments at 10–11.
125 Id.; see also ClearBox Rights Reply Comments
at 5 (agreeing ‘‘that a minimum 30-day notice of a
termination be required before the MLC has to
implement the requested actions’’).
126 37 CFR 210.24(f) (‘‘[T]he mechanical licensing
collective shall not be required to undertake any
obligations otherwise imposed on it by this subpart
with respect to any voluntary license for which the
collective has not received the description required
by paragraph (b)(8) of this section at least 30
calendar days prior to the delivery of a report of
usage for such period, but such obligations attach
and are ongoing with respect to such license for
subsequent periods.’’).
127 For example, if the MLC receives a notice of
a contractual ownership transfer on September 20,
2023, for a transfer that, under the terms of the
agreement, is effective on September 1, 2023, then
the MLC would need to implement the change
starting with the January 2024 royalty distribution
(because the first monthly reporting period to
124 MLC
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65917
The second scenario covers where the
MLC receives the notice on or after the
start of that reporting period. In those
cases, the MLC would need to
implement and give effect to the change
beginning no later than the first
distribution of royalties based on the
first ‘‘payee snapshot’’ taken by the MLC
at least 30 days after it receives the
notice.128 By ‘‘payee snapshot,’’ the
Office means the royalty payee
information contained in the MLC’s
records as of a particular date that it will
use for a particular monthly royalty
distribution. According to the MLC, it
currently takes the payee snapshot 10
days after the end of the monthly
reporting period, and it is this
information that it uses to make the
royalty distribution for that reporting
period, which occurs about 65 days
later.129
The supplemental proposal rule also
contains a variant of both of these
scenarios to accommodate the
additional 45 days needed for the notice
and dispute mechanism discussed
above regarding a pre-termination
copyright owner’s ability to initiate a
dispute with the MLC.
ii. Additional Provisions for
Termination-Related Changes
The supplemental proposed rule
contains two additional MLC
implementation provisions concerning
termination-related changes. First, the
Office proposes that where the MLC
needs additional information to
implement the change and such
information is received after the notice,
the timing requirements discussed
above would apply based on the date
that the MLC receives the last piece of
necessary information.
The second provision relates to where
a compliant notice is accompanied by
proof that the statutory notice of
termination was submitted to the Office
for recordation, but not proof that it was
timely recorded. The supplemental
proposed rule would prohibit the MLC
commence after the effective date of the transfer
would be the October 2023 reporting period, and
the first distribution of royalties for that period
would occur in January 2024).
128 For example, if the MLC receives a notice of
a contractual ownership transfer on October 15,
2023, for a transfer that, under the terms of the
agreement, is effective on September 1, 2023, then
the MLC would need to implement the change no
later than the February 2024 royalty distribution
(because the first payee snapshot to occur at least
30 days after the MLC’s receipt of the notice would
be the December 2023 snapshot, which would be
for the November 2023 reporting period, and the
first distribution of royalties for that period would
occur in February 2024).
129 The MLC, Blanket Royalty Distributions,
https://www.themlc.com/blanket-payments (last
visited Sept. 20, 2023).
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from implementing any termination
unless and until proof of timely
recordation is received.130 It would also
make clear that the eventual receipt of
proof that the statutory notice has been
timely recorded should be treated as a
type of additional information with
respect to the timing of the MLC’s
implementation.
Even though the MLC would not
implement the termination, to
accommodate the fact that recordation is
not an automatic process, the Office
proposes that, after receiving notice that
submission to the Office for recordation
has been made, the MLC hold
applicable royalties pending receipt of
proof of timely recordation. After the
MLC receives proof of timely
recordation, it would need to implement
the change in accordance with the
above-discussed requirements, which
would include distributing the held
funds to the terminating party. If, on the
other hand, the Office refuses to record
the notice or the notice is recorded on
or after the effective date of termination,
and the termination is not effective,
then the MLC would need to release the
held funds to the pre-termination
copyright owner. Under the
supplemental proposed rule, if proof of
timely recordation is not received
within 6 months, the MLC would need
to contact the Office to confirm the
status of the relevant recordation
submission and then act accordingly.
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iii. Effect of Implementation
Multiple commenters, including the
MLC, raise the issue of whether the
MLC’s implementation of a payee
change should only be forward-looking
or whether the MLC should be required
to implement the change going back to
the effective date of the change,
regardless of when it implements it.131
For example, Linda Edell Howard
explains that in the termination context
‘‘there will be a substantial delay in
notifying the MLC (sometimes years) as
to the correct and legal owner(s) of the
copyright,’’ and expresses concern that,
as a result, there is ‘‘little doubt the
MLC will innocently misdirect royalty
payments’’ to the pre-termination
copyright owner.132 The MLC states that
implementation ‘‘on a retroactive basis
would require The MLC to design,
implement, and manage a new, manual
130 See 17 U.S.C. 203(a)(4)(A), 304(c)(4)(A) (‘‘A
copy of the notice shall be recorded in the
Copyright Office before the effective date of
termination, as a condition to its taking effect.’’).
131 See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 8; MLC
Reply Comments at 2; Howard Initial Comments at
3–4; ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 5 (June 28,
2023).
132 Howard Initial Comments at 3–4.
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process to benefit a small group of
members that would divert the limited
resources of The MLC from critical
services and activities that benefit all
copyright owners.’’ 133
The Office welcomes further
comments on this issue, including with
regard to Linda Edell Howard’s
termination-related concerns and what
is standard in the industry. At this time,
the Office is inclined to agree with the
MLC that retroactive implementation
may be too administratively
burdensome to require for every payee
change. Notably, the Office only
requires prospective implementation
with respect to the MLC’s processing of
DMP voluntary licenses.134 The Office
does not, however, wish to foreclose the
possibility that there may be certain
payee changes that the MLC could
implement retroactively with little or no
difficulty. Therefore, where a relevant
change is effective prior to the MLC’s
implementation of it, the Office
proposes to permit, but not require, the
MLC to implement the change going
back to its effective date, if the notice to
the MLC requests it.135
Relatedly, the Office proposes a
savings clause to help allay Linda Edell
Howard’s concern that the pretermination copyright owner ‘‘will
claim they were the ‘copyright owner’ of
record as of the last day of the monthly
reporting period (because of the
terminating party’s delay) and refuse to
turn over the misdirected royalties to
the rightful copyright owners.’’ 136 The
proposed savings clause would make
clear that even though the MLC may not
be required to implement a change
going back to its effective date, that fact
does not affect a party’s right to royalties
previously distributed by the MLC to
someone else or that party’s ability to
collect those royalties from that prior
payee.137 For example, if the MLC is not
133 MLC Initial Comments at 8; see also MLC
Reply Comments at 2.
134 37 CFR 210.24(f) (‘‘[T]he mechanical licensing
collective shall not be required to undertake any
obligations otherwise imposed on it by this subpart
with respect to any voluntary license for which the
collective has not received the description required
by paragraph (b)(8) of this section at least 30
calendar days prior to the delivery of a report of
usage for such period, but such obligations attach
and are ongoing with respect to such license for
subsequent periods.’’).
135 The Office declines to propose Linda Edell
Howard’s suggested solution involving the Office’s
records. Howard Initial Comments at 4. At least
based on the current record, it is not clear how the
mechanics of that proposal would work in practice.
136 Id. at 3.
137 To be clear, this proposed provision does not
address the situation where the MLC simply makes
a mistake. Where the MLC distributes royalties to
the wrong payee due to an error on the MLC’s part
(as opposed to where the MLC does not receive
sufficiently advanced notice of a payee change to
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required to implement a payee change
until six months after it is effective, the
MLC would have made several royalty
distributions to the prior payee instead
of the new payee. The fact that the
supplemental proposed rule would not
require the MLC to recover the
previously distributed royalties from the
prior payee and redistribute them to the
new payee does not mean that the new
payee is not still legally entitled to those
royalties or cannot seek to collect them
from the prior payee.
G. Disputes
The MLC requests guidance from the
Office on several matters relating to
termination-related disputes.138 The
Office proposes to provide such
guidance and to further elaborate on
other dispute-related issues where it
believes regulations would be helpful.
1. Royalty Holds
The MLC requests guidance ‘‘as to the
types of disputes concerning
termination claims for which The MLC
should place relevant royalties on hold
pending resolution.’’ 139 It also states
that its ‘‘general policy is to place
royalties on hold when a legal
proceeding is commenced that would
impact the proper payee for those
royalties,’’ and asks the Office for
clarification if it disagrees.140
Under section 115(d)(3)(K)(i), the
MLC must ‘‘establish policies and
procedures’’ ‘‘for copyright owners to
address in a timely and equitable
manner disputes relating to ownership
interests in musical works licensed
under this section and allocation and
distribution of royalties by the
mechanical licensing collective.’’ 141
Section 115(d)(3)(K)(ii) then requires the
MLC’s ‘‘policies and procedures’’ to
‘‘include a mechanism to hold disputed
funds . . . pending resolution of the
dispute.’’ 142 Therefore, if there is a bona
fide dispute among purported copyright
owners over the ownership of a musical
work (or share), the applicable funds
must be held pending resolution of the
dispute.143 Because a dispute as to the
implement it before it is effective), the MLC must
correct its error in a timely fashion.
138 MLC Initial Comments at 11–14.
139 Id. at 11–12.
140 Id. at 12.
141 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(K)(i).
142 Id. at 115(d)(3)(K)(ii).
143 In the NPRM, the Office proposed that the
MLC be permitted to distribute royalties as directed
‘‘by the mutual written agreement of the parties to
an ownership dispute.’’ 87 FR 64405, 64412. The
supplemental proposed rule would not allow this.
On reflection, the Office is concerned about the
administrative challenges that could ensue if
distributed royalties need to be recovered. The
Office, thus, seeks further comments on this issue,
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validity of a statutory termination—
regardless of the grounds for the
dispute—is a dispute as to the identity
of the rightful copyright owner, it is an
ownership dispute for which the MLC
must hold applicable royalties.
In contrast, a dispute as to the
application of the Exception is not a
dispute over ownership, but rather over
the legal effect of a concededly valid
termination. The Office’s final analysis
and conclusions on the law in the
current proceeding will govern the
MLC’s treatment of the Exception. As a
result, a disagreement over the
application of the Exception would
generally not constitute grounds for the
MLC to hold related royalties. There are,
however, two potential exceptions.
The first is where litigation is
commenced over the issue. In such
cases—as with any type of dispute that
is subject to a legal proceeding—the
MLC should hold all applicable
royalties pending the outcome of the
proceeding unless the adjudicator
orders otherwise. While the statute may
not compel the MLC to implement legal
holds in disputes unrelated to
ownership, the Office believes it is
prudent for the MLC to hold royalties
whenever a litigation or other formal
dispute procedure (e.g., arbitration) is
initiated that implicates the disposition
of royalties.
Second, based on the Office’s initial
analysis, it recognizes that the
Exception could potentially apply to at
least some types of DMP voluntary
licenses. Consequently, the Office
proposes that a pre-termination
copyright owner be able to initiate a
dispute with the MLC over the
application of the Exception to a
particular voluntary license or its
underlying grant of authority, and that
the MLC should hold applicable
royalties pending resolution of such a
dispute.
2. Process and Documentation for
Termination-Related Disputes
Under the supplemental proposed
rule, only the pre-termination copyright
owner or its representative would be
permitted to initiate a terminationrelated dispute with the MLC. A
terminating party would not need to
initiate such a dispute because it would
always have the ability to submit the
notice of a payee change to the MLC that
would obligate the MLC to implement
the termination in the absence of a
dispute.
The Office agrees with the MLC that
a pre-termination copyright owner
should provide certain information to
initiate the dispute and substantiate that
it is bona fide.144 The Office proposes
requirements similar to those suggested
by the MLC, but with some additions.145
It proposes that the minimum
information that must be delivered to
the MLC to substantiate, and trigger a
royalty hold for, a dispute as to the
validity of a termination consists of: (1)
a detailed explanation of the grounds for
the dispute; (2) documentation
sufficient to support those grounds,
consisting of copies of (i) each grant in
dispute, (ii) any other document
necessary to support the grounds for the
dispute, and (iii) any other reasonable
information required by the MLC’s
dispute policy; (3) an identification
satisfactory to the MLC of each musical
work in dispute; and (4) an appropriate
certification regarding the accuracy of
the information made by the submitter.
Where the dispute is over the
application of the Exception to a
voluntary license, the Office proposes to
additionally require: (1) a copy of each
voluntary license at issue; (2) an
identification satisfactory to the MLC of
each relevant sound recording that
constitutes a derivative work prepared
with appropriate authority; and (3) the
date of preparation for each such sound
recording, which must be before the
effective date of termination.
The Office proposes that any and all
documentation provided to the MLC in
connection with a termination-related
dispute be shared with all parties to the
dispute. If a party to the dispute is not
a party or a successor to a party to an
otherwise confidential document, then
the supplemental proposed rule would
require the disclosure to be subject to
that party’s acceptance of an appropriate
written confidentiality agreement. The
Office believes that all parties to a
dispute have a right to know the basis
for the dispute and to see the other
party’s supporting evidence. The
proposed approach seeks to safeguard
that right while ensuring that
confidential information is not made
public.
3. Disclosure and Confidentiality
The MLC seeks guidance as to
whether it ‘‘should be required to
disclose information about the royalties
being held to the parties involved,’’
stating that it ‘‘typically does not
disclose the amount of royalties on hold
to the parties in a dispute pending
agreement or resolution of a
dispute.’’ 146 The Office is inclined to
144 MLC
including as to whether it is permissible under the
statute. See 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(K)(ii).
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Initial Comments at 13.
(listing proposed requirements).
146 Id. at 13–14.
145 Id.
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agree with ClearBox Rights that the MLC
should disclose information about such
royalties to the parties to a dispute.147
All parties to the dispute should know
the amount in controversy so that they
are on equal footing in developing a
strategy for resolving the dispute,
including the negotiation of a
settlement. Therefore, the Office
proposes an exception to its
confidentiality regulations to clarify that
such disclosures are required.
The supplemental proposed rule
would further recognize that there are
other circumstances, unrelated to an
ownership dispute, where the MLC may
put amounts on hold. In such cases,
including where the MLC initiates the
hold unilaterally (e.g., in connection
with an investigation),148 the affected
parties should have a right to know the
grounds for the hold.
The supplemental proposed rule,
thus, would require that where the MLC
is holding royalties or other monies, it
must disclose the amount being held
and the reason for the hold to anyone
with a bona fide legal claim to the
funds. More specifically, the Office
proposes that the MLC provide the
equivalent of monthly royalty
statements for the amounts held along
with monthly updates concerning the
status of the hold. The Office
encourages the MLC to disclose required
information and provide updates
through its member portal.
4. Dispute Resolution
Though not raised by the commenters,
the Office proposes regulations
governing the resolution of disputes
among purported copyright owners or
royalty payees and the associated
release of held funds. The Office
proposes these regulations to provide
certainty to both the MLC and disputing
parties about what constitutes the
resolution of a dispute, how held funds
should be released, and how the MLC
should implement any related change in
payee that results from the resolution of
the dispute. The Office also believes
that it may be useful to adopt a rule to
prevent the MLC having to hold
disputed funds indefinitely. Indeed, the
statute requires disputes to be
‘‘address[ed] in a timely and equitable
manner.’’ 149
Accordingly, the supplemental
proposed rule contemplates three
scenarios. The first is where the dispute
is resolved through the mutual
147 ClearBox
Rights Reply Comments at 6.
Letter from U.S. Copyright Office to The
MLC (Apr. 20, 2023), https://copyright.gov/ai/
USCO-Guidance-Letter-to-The-MLC-Letter-on-AICreated-Works.pdf.
149 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(K)(i).
148 See
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agreement of the relevant parties. In
such cases, released funds would be
paid in accordance with the agreement.
If the agreement changes the royalty
payee, then the release of the held funds
would be subject to the same notice and
implementation requirements discussed
above in Part II.F, except that payments
would need to be made for applicable
reporting periods predating the MLC’s
implementation of the change.
The second scenario is where the
dispute is resolved by order of an
adjudicative body (e.g., a court or
arbitrator). In such cases, released funds
would be paid in accordance with the
order. The MLC’s implementation of
any associated payee change would be
in accordance with the order, rather
than the above-discussed notice and
implementation requirements. Absent a
stay issued by the adjudicatory body,
the appeal or request for reconsideration
of such order would not delay the
distribution of the affected monies.
The last scenario is focused on
preventing disputed funds from being
held indefinitely. It would enforce a
proposed requirement that all funds
held by the MLC pursuant to a dispute
among purported copyright owners or
royalty payees be subject to active
dispute resolution by the relevant
parties.150 It would do so by providing
that if the disputed funds have been
held for at least one year, and no legal
proceeding has been commenced, then
during every subsequent 6-month
period the parties to the dispute would
need to submit a jointly signed notice to
the MLC stating that they are continuing
to engage in active dispute resolution. If
the MLC does not receive such notice,
it would be required to release the funds
to the party who would have received
them if the funds had not been placed
on hold. This would put the onus on the
party who initiates the dispute to
eventually commence a legal proceeding
to maintain the hold. The Office
proposes this approach because the
initiating party is the one seeking to
change the status quo. It welcomes
comments on this proposal, including
whether there are any industry
analogues to consider.
H. Corrective Royalty Adjustment
In the NPRM, the Office proposed to
require the MLC to adjust any royalties
distributed under its (now-suspended)
termination dispute policy within 90
days.151 The Office explained that the
150 To be clear, this proposal would not cover
other types of potential disputes that may arise in
connection with the MLC’s administration of the
blanket license, such as a dispute involving a DMP
or the MLC itself.
151 87 FR 64405, 64412.
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purpose of this proposal is to make
copyright owners whole for any
distributions the MLC made based on an
erroneous understanding and
application of the Exception.152
In response, several commenters,
including the MLC, seek further
guidance from the Office as to how the
proposed corrective royalty adjustment
should work.153 For example, Promopub
states that the adjustment process ‘‘may
take an unacceptably long time if the
MLC must recoup sums from publishers
whose other mechanical royalties are
insufficient for full and prompt
recoupment. In such instances, it may
be appropriate to require such
publishers to return the royalties
received in error from their own funds
rather than extending the adjustment
period.’’ 154 ClearBox Rights says that
the MLC ‘‘should be responsible to
recoup all payments known to have
been incorrectly made to original
publishers for effectively terminated
works, and should not wait until
recoupment of the sums incorrectly paid
before paying the correct royalties to the
terminated owners.’’ 155 ClearBox Rights
explains that this ‘‘is standard operating
procedure for many if not most of the
publishers in the industry when
incorrect payments are made.’’ 156
ClearBox Rights further states that ‘‘it is
fair that any party that was ultimately
overpaid in error, including publishers,
writers, and other third party recipients,
should be eligible to have their overpaid
royalties recouped from future funds in
order to correct the issue.’’ 157
The MLC requests that the Office
make clear that the MLC ‘‘is not
required to pay [previously distributed]
royalties to a new payee until The MLC
is able to fully recover those royalties
from the previously-paid payee.’’ 158
The MLC further asks the Office to
confirm that it ‘‘may recover those
royalties at any time from any funds
payable to the previously-paid payee,
since there may not be any additional
royalties payable to that payee for the
works in question given that such
payee’s rights to those works have now
been terminated.’’ 159 The MLC, as well
152 Id.
153 See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 6–8;
ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 3–4; ClearBox
Rights Ex Parte Letter at 2–4 (June 28, 2023);
Howard Initial Comments at 6; Promopub Initial
Comments at 2; Promopub Reply Comments at 3;
North Music Grp. Reply Comments at 2.
154 Promopub Initial Comments at 2.
155 ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 4 (June 28,
2023) (proposing that the MLC ‘‘ ‘borrow’ from the
unallocated, unidentified funds pool’’).
156 Id.
157 Id.
158 MLC Initial Comments at 7.
159 Id. at 7–8.
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as other commenters, also raise
questions about the recovery of royalties
from publishers who have already
distributed a portion of those royalties
to songwriters.160 Additionally,
commenters disagree over how
complicated and burdensome it might
be to administer the corrective royalty
adjustment, with some opposing the
proposed adjustment on this basis.161
Based on its review of these
comments to date, the Office proposes
to replace its original proposed rule
with a more detailed one that would lay
out the operational procedures for the
corrective royalty adjustment. In making
this proposal, the Office reiterates that
it is continuing to evaluate comments
regarding its authority to adopt
regulations concerning a corrective
royalty adjustment and welcomes
further comments on the subject. By
seeking comments on the revised
proposal, the Office does not mean to
suggest that it has reached any final
conclusions about its authority to adopt
the proposal.
While the Office welcomes comments
on the relative burdens associated with
its proposal versus some alternative
adjustment process, it is inclined to
disagree with commenters suggesting
that there should not be any corrective
adjustment because of the potential
160 See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 7–8;
ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 3–4; ClearBox
Rights Ex Parte Letter at 3–4 (June 28, 2023);
Promopub Reply Comments at 3; NMPA Initial
Comments at 5; CMPA Initial Comments at 2;
McAnally & North Ex Parte Letter at 5–6, 9 (Mar.
14, 2023).
161 See, e.g., ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at
3–4; ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 2–4 (June
28, 2023) (stating that ‘‘[c]ompanies like ClearBox
Rights . . . do these types of calculations all the
time’’ and that it ‘‘is laughable’’ to suggest the
process would be burdensome for the MLC); SONA
et al. Reply Comments at 3 (‘‘It is not ‘undue
hardship’ to request a government-mandated body
undertake a retroactive accounting—not where such
an outcome could and should have been avoided
by the very body that would undertake such an
accounting.’’); Promopub Reply Comments at 3
(‘‘We are confident that most, if not all, of the
publishers who have benefitted from the Policy . . .
have the means to promptly refund all royalties
paid them in error[.]’’); McAnally & North Ex Parte
Letter at 3–4 (Mar. 14, 2023) (‘‘Any suggestion that
publishers cannot render retroactive payments or
that doing so would be so difficult the process
should require a change in the law is inconsistent
with our lived experience.’’); Howard Reply
Comments at 2; NMPA Initial Comments at 5 (‘‘This
would create a significant administrative and
financial burden on the MLC, as well as on
publishers or other recipients of these royalty
payments who likely already distributed some
portion of those amounts pursuant to their
contractual obligations with their songwriters.’’);
CMPA Initial Comments at 2 (‘‘[T]he likelihood of
recovering what was previously paid out to the
songwriter(s) in order to create an accounting to the
post-termination owner, whether or not that be the
songwriter(s) themselves, would be both unlikely,
and an onerous obligation to place on the pretermination publisher.’’).
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burdens involved. Corrective royalty
adjustments are common in the music
industry 162 and explicitly contemplated
by the statute and the Office’s existing
regulations.163 Nothing in the current
record suggests that this adjustment
would be any more or less burdensome
than others, whether for the MLC,
publishers, or songwriters. Indeed, the
MLC’s own guidelines provide that
adjustments, including ‘‘a correction of
an overpayment,’’ ‘‘may be made by The
MLC retroactively to January 1, 2021
(i.e., the License Availability Date).’’ 164
For similar reasons, the Office
declines to propose any specific
procedures at this time regarding where
a publisher has already distributed a
portion of the applicable royalties to its
songwriters. That is a possibility with
any type of adjustment for an
overpayment. For example, at least one
commenter asserts that ‘‘many of the
standard songwriter agreements allow
the publishers to recoup any
overpayment made by the publishers to
the writers.’’ 165 The Office welcomes
further comments on this issue,
including on the feasibility of ClearBox
Rights’ proposal that the MLC only
recoup the publisher’s share.166
The Office’s proposal reflects its
preliminary conclusions about the
Exception discussed above in Part II.B.
Under the supplemental proposed rule,
the corrective adjustment would apply
where the MLC’s prior erroneous
application of the Exception, whether or
not through its termination dispute
policy, affected: (1) the distribution of
blanket license royalties or matched
historical royalties; (2) the holding of
such royalties; 167 or (3) the deduction
162 See, e.g., Promopub Reply Comments at 2
(‘‘[T]he concept of retroactive royalty adjustments is
one with which the NMPA’s members should be
familiar because other collecting organizations
regularly employ retroactive royalty adjustments
when music publishing royalties have been paid
erroneously.’’); McAnally & North Ex Parte Letter at
3–5 (Mar. 14, 2023) (explaining that ‘‘it is of the
essence of the role of publishers large and small,
including collectives like The MLC, to be able to
make allocation corrections involving adjusting
debits and credits,’’ that ‘‘[t]hese adjustments
necessarily require retroactive payments,’’ and that
‘‘these bread-and-butter adjustments [are] a matter
of routine practice’’).
163 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(4)(A)(iv)(II); 37 CFR
210.10(k), 210.27(k).
164 The MLC, Guidelines for Adjustments secs.
2.1, 3.4 (Jan. 2022), https://f-hubspotusercontent40.net/hubfs/8718396/files/2022-02/
MLC%20Guidelines%20for%20Adjustments.pdf.
165 ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 4 (June 28,
2023).
166 See id. at 3–4; ClearBox Rights Reply
Comments at 3–4.
167 The Office proposes to include held royalties
to reflect the fact that the MLC states that it is
presently holding applicable royalties pending the
outcome of the current rulemaking proceeding. See
The MLC, Policies, https://www.themlc.com/
dispute-policy (last visited Sept. 20, 2023).
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from a DMP’s payable blanket license
royalties made by matching usage to
voluntary licenses or individual
download licenses.
With respect to previous
distributions, the MLC would be
required to recover any overpayment
from the prior payee and distribute it to
the proper payee (i.e., the payee legally
entitled to the royalties under the
correct interpretation of the Exception
under current law). The MLC would
have thirty days from publication of the
final rule to notify the prior payee of the
overpayment, and then the prior payee
would have thirty days to return it. If
the prior payee fails to do so, then the
MLC would be required to debit its
future royalties, for all works (and
shares), until the full amount of the
overpayment is recovered. The Office
proposes that the debit be limited to
50% of payable amounts to the prior
payee each month.
While the Office is sympathetic to
commenters calling for the corrective
adjustment to be made quickly, it is also
concerned that smaller publishers, who
may no longer be in possession of the
applicable funds, may be unable to
repay the full overpayment all at once
or financially withstand the debiting of
most of their mechanical royalties each
month. Additionally, the Office does not
propose that the MLC should borrow
against the pool of unclaimed
royalties.168 Assuming, without
deciding, that the statute would even
allow it,169 the Office does not believe
it would be prudent for the MLC to do
so at this time. The total sum of such
royalties is not yet known because of the
adjustments DMPs will be making in
connection with the recent final
determination in the Copyright Royalty
Judges’ Phonorecords III Remand
proceeding.
With respect to deducted royalties
related to voluntary licenses or
individual download licenses, the
Office proposes that the same recovery
procedures apply as for previously
distributed royalties. For such purposes,
the prior payee from whom the MLC
would need to recover the royalties
would be the copyright owner to whom
the relevant usage was originally (and
erroneously) matched. As for royalties
the MLC is already holding, the
supplemental proposed rule would give
it thirty days after the effective date of
the final rule to distribute them to the
proper payee.
Lastly, the supplemental proposed
rule would clarify that the Office’s
adoption of the corrective adjustment
mechanism would not prejudice the
proper payee’s right or ability to
otherwise recover the overpayment from
the prior payee outside of the abovedescribed process. If the overpayment,
however, is recovered directly or a legal
proceeding is commenced, the MLC
would need to be notified by the parties.
The MLC would then be required to
discontinue the above-described
recovery efforts.170
168 See, e.g., ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 4
(June 28, 2023) (proposing that the MLC ‘‘‘borrow’
from the unallocated, unidentified funds pool’’).
169 See 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(7)(C).
170 The Office proposes that the same rule also
apply if there is a bona fide dispute regarding the
application of the Exception to a relevant voluntary
license or its underlying grant of authority.
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List of Subjects in 37 CFR Part 210
Copyright, Phonorecords, Recordings.
Proposed Regulations
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the U.S. Copyright Office
proposes amending 37 CFR part 210 as
follows:
PART 210—COMPULSORY LICENSE
FOR MAKING AND DISTRIBUTING
PHYSICAL AND DIGITAL
PHONORECORDS OF NONDRAMATIC
MUSICAL WORKS
1. The authority citation for part 210
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 17 U.S.C. 115, 702.
2. Amend § 210.22 as follows:
a. Redesignate paragraphs (d), (e), (f),
(g), (h), (i), and (j) as paragraphs (e), (g),
(h), (i), (j), (m), and (n), respectively.
■ b. Add paragraphs (d), (f), (k), and (l).
The additions read as follows:
■
■
§ 210.22
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) The term derivative works
exception means the limitations
contained in 17 U.S.C. 203(b)(1) and
304(c)(6)(A).
*
*
*
*
*
(f) The term historical unmatched
royalties means the accrued royalties
transferred to the mechanical licensing
collective by digital music providers
pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10) and
§ 210.10.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) The term matched historical
royalties means historical unmatched
royalties attributable to a musical work
(or share thereof) matched after being
transferred to the mechanical licensing
collective.
(l) The term pre-termination copyright
owner means the owner of the relevant
copyright immediately prior to:
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(1) The effective date of termination
for an effective termination under 17
U.S.C. 203 or 304; or
(2) The purported effective date of
termination for a claimed, disputed, or
invalid termination under 17 U.S.C. 203
or 304.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 210.27 as follows:
■ a. Redesignate paragraph (g)(2)(ii) as
paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(A).
■ b. Add paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(B).
The addition reads as follows:
§ 210.27 Reports of usage and payment for
blanket licensees.
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii)(A) * * *
(B) To the extent applicable to the
mechanical licensing collective’s efforts
under paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(A) of this
section:
(1) The derivative works exception
does not apply to any individual
download license and no individual or
entity may be construed as the copyright
owner or royalty payee of a musical
work (or share thereof) used pursuant to
any such license based on the derivative
works exception.
(2) The derivative works exception
does not apply to any voluntary license
and no individual or entity may be
construed as the copyright owner or
royalty payee of a musical work (or
share thereof) used pursuant to any such
license based on the derivative works
exception, unless and only to the extent
that the mechanical licensing collective
is directed otherwise pursuant to:
(i) The resolution of a dispute under
§ 210.30(f) regarding the application of
the derivative works exception to a
particular voluntary license or its
underlying grant of authority; or
(ii) A notice submitted under
§ 210.30(c)(4) designating or changing
an alternative royalty payee.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Amend § 210.29 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (a):
■ i. Remove ‘‘reporting obligations’’ and
add in its place ‘‘reporting and payment
obligations’’.
■ ii. Add two sentences at the end of the
paragraph.
■ b. Add paragraphs (b)(4), (j), and (k).
The additions read as follows:
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*
§ 210.29 Reporting and distribution of
royalties to copyright owners by the
mechanical licensing collective.
(a) * * * This section also prescribes
reporting and payment obligations of
the mechanical licensing collective to
copyright owners for the distribution of
matched historical royalties. This
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section does not apply to distributions
of unclaimed accrued royalties under 17
U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(J).
(b) * * *
(4)(i)(A) The copyright owner of a
musical work (or share thereof) as of the
last day of a monthly reporting period
in which such musical work is used
pursuant to a blanket license is entitled
to all royalty payments and other
distributable amounts (e.g., accrued
interest), including any subsequent
adjustments, for the uses of that musical
work occurring during that monthly
reporting period. As used in the
previous sentence, the term uses means
all covered activities engaged in under
blanket licenses as reported by blanket
licensees to the mechanical licensing
collective.
(B) The derivative works exception
does not apply to any blanket license
and no individual or entity may be
construed as the copyright owner or
royalty payee of a musical work (or
share thereof) used pursuant to a
blanket license based on the derivative
works exception.
(ii) Subject to the requirements of and
except to the extent permitted by
§ 210.30, the mechanical licensing
collective shall not distribute royalties
in a manner inconsistent with paragraph
(b)(4)(i) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(j) Matched historical royalties. The
mechanical licensing collective shall
report and distribute matched historical
royalties and related accrued interest
and adjustments in the same manner
and subject to the same requirements as
apply to the reporting and distribution
of royalties for musical works licensed
under the blanket license, as if such
matched historical royalties were
royalties payable for musical works
licensed under the blanket license, but
subject to the following clarifications:
(1) Matched historical royalties shall
be treated as accrued royalties
distributable under paragraph (b)(1)(ii)
of this section and shall be separately
identified in applicable royalty
statements.
(2) With respect to the requirements
of paragraph (b)(2) of this section,
royalty distributions based on
adjustments to matched historical
royalties reflected in cumulative
statements of account delivered to the
mechanical licensing collective by
digital music providers pursuant to
§ 210.10(b)(3)(i) shall be made by the
mechanical licensing collective at least
once annually, upon submission of one
or more statements of adjustment
delivered to the mechanical licensing
collective by digital music providers
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pursuant to § 210.10(k), to the extent
any such statement of adjustment is
delivered to the mechanical licensing
collective during such annual period.
(k) Corrective royalty adjustment. Any
distribution under paragraph (b) of this
section (including any distribution of
matched historical royalties, including
related accrued interest or adjustments)
or deduction under § 210.27(g)(2)(ii)
made by the mechanical licensing
collective before [EFFECTIVE DATE OF
FINAL RULE] and based on an
application of the derivative works
exception that is inconsistent with
paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section
(including as such paragraph applies to
matched historical royalties through
paragraph (j) of this section) or
§ 210.27(g)(2)(ii), as each of those
provisions exist on [EFFECTIVE DATE
OF FINAL RULE], shall be adjusted by
the mechanical licensing collective.
Such adjustment shall also apply to any
amounts held by the mechanical
licensing collective in connection with
such application of the derivative works
exception as of [EFFECTIVE DATE OF
FINAL RULE]. The adjustment shall be
made as follows:
(1) To the extent required by this
paragraph (k), where a royalty payee
(the prior payee) received amounts from
the mechanical licensing collective that
such prior payee would not have
received had the distribution been made
in a manner consistent with the
application of the derivative works
exception embodied in paragraph
(b)(4)(i) of this section, the mechanical
licensing collective shall recover such
overpayment from such prior payee and
shall distribute it to the royalty payee
(the proper payee) who is entitled to
such funds under the application of the
derivative works exception embodied in
paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section. The
following requirements shall apply to
the recovery and distribution of any
such overpayment:
(i) The mechanical licensing
collective shall notify the prior payee of
such overpayment no later than
[EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE],
and request that the prior payee return
such overpayment no later than 30
calendar days after receipt of the notice.
Any returned amounts shall be
distributed to the proper payee with the
next regular monthly royalty
distribution.
(ii) If such overpayment is not
returned in full in accordance with
paragraph (k)(1)(i) of this section, then
beginning with the first distribution of
royalties to occur after the deadline
specified in that paragraph, 50 percent
of any and all accrued royalties and
other distributable amounts (e.g.,
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accrued interest) that would otherwise
be payable to the prior payee from the
mechanical licensing collective each
month, regardless of the associated work
(or share), shall instead be distributed to
the proper payee until such time as the
full amount of the overpayment is
recovered. Where more than one proper
payee is entitled to a corrective royalty
adjustment from the same prior payee
for different musical works, any
amounts recovered and distributed
under this paragraph (k)(1)(ii) shall be
apportioned equally among such proper
payees.
(2) Where, as of [EFFECTIVE DATE
OF FINAL RULE], the mechanical
licensing collective is holding amounts
that would constitute an overpayment
under paragraph (k)(1) of this section if
such amounts had been distributed to
the prior payee, such amounts shall be
distributed to the proper payee no later
than [DATE 30 DAYS AFTER
EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE].
(3) The recovery and distribution
processes described in paragraphs (k)(1)
and (2) of this section shall also apply,
as applicable, to amounts deducted, or
held pending deduction, by the
mechanical licensing collective under
§ 210.27(g)(2)(ii) where the proper payee
is not the copyright owner to whom the
relevant usage was originally matched.
For purposes of this paragraph (k)(3),
the copyright owner to whom the
relevant usage was originally matched
shall constitute the prior payee as that
term is used in paragraphs (k)(1), (2),
and (4) of this section. Where this
paragraph (k)(3) applies, the mechanical
licensing collective shall flag the change
in payee, including by specifying the
affected reporting periods, in the next
response file delivered to the relevant
digital music provider after [EFFECTIVE
DATE OF FINAL RULE].
(4) Nothing in this paragraph (k) shall
be construed as prejudicing the proper
payee’s right or ability to otherwise
recover such overpayment from the
prior payee outside of the adjustment
process detailed in this paragraph (k).
Where the overpayment is recovered
outside of such adjustment process, a
legal proceeding is commenced seeking
recovery of the overpayment, or, with
respect to paragraph (k)(3) of this
section, a dispute is initiated with the
mechanical licensing collective
pursuant to § 210.30(e) regarding the
application of the derivative works
exception to a particular voluntary
license or its underlying grant of
authority, the mechanical licensing
collective must be notified. Upon
receipt of such notice, the mechanical
licensing collective shall discontinue
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any recovery efforts engaged in under
this paragraph (k).
■ 5. Revise § 210.30 to read as follows:
§ 210.30 Transfers of copyright ownership,
designating or changing an alternative
royalty payee, and related disputes.
(a) General. This section prescribes
rules governing the mechanical
licensing collective’s administration of
transfers of copyright ownership, the
designating or changing of an alternative
royalty payee, and related disputes.
(b) Requirements for the mechanical
licensing collective to implement a
change. The mechanical licensing
collective shall not take any action to
implement or give effect to any transfer
of copyright ownership (including a
transfer resulting from an effective
termination under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304)
or request to distribute royalties to a
payee other than the copyright owner
identified in § 210.29(b)(4)(i) (or request
to change such alternative royalty
payee), unless the requirements of
paragraph (c) of this section are satisfied
or the mechanical licensing collective is
acting in connection with the resolution
of a dispute pursuant to paragraph (f) of
this section. Where the requirements of
paragraph (c) of this section are
satisfied, the mechanical licensing
collective shall implement and give
effect to such transfer or request in
accordance with paragraph (d) of this
section.
(c) Notices of change. The mechanical
licensing collective must be
appropriately notified in writing with
respect to any transfer or request
described in paragraph (b) of this
section. Subject to the further
requirements of this paragraph (c), such
notice must comply with any reasonable
formatting and submission requirements
established by the mechanical licensing
collective and made publicly available
on its website. No fee may be charged
for submitting such a notice. Upon
submitting such a notice, or any
additional information related to such
notice, the submitter shall be provided
with a prompt response from the
mechanical licensing collective
confirming receipt of the notice, or
additional information, and the date of
receipt.
(1) Specific requirements for notices
about transfers of copyright ownership,
other than transfers by will or operation
of law, are as follows:
(i) The required notice shall include
all of the following information:
(A) All relevant dates required for the
mechanical licensing collective to
properly implement and give effect to
the transfer.
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(B) The transferor (i.e., the prior
musical work copyright owner),
identified by name and any known and
appropriate unique identifiers, and
appropriate contact information for the
transferor or their administrator or other
representative.
(C) The transferee (i.e., the new
musical work copyright owner),
identified by name and any known and
appropriate unique identifiers,
appropriate contact information for the
transferee or their administrator or other
representative, and, if the transferee is
not already receiving royalty
distributions from the mechanical
licensing collective, any additional
information that is necessary for the
transferee to receive royalty
distributions from the mechanical
licensing collective.
(D) A satisfactory identification of any
applicable catalog exclusions from the
transfer or a list of all transferred
musical works identified by appropriate
unique identifiers.
(ii) The required notice shall be
submitted and signed by the transferor
(or its duly authorized representative).
Such signature shall be accompanied by
the name and title of the person signing
the notice and the date of the signature.
The notice may be signed electronically.
The person signing the notice shall
certify that they have appropriate
authority to submit the notice to the
mechanical licensing collective and that
all information submitted as part of the
notice is true, accurate, and complete to
the best of the signer’s knowledge,
information, and belief, and is provided
in good faith.
(iii) Where there is more than one
transferor or transferee, the required
notice shall include a satisfactory
identification of any applicable
ownership shares for the transferred
musical works. Where there is more
than one transferor, the notice shall be
effective only as to those transferors
whose information is provided in
accordance with paragraph (c)(1)(i)(B) of
this section and whom have signed and
certified the notice in accordance with
paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this section.
Where there is more than one transferee,
the notice shall be effective only as to
those transferees whose information is
provided in accordance with paragraph
(c)(1)(i)(C) of this section.
(2) Specific requirements for notices
about transfers of copyright ownership
resulting from an effective termination
under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304 are as
follows:
(i) The required notice shall include
all of the following information:
(A) A true, correct, complete, and
legible copy of the signed and as-served
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notice of termination submitted to the
Copyright Office for recordation
pursuant to § 201.10.
(B) A true, correct, complete, and
legible copy of the statement of service
submitted to the Copyright Office for
recordation pursuant to § 201.10, if one
was submitted.
(C) Either:
(1) Proof that the notice of termination
was recorded in the Copyright Office
before the effective date of termination;
or
(2) If the Copyright Office has not yet
recorded the notice of termination,
proof that the notice of termination was
submitted to the Copyright Office for
recordation, provided that proof that the
notice of termination was recorded in
the Copyright Office before the effective
date of termination is delivered to the
mechanical licensing collective at a later
date.
(D) The terminating party (i.e., the
new musical work copyright owner),
identified by name and any known and
appropriate unique identifiers,
appropriate contact information for the
terminating party or their administrator
or other representative, and, if the
terminating party is not already
receiving royalty distributions from the
mechanical licensing collective, any
additional information that is necessary
for the terminating party to receive
royalty distributions from the
mechanical licensing collective.
(ii) With respect to the information
required by paragraphs (c)(2)(i)(A)
through (C) of this section, providing an
official Copyright Office certification for
any such information shall not be
required. If the mechanical licensing
collective has good cause to doubt the
authenticity of any such information,
the mechanical licensing collective shall
seek verification from the Copyright
Office.
(iii) Where the information required
by paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section is
insufficient to enable the mechanical
licensing collective to implement and
give effect to the termination, the
mechanical licensing collective shall
engage in best efforts to identify the
relevant musical works or other
necessary information. To the extent
necessary, the mechanical licensing
collective shall correspond with the
terminating party and the pretermination copyright owner (or their
respective representatives) to attempt to
obtain the minimum necessary
information.
(iv) The required notice shall be
submitted and signed by either the
terminating party or the pre-termination
copyright owner (or their respective
duly authorized representatives). Such
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signature shall be accompanied by the
name and title of the person signing the
notice and the date of the signature. The
notice may be signed electronically. The
person signing the notice shall certify
that they have appropriate authority to
submit the notice to the mechanical
licensing collective and that all
information submitted as part of the
notice is true, accurate, and complete to
the best of the signer’s knowledge,
information, and belief, and is provided
in good faith. If the notice is submitted
by the terminating party, the following
additional requirements shall apply:
(A) The mechanical licensing
collective shall notify the pretermination copyright owner about the
terminating party’s notice within 15
calendar days of receiving either the
notice or the last piece of information
necessary for the mechanical licensing
collective to implement the change,
whichever is later.
(B) If the pre-termination copyright
owner does not initiate a dispute with
the mechanical licensing collective
regarding the termination, in accordance
with paragraph (e) of this section,
within 30 calendar days of receiving
such notice, the mechanical licensing
collective shall implement and give
effect to the transfer of copyright
ownership resulting from the
termination, in accordance with
paragraph (d) of this section. Nothing in
this paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(B) shall prevent
the pre-termination copyright owner
from disputing the termination with the
mechanical licensing collective at a later
date or challenging the termination in a
legal proceeding.
(v) Where there is more than one
terminating party or pre-termination
copyright owner, the required notice
shall include a satisfactory
identification of any applicable
ownership shares for the musical works
that are subject to the termination.
Where there is more than one
terminating party, the notice shall be
effective only as to those terminating
parties whose information is provided
in accordance with paragraph
(c)(2)(i)(D) of this section. Where there
is more than one terminating party, a
notice that is signed and certified by any
one terminating party in accordance
with paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this section
is sufficient as to all terminating parties.
(3) Any transfer of copyright
ownership that is not covered by
paragraphs (c)(1) or (2) of this section
(e.g., transfers by will or intestate
succession) shall be subject to any
reasonable notice requirements
established by the mechanical licensing
collective and made publicly available
on its website.
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(4) Specific requirements for notices
requesting that the mechanical licensing
collective distribute royalties to a payee
other than the copyright owner
identified in § 210.29(b)(4)(i) and
notices requesting to change such
alternative royalty payee are as follows:
(i) The required notice shall include
all of the following information:
(A) All relevant dates required for the
mechanical licensing collective to
properly implement and give effect to
the request.
(B) The copyright owner identified in
§ 210.29(b)(4)(i), identified by name and
any known and appropriate unique
identifiers, and appropriate contact
information for the copyright owner or
their administrator or other
representative.
(C) If the copyright owner identified
in paragraph (c)(4)(i)(B) of this section is
not also the current royalty payee, the
current royalty payee (i.e., the
previously designated royalty payee
who is being superseded by the payee
identified in paragraph (c)(4)(i)(D) of
this section), identified by name and
any known and appropriate unique
identifiers, and appropriate contact
information for the payee or their
administrator or other representative.
(D) The designated royalty payee (i.e.,
the new payee designated by the
copyright owner identified in
§ 210.29(b)(4)(i) to receive royalty
distributions from the mechanical
licensing collective that would
otherwise be paid to such owner under
§ 210.29(b)(4)(i)), identified by name
and any known and appropriate unique
identifiers, appropriate contact
information for the payee or their
administrator or other representative,
and, if the payee is not already receiving
royalty distributions from the
mechanical licensing collective, any
additional information that is necessary
for the payee to receive royalty
distributions from the mechanical
licensing collective.
(E) A satisfactory identification of any
applicable catalog exclusions from the
request or a list of all musical works
subject to the request identified by
appropriate unique identifiers.
(ii) The required notice shall be
submitted and signed by the copyright
owner identified in paragraph
(c)(4)(i)(B) of this section (or its duly
authorized representative). Such
signature shall be accompanied by the
name and title of the person signing the
notice and the date of the signature. The
notice may be signed electronically. The
person signing the notice shall certify
that they have appropriate authority to
submit the notice to the mechanical
licensing collective and that all
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information submitted as part of the
notice is true, accurate, and complete to
the best of the signer’s knowledge,
information, and belief, and is provided
in good faith.
(iii) Where the required notice is
made in connection with a notice about
a transfer of copyright ownership
resulting from an effective termination
under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304 submitted
under paragraph (c)(2) of this section,
and the copyright owner identified in
paragraph (c)(4)(i)(B) of this section is
the terminating party and the designated
royalty payee identified in paragraph
(c)(4)(i)(D) of this section is the pretermination copyright owner, the
following additional requirements shall
apply:
(A) The notice must be signed after
the effective date of termination.
(B) The notice must set forth in plain
language an acknowledgement that the
requested action alters the royalty payee
from the standard royalty payee
established by § 210.29(b)(4)(i).
(C) The notice must include a clear
statement stipulating that neither the
notice nor the distribution of royalties
by the mechanical licensing collective
in accordance with the notice prejudices
the rights of either party.
(iv) Where there is more than one
copyright owner or designated royalty
payee, the required notice shall include
a satisfactory identification of any
applicable ownership shares for the
musical works subject to the request.
Where there is more than one copyright
owner, the notice shall be effective only
as to those copyright owners whose
information is provided in accordance
with paragraph (c)(4)(i)(B) of this
section and, subject to paragraph
(c)(4)(iii) of this section to the extent it
applies, whom have signed and certified
the notice in accordance with paragraph
(c)(4)(ii) of this section. Where there is
more than one designated royalty payee,
the notice shall be effective only as to
those payees whose information is
provided in accordance with paragraph
(c)(4)(i)(D) of this section.
(v) The references to § 210.29(b)(4)(i)
in paragraphs (b) and (c)(4) of this
section shall, as applicable, be read to
incorporate § 210.29(j).
(5) Where multiple transfers of
copyright ownership occur prior to
providing notice of the change to the
mechanical licensing collective, a
compliant notice for each transfer must
be provided to the mechanical licensing
collective. For example, where there is
a termination followed by an
assignment of the copyright in the
musical work, notice of the termination
under paragraph (c)(2) of this section
and notice of the subsequent assignment
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under paragraph (c)(1) of this section
must both be provided to the
mechanical licensing collective.
(6) Where a transfer of copyright
ownership and a request to designate or
change an alternative royalty payee are
related, a compliant notice for both the
transfer and request must be provided to
the mechanical licensing collective. For
example, where there is an assignment
of the copyright in the musical work
that includes a contractual right for the
assignee to also be entitled to future
royalty distributions for periods
predating the transfer, notice of the
assignment under paragraph (c)(1) of
this section and notice of the
designation of an alternative royalty
payee under paragraph (c)(4) of this
section must both be provided to the
mechanical licensing collective.
(d) Implementation of a change. Upon
receiving a notice that complies with
the requirements of paragraph (c) of this
section, the mechanical licensing
collective shall implement and give
effect to the identified transfer or
request as follows:
(1)(i) Except as provided by paragraph
(d)(1)(ii) of this section, where the
mechanical licensing collective receives
the notice before the first day of the first
monthly reporting period to commence
after the change is effective, the
mechanical licensing collective shall
implement and give effect to the change,
on a prospective basis, beginning with
the first distribution of royalties for such
reporting period.
(ii) Where the notice concerns a
transfer of copyright ownership
resulting from an effective termination
under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304 submitted by
the terminating party under paragraph
(c)(2) of this section, and the pretermination copyright owner does not
initiate a dispute as described in
paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(B) of this section,
then the mechanical licensing collective
shall implement and give effect to the
change as follows: Where the
mechanical licensing collective receives
the notice at least 45 calendar days
before the first day of the first monthly
reporting period to commence after the
change is effective, the mechanical
licensing collective shall implement and
give effect to the change, on a
prospective basis, beginning with the
first distribution of royalties for such
reporting period.
(2)(i) Except as provided by paragraph
(d)(2)(ii) of this section, where the
mechanical licensing collective receives
the notice on or after the first day of the
first monthly reporting period to
commence after the change is effective,
the mechanical licensing collective shall
implement and give effect to the change,
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65925
on a prospective basis, beginning no
later than the first distribution of
royalties based on the first payee
snapshot taken by the mechanical
licensing collective at least 30 calendar
days after the mechanical licensing
collective receives the notice. As used
in the previous sentence and in
paragraph (d)(2)(ii) of this section, the
term payee snapshot means the royalty
payee information in the mechanical
licensing collective’s records as of a
particular date that will be used for a
particular monthly royalty distribution.
(ii) Where the notice concerns a
transfer of copyright ownership
resulting from an effective termination
under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304 submitted by
the terminating party under paragraph
(c)(2) of this section, and the pretermination copyright owner does not
initiate a dispute as described in
paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(B) of this section,
then the mechanical licensing collective
shall implement and give effect to the
change as follows: Where the
mechanical licensing collective receives
the notice less than 45 calendar days
before the first day of the first monthly
reporting period to commence after the
change is effective, the mechanical
licensing collective shall implement and
give effect to the change, on a
prospective basis, beginning no later
than the first distribution of royalties
based on the first payee snapshot taken
by the mechanical licensing collective at
least 30 calendar days after the pretermination copyright owner’s deadline
to dispute under paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(B)
of this section.
(3) Where additional information
related to the notice is required to
enable the mechanical licensing
collective to implement and give effect
to the change, and such information is
received after receipt of the notice, the
timing requirements described in
paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of this section
shall be based on the date that the last
piece of necessary information is
received by the mechanical licensing
collective.
(4) Where the change is effective as to
one or more monthly reporting periods
for which the mechanical licensing
collective distributed royalties before
implementing and giving effect to the
change, the mechanical licensing
collective may, but is not required to,
make a corrective royalty adjustment if
the notice requests one.
(5) Where the notice concerns a
transfer of copyright ownership
resulting from an effective termination
under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304 submitted
under paragraph (c)(2) of this section,
and the notice is accompanied by proof
that the notice of termination was
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submitted to the Copyright Office for
recordation, but not that it was recorded
in the Copyright Office before the
effective date of termination, the
mechanical licensing collective shall act
as follows:
(i) The receipt of proof that the notice
of termination was recorded in the
Copyright Office before the effective
date of termination shall be treated as a
type of additional information under
paragraph (d)(3) of this section. The
mechanical licensing collective shall
not implement or give effect to any such
termination unless and until such proof
is received.
(ii) Notwithstanding paragraph
(d)(5)(i) of this section, the mechanical
licensing collective shall hold
applicable accrued royalties and
accrued interest pending receipt of
proof that the notice of termination was
recorded in the Copyright Office before
the effective date of termination as
follows:
(A) The mechanical licensing
collective shall commence holding such
amount no later than the
implementation deadline that would
apply under paragraphs (d)(1) through
(3) of this section, as applicable, if proof
of recordation had been provided with
the notice.
(B) After proof that the notice of
termination was recorded in the
Copyright Office before the effective
date of termination is received, the
mechanical licensing collective shall
implement and give effect to the
termination as provided by paragraphs
(d)(1) through (4) and (5)(i) of this
section, as applicable.
(C) Where the Copyright Office
refuses to record the notice of
termination or the notice of termination
is recorded on or after the effective date
of termination, such that the
termination is not effective, the
mechanical licensing collective shall
release the held funds to the pretermination copyright owner.
(D) If proof that the notice of
termination was recorded in the
Copyright Office before the effective
date of termination is not received by
the mechanical licensing collective
within 6 months after the mechanical
licensing collective commences holding
applicable accrued royalties and
accrued interest, the mechanical
licensing collective shall contact the
Copyright Office to confirm the status of
the relevant recordation submission. If
the submission remains pending at that
time, the mechanical licensing
collective shall continue to check its
status monthly. Upon confirmation from
the Copyright Office regarding whether
the applicable notice of termination has
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:49 Sep 25, 2023
Jkt 259001
been timely recorded or not, the
mechanical licensing collective shall act
in accordance with paragraph
(d)(5)(ii)(B) or (C) of this section, as the
case may be, except that no further
proof shall be required to be submitted
to the mechanical licensing collective
for it to act.
(6) No action or inaction by the
mechanical licensing collective with
respect to implementing and giving
effect to a payee change shall affect any
party’s right to royalties pursuant to
such change or such party’s ability to
collect such royalties from someone
other than the mechanical licensing
collective if such royalties were not
distributed to such party by the
mechanical licensing collective.
(e) Termination disputes. The
following requirements shall apply to
any dispute initiated with the
mechanical licensing collective
regarding a termination under 17 U.S.C.
203 or 304:
(1) Such a dispute must be with
regard to the validity of the termination
or the application of the derivative
works exception to a particular
voluntary license or its underlying grant
of authority.
(2) Only the pre-termination copyright
owner (or its representative) may
initiate such a dispute.
(3) If the pre-termination copyright
owner (or its representative) initiates
such a dispute and delivers the
information required to substantiate the
dispute to the mechanical licensing
collective under paragraph (e)(4) of this
section, the mechanical licensing
collective shall hold applicable accrued
royalties and accrued interest pending
resolution of the dispute.
(4) The minimum information that
must be delivered to the mechanical
licensing collective to substantiate a
termination-related dispute shall consist
of the following:
(i) A cognizable explanation of the
grounds for the dispute, articulated with
specificity.
(ii) Documentation sufficient to
support the grounds for the dispute,
which shall consist of the following:
(A) A true, correct, complete, and
legible copy of each grant in dispute.
(B) A true, correct, complete, and
legible copy of any other agreement or
document necessary to support the
grounds for the dispute.
(C) Such other documentation or
substantiating information as the
mechanical licensing collective may
reasonably require pursuant to a dispute
policy adopted under 17 U.S.C.
115(d)(3)(K).
(iii) A satisfactory identification of
each musical work in dispute.
PO 00000
Frm 00100
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
(iv) A certification that the submitter
has appropriate authority to initiate the
dispute with the mechanical licensing
collective and that all information
submitted in connection with the
dispute is true, accurate, and complete
to the best of the submitter’s knowledge,
information, and belief, and is provided
in good faith.
(v) If the dispute concerns the
application of the derivative works
exception to a particular voluntary
license or its underlying grant of
authority:
(A) A true, correct, complete, and
legible copy of each voluntary license at
issue.
(B) A satisfactory identification of
each relevant sound recording that
constitutes a derivative work within the
meaning of 17 U.S.C. 101 that was
prepared pursuant to appropriate
authority.
(C) The date of preparation for each
such sound recording, which must be
before the effective date of termination.
(5) Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary that may be contained in
§ 210.34, any and all documentation
provided to the mechanical licensing
collective pursuant to paragraph (e)(4)
of this section shall be disclosed to all
parties to the dispute. If a party to the
dispute is not a party or successor to a
party to an otherwise confidential
document, such disclosure shall be
subject to an appropriate written
confidentiality agreement.
(f) Resolution of a dispute and release
of disputed funds. All disputed funds
held by the mechanical licensing
collective pursuant to a dispute among
purported copyright owners or royalty
payees must be subject to active dispute
resolution by the relevant parties. Such
funds shall no longer be considered to
be in dispute and the mechanical
licensing collective shall release such
funds under the following
circumstances, which shall constitute
the resolution of the dispute as to such
funds:
(1) Where the mechanical licensing
collective is directed to do so by mutual
agreement of the relevant parties. Funds
released under this paragraph (f)(1) shall
be paid in accordance with such
agreement, subject to the relevant
requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d)
of this section if the agreement changes
the royalty payee, except that,
notwithstanding paragraph (d)(4) of this
section, payments of released funds
shall be made for applicable monthly
reporting periods predating the
mechanical licensing collective’s
implementation of the change.
(2) Where the mechanical licensing
collective is directed to do so by order
E:\FR\FM\26SEP1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 185 / Tuesday, September 26, 2023 / Proposed Rules
of an adjudicative body with
appropriate authority. Funds released
under this paragraph (f)(2) shall be paid
in accordance with such order.
(3) Except where a legal proceeding is
commenced, where, during any 6-month
period starting one year after the
disputed funds are placed on hold, the
mechanical licensing collective does not
receive a joint notice signed by all
relevant parties that they are continuing
to engage in active dispute resolution.
Such notice must comply with any
reasonable formatting and submission
requirements established by the
mechanical licensing collective and
made publicly available on its website.
Funds released under this paragraph
(f)(3) shall be paid to the party who
would have received such funds if the
funds were not placed on hold pursuant
to a dispute.
■ 6. Amend § 210.34 as follows:
■ a. Add paragraph (c)(6).
■ b. In paragraph (c)(5), remove ‘‘to
paragraph (c)(4) of’’ and add in its place
‘‘to paragraph (c)(4) or (c)(6) of’’.
The addition reads as follows:
§ 210.34 Treatment of confidential and
other sensitive information.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(6)(i) Notwithstanding paragraph
(c)(1) of this section, where the
mechanical licensing collective has
placed any accrued royalties, accrued
interest, or other monies on hold with
respect to particular reported usage or a
particular work (or share thereof) (e.g.,
where there is an ownership dispute or
a legal proceeding has been
commenced), the mechanical licensing
collective shall disclose the amount
being held and reason for the hold to
any individual or entity with a bona fide
legal claim to such funds or a portion
thereof.
(ii) Such disclosure shall be made to
each such claimant no later than 10
business days after placing the amount
on hold, where the mechanical licensing
collective is aware of the claimant’s
claim at that time. Where the
mechanical licensing collective is not
aware of a claimant’s claim when the
amount is placed on hold, such
disclosure shall be made to that
claimant no later than 10 business days
after becoming aware. For any amounts
placed on hold before [EFFECTIVE
DATE OF FINAL RULE], where the
mechanical licensing collective is aware
of a claimant’s claim at that time, such
disclosure shall be made to such
claimant no later than [DATE 10
BUSINESS DAYS AFTER EFFECTIVE
DATE OF FINAL RULE]. Where the
mechanical licensing collective is not
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:49 Sep 25, 2023
Jkt 259001
aware of a claimant’s claim as of
[EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE],
such disclosure shall be made to that
claimant no later than 10 business days
after becoming aware.
(iii) Disclosure of the amount being
held with respect to particular reported
usage or a particular work (or share
thereof) shall be accompanied by a
statement that complies with the
requirements of § 210.29 as if such held
amount were to instead be distributed
pursuant to § 210.29. Disclosure of the
reason for the hold shall be made with
specificity. The mechanical licensing
collective shall provide all claimants
with monthly updates concerning the
status of the hold and the amount being
held. The mechanical licensing
collective shall respond to any inquiry
from a claimant about the hold within
10 business days and shall provide any
reasonably requested additional
information about the hold within a
reasonable period of time commensurate
with the request.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: September 21, 2023.
Suzanne V. Wilson,
General Counsel and Associate Register of
Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 2023–20922 Filed 9–25–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410–30–P
POSTAL REGULATORY COMMISSION
39 CFR Part 3050
[Docket No. RM2023–11; Order No. 6692]
Periodic Reporting
Postal Regulatory Commission.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Commission is
acknowledging a recent filing requesting
the Commission initiate a rulemaking
proceeding to consider changes to
analytical principles relating to periodic
reports (Proposal Five). This document
informs the public of the filing, invites
public comment, and takes other
administrative steps.
DATES: Comments are due: October 20,
2023.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments
electronically via the Commission’s
Filing Online system at https://
www.prc.gov. Those who cannot submit
comments electronically should contact
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section by
telephone for advice on filing
alternatives.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David A. Trissell, General Counsel, at
202–789–6820.
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00101
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
65927
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Proposal Six
III. Notice and Comment
IV. Ordering Paragraphs
I. Introduction
On September 15, 2023, the Postal
Service filed a petition pursuant to 39
CFR 3050.11 requesting that the
Commission initiate a rulemaking
proceeding to consider changes to
analytical principles relating to periodic
reports.1 The Petition identifies the
proposed analytical changes filed in this
docket as Proposal Six.
II. Proposal Six
Background. Proposal Six relates to
modifications to the mail processing
and destination entry cost models for
letter-shaped USPS Marketing Mail
pieces to account for recent price
structure changes. Petition, Proposal Six
at 1. The cost models were last
presented in Docket No. ACR2022,
Library References USPS–FY22–10 and
USPS–FY22–13, respectively. Id. If
approved, the Postal Service intends to
incorporate the requested modifications
in the preparation of its the Fiscal Year
(FY) 2023 Annual Compliance Review
(ACR) and apply new cost avoidances
figures in its ‘‘July 2024 Market
Dominant price change.’’ Id.
As part of Docket No. R2023–2, the
Commission approved two new
workshare discounts for USPS
Marketing Mail letter-shaped pieces
prepared on sectional center facility
(SCF) pallets: (1) USPS Marketing Mail
Automation and Non-automation letters;
and (2) USPS Marketing Mail Carrier
Route, High Density, High Density Plus
and Saturation letters. Id. at 1–2.
Proposal. Proposal Six presents four
modifications to support the new
discounts: (1) the addition of tray
sorting cost data to Library Reference
USPS–FY22–10, (2) the incorporation of
a standalone tray sorting cost avoidance
estimate into Library Reference USPS–
FY22–10, (3) the reclassification of tray
sorting cost pools in Library Reference
USPS–FY22–10, and (4) the removal of
tray sorting costs from Library Reference
USPS–FY22–13. Id. at 2. The first three
modifications are made to the mail
processing cost model and the fourth
modification is made to the destination
entry cost model. Id. The Postal Service
provided a modified mail processing
cost model in the Excel file ‘‘USPS–
1 Petition of the United States Postal Service for
the Initiation of a Proceeding to Consider Proposed
Changes in Analytical Principles (Proposal Six),
September 15, 2023 (Petition).
E:\FR\FM\26SEP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 185 (Tuesday, September 26, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 65908-65927]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-20922]
[[Page 65908]]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Copyright Office
37 CFR Part 210
[Docket No. 2022-5]
Termination Rights, Royalty Distributions, Ownership Transfers,
Disputes, and the Music Modernization Act
AGENCY: U.S. Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
ACTION: Supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Copyright Office is issuing a supplemental notice of
proposed rulemaking to update its October 25, 2022 proposed rule
regarding the applicability of the derivative works exception to
termination rights under the Copyright Act to the new statutory
mechanical blanket license established by the Music Modernization Act.
This supplemental notice modifies the proposed rule and expands its
scope in light of comments received in response to the previous notice.
In addition to addressing the applicability of the derivative works
exception, the supplemental proposed rule addresses other matters
relevant to identifying the proper payee to whom the mechanical
licensing collective must distribute royalties. Among other things, the
Office proposes adopting regulations addressing the mechanical
licensing collective's distribution of matched historical royalties and
administration of ownership transfers, requests to designate
alternative royalty payees, and related disputes. The Office invites
public comments on the supplemental proposed rule.
DATES: Written comments must be received no later than 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time on October 26, 2023. Written reply comments must be
received no later than 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on November 13, 2023.
ADDRESSES: For reasons of governmental efficiency, the Copyright Office
is using the regulations.gov system for the submission and posting of
public comments in this proceeding. All comments are therefore to be
submitted electronically through regulations.gov. Specific instructions
for submitting comments are available on the Copyright Office's website
at https://copyright.gov/rulemaking/mma-termination. If electronic
submission of comments is not feasible due to lack of access to a
computer or the internet, please contact the Copyright Office using the
contact information below for special instructions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rhea Efthimiadis, Assistant to the
General Counsel, by email at [email protected] or telephone at 202-
707-8350.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Copyright Office (``Office'') issues this supplemental notice
of proposed rulemaking (``SNPRM'') subsequent to a notice of proposed
rulemaking (``NPRM'') published in the Federal Register on October 25,
2022, pursuant to the Orrin G. Hatch-Bob Goodlatte Music Modernization
Act (``MMA'').\1\ In the NPRM, the Office proposed regulations
regarding the applicability of the derivative works exception
(``Exception'') to termination rights under the Copyright Act to the
statutory mechanical blanket license established by the MMA (``blanket
license'').\2\ This SNPRM assumes familiarity with the prior NPRM and
the public comments received in response to the NPRM.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 87 FR 64405 (Oct. 25, 2022).
\2\ Id.
\3\ The NPRM stemmed from a previous rulemaking proceeding,
discussed in detail in the NPRM, that involved multiple rounds of
public comments through a notification of inquiry, 84 FR 49966
(Sept. 24, 2019), a notice of proposed rulemaking, 85 FR 22518 (Apr.
22, 2020), and an ex parte communications process. Guidelines for ex
parte communications, along with records of such communications,
including those referenced herein, are available at https://www.copyright.gov/rulemaking/mma-implementation/ex-parte-communications.html. All rulemaking activity, including public
comments, as well as educational material regarding the MMA, can
currently be accessed via navigation from https://www.copyright.gov/music-modernization. Comments received in response to the NPRM are
available at https://copyright.gov/rulemaking/mma-termination/.
References to those public comments are by party name (abbreviated
where appropriate), followed by ``Initial Comments,'' ``Reply
Comments,'' or ``Ex Parte Letter,'' as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
The Office commenced this proceeding in response to the adoption by
he Mechanical Licensing Collective (``MLC'') of a termination dispute
policy that conflicted with prior guidance given by the Office and that
embodied an erroneous application of the Exception.\4\ As a result of
the MLC's adoption of this policy, the Office concluded it was
necessary to revisit the termination issue more directly and to
squarely resolve the question of how termination law intersects with
the blanket license.\5\ The NPRM explained that the Office ``seeks to
provide clarity concerning the application of the Exception to the
blanket license,'' as ``[d]oing so would provide much needed business
certainty to music publishers and songwriters'' and ``would enable the
MLC to appropriately operationalize the distribution of post-
termination royalties in accordance with existing law.'' \6\ The NPRM
contained a detailed discussion of the procedural background leading to
this rulemaking,\7\ the Office's regulatory authority,\8\ and legal
background about the Copyright Act's termination provisions and the
Exception.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 87 FR 64405, 64407. The Office disagrees with the MLC's
suggestions to the contrary. See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 2-3;
MLC Reply Comments at 1-2. As explained more fully in the NPRM, the
Office's ultimate conclusion in the prior proceeding was that ``it
seems reasonable for the MLC to act in accordance with letters of
direction received from the relevant parties, or else hold
applicable royalties pending direction or resolution of any dispute
by the parties.'' 87 FR 64405, 64407 (quoting 85 FR 58114, 58132
(Sept. 17, 2020)).
\5\ 87 FR 64405, 64407.
\6\ Id. (``Moreover, without the uniformity in application that
a regulatory approach brings, the Office is concerned that the MLC's
ability to distribute post-termination royalties efficiently would
be negatively impacted.'').
\7\ Id. at 64406-07.
\8\ Id. at 64407-08.
\9\ Id. at 64408-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office then analyzed the application of the Exception in the
context of the blanket license and preliminarily concluded ``that the
MLC's termination dispute policy is inconsistent with the law.'' \10\
It explained that ``[w]hether or not the Exception applies to a
[digital music provider's (``DMP's'')] blanket license (and the Office
concludes that the Exception does not), the statute entitles the
current copyright owner to the royalties under the blanket license,
whether pre- or post-termination.'' \11\ This means that ``the post-
termination copyright owner (i.e., the author, the author's heirs, or
their successors, such as a subsequent publisher grantee) is due the
post-termination royalties paid by the DMP to the MLC.'' \12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Id. at 64410-11.
\11\ Id. at 64411.
\12\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consequently, the Office proposed a rule to clarify the appropriate
payee under the blanket license to whom the MLC must distribute
royalties following a statutory termination.\13\ Because the Office
concluded that the MLC's termination dispute policy is contrary to law,
it also proposed to require the MLC to immediately repeal its policy in
full.\14\ The Office further proposed to require the MLC to adjust any
royalties distributed under the policy within 90 days to make copyright
owners whole for any distributions the MLC made based on ``an erroneous
understanding and application of current law.'' \15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Id. at 64411-12.
\14\ Id. at 64412.
\15\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 65909]]
After publication of the NPRM, the MLC said that it voluntarily
``suspended its [termination dispute policy] pending the outcome of the
[Office's] rulemaking proceeding'' and ``will hold all royalties for
uses of musical works that are subject to statutory termination claims
beginning with the October [2022] usage period, which would have been
distributed in January 2023.'' \16\ To the Office's knowledge, the MLC
continues to hold such royalties at present.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ The MLC, Policies, https://www.themlc.com/dispute-policy
(last visited Sept. 20, 2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. The NPRM Comments
The Office received over 40 public comments in response to the
NPRM. These comments reflect the views of hundreds of interested
parties, including songwriters, music publishers and administrators,
record labels, public interest groups, academics, and practitioners.
Most commenters, including multiple music publishers and
administrators, generally supported the proposed rule.\17\ While some
commenters raised concerns with certain aspects of the NPRM,\18\ the
National Music Publishers' Association (``NMPA'') was the only
commenter to oppose the proposed rule more broadly.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See, e.g., Authors All. et al. Initial Comments at 1-3; BMG
Rights Mgmt. Initial Comments at 1-2; BMG Rights Mgmt. Reply
Comments at 1; ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 2, 6-8; Fishman &
Garcia Initial Comments at 1-4; Gates Reply Comments at 1; Howard
Initial Comments at 1-2; Howard Reply Comments at 2-3; King, Holmes,
Paterno & Soriano LLP Initial Comments at 1; Landmann Initial
Comments at 1; Miller Initial Comments at 1; North Music Grp. Reply
Comments at 2-3; NSAI Initial Comments at 3; Promopub Initial
Comments at 1-2; Promopub Reply Comments at 1-2; Recording Academy
Reply Comments at 2-3; Rights Recapture Initial Comments at 1; SGA
et al. Initial Comments at 1-2, 5; SONA et al. Initial Comments at
2-3; SONA et al. Reply Comments at 3; Songwriters Reply Comments at
1; Wixen Music Publ'g Initial Comments at 1-2.
\18\ See, e.g., CMPA Initial Comments at 1-2 (requesting that
the rule not affect previously distributed royalties); A2IM & RIAA
Reply Comments at 1-2 (agreeing with parts of the Office's
termination analysis, but requesting that the Office limit its
analysis to those parts to ensure that the analysis and rule are
strictly limited to the context of the blanket license); MPA Reply
Comments at 2-5 (taking no position on the proposed rule, but
expressing ``significant concerns with portions of the NPRM
supporting the proposed rule to the extent they could be read to
limit the application of the [Exception] beyond the Section 115
blanket license'').
\19\ See generally NMPA Initial Comments; NMPA Ex Parte Letter
(Feb. 6, 2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NMPA explained that it ``has serious concerns regarding (i) the
impermissible retroactive effect of the NPRM, (ii) the statutory
authority underlying the broad legal analysis contained in the NPRM
that would appear to have effect beyond the limited issue of whether
the Exception applies to the Blanket License, and (iii) whether the
Proposed Rule may constitute an unconstitutional taking in violation of
the Fifth Amendment.'' \20\ Notwithstanding these concerns, NMPA stated
that it ``supports what it believes to be the ultimate goal of the
Proposed Rule: to provide that the post-termination copyright owner of
a musical composition shall receive post-termination royalties under
the Blanket License for any sound recordings created pre- or post-
termination.'' \21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ NMPA Initial Comments at 2; see also NMPA Ex Parte Letter
at 2 (Feb. 6, 2023).
\21\ NMPA Initial Comments at 1; see also NMPA Ex Parte Letter
at 2 (Feb. 6, 2023); CMPA Initial Comments at 1 (``CMPA concurs with
what it believes the USCO's intent is, under the Proposed Rule.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several commenters, including the MLC, sought additional guidance
from the Office on various related issues not directly addressed by the
NPRM. Examples include the following:
Application of the Exception to other types of statutory
mechanical licenses; \22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 6; MLC Reply Comments at
2; ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 6; ClearBox Rights Reply
Comments at 2; Howard Initial Comments at 5; King, Holmes, Paterno &
Soriano LLP Initial Comments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Application of the Exception to voluntary licenses; \23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 4-6; MLC Reply Comments
at 2; ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 6; ClearBox Rights Reply
Comments at 2; Howard Initial Comments at 5; Rights Recapture
Initial Comments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Procedures for carrying out the proposed corrective
royalty adjustment to remedy prior distributions by the MLC based on an
erroneous understanding and application of the Exception.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 6-8; ClearBox Rights
Reply Comments at 3-4; ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 2-4 (June
28, 2023); Howard Initial Comments at 6; Promopub Initial Comments
at 2; Promopub Reply Comments at 3; North Music Grp. Reply Comments
at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Procedures concerning notice, documentation, timing, and
other matters relating to the MLC's implementation of a termination
notification; \25\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 10-11; ClearBox Rights
Initial Comments at 8; ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 5-6; Howard
Initial Comments at 3-5; Howard Reply Comments at 2-3; SGA et al.
Initial Comments at 2, 6-8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Procedures concerning termination disputes and related
confidential information.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 11-14; ClearBox Rights
Reply Comments at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The MLC emphasized the importance of the Office providing guidance
on these topics, explaining that it is ``essential to processing
royalties in connection with statutory termination claims'' and ``would
provide important guidance to parties involved in termination claims.''
\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ MLC Initial Comments at 9-10; see also MLC Reply Comments
at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Supplemental Proposed Rule
While the Office is still considering the comments submitted in
response to the NPRM, in light of the requests for further guidance and
other comments received, the Office is issuing this SNPRM modifying the
proposed rule, providing additional detail, and expanding its scope.
The Office seeks public comments on the revised proposal and will
consider all comments received in response to both the NPRM and SNPRM
when issuing its final rule.
As discussed below, in addition to the Exception, the supplemental
proposed rule addresses other matters germane to identifying the proper
payee to whom the MLC must distribute royalties. These matters include
issues related to the distribution of matched historical royalties, the
MLC's administration of terminations and related disputes, other types
of ownership transfers, and requests to designate alternative royalty
payees. While commenters' requests for additional guidance largely
pertain to termination-related issues, the requests and other comments
lead the Office to believe that a more comprehensive set of regulations
would be beneficial to the MLC, publishers, songwriters, and the wider
music industry. The accurate distribution of royalties is a core
objective of the MLC. Adopting the supplemental proposed rule would
establish standards and settle expectations for all parties with
respect to such distributions. This SNPRM is, thus, a natural extension
of the NPRM and continues to ``ultimately reflect[] the Office's
oversight and governance of the MLC's reporting and payment obligations
to copyright owners.'' \28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See 87 FR 64405, 64408.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office begins with two introductory notes about some of the
terminology used below. First, under the MMA, the MLC must hold, for a
designated minimum time period, royalties associated with reported uses
of sound recordings embodying musical works for which the copyright
owners of such musical works (or shares of such works) have not been
identified or located.\29\ Such works (or shares) are ``unmatched.''
\30\ At the end of the statutory minimum holding period, accrued
royalties for musical works (and shares) that remain unmatched become
eligible for distribution by relative
[[Page 65910]]
market share to copyright owners identified in the MLC's records, at
which point they become ``unclaimed royalties.'' \31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(H)(i).
\30\ Id. at 115(e)(35).
\31\ Id. at 115(d)(3)(J)(i), (e)(34). The MLC has publicly
confirmed that it does not have ``any such [market-share]
distribution planned in the coming year,'' as it ``is focused on
matching uses and identified rightsholders, and . . . has not yet
turned to the evaluation of what remaining royalties might be
appropriate for a market share distribution, let alone begun the
process to effectuate such a distribution, which will occur with
significant public notice and transparency as Congress intended.''
Five Years Later--The Music Modernization Act: Hearing Before the
Subcomm. on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the internet of the
H. Comm. on the Judiciary, Responses to Questions for the Record,
118 Cong. 2-3 (2023) (statement of Kris Ahrend, CEO, Mechanical
Licensing Collective), https://docs.house.gov/meetings/JU/JU03/20230627/116155/HHRG-118-JU03-20230627-SD013.pdf.
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Second, the MMA contains an optional limitation on liability for
unlicensed uses of musical works made by DMPs prior to January 1, 2021
(the ``license availability date'').\32\ To be eligible for this
limitation on liability, DMPs had to engage in good-faith, commercially
reasonable efforts to identify, locate, and pay musical work copyright
owners for covered uses of their works and had to accrue and hold
royalties for uses of any unmatched musical works.\33\ If a musical
work remained unmatched as of January 1, 2021, the DMP had to transfer
all accrued royalties to the MLC along with a cumulative statement of
account.\34\ Such royalties are ``historical unmatched royalties.''
When the MLC matches the musical work (or share) to which historical
unmatched royalties are attributable, they become ``matched historical
royalties.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(A).
\33\ Id. at 115(d)(10)(B).
\34\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Rulemaking Authority
The Office relies on the same authority for the supplemental
proposed rule as it did for the original proposed rule, which is
discussed in detail in the NPRM.\35\ The Office is continuing to
evaluate comments submitted on this topic \36\ and welcomes further
comments on its authority to adopt the supplemental proposed rule,
including with respect to the proposed corrective royalty adjustment
discussed in Part II.H below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ 87 FR 64405, 64407-08.
\36\ See NMPA Initial Comments at 4-10, 12-13; NMPA Ex Parte
Letter at 2-4 (Feb. 6, 2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Termination and the Exception
1. Analysis Regarding Blanket Licenses
While many commenters agree with the Office's legal analysis in the
NPRM regarding the application of the Exception to blanket
licenses,\37\ other commenters raise some concerns.\38\ The Office is
continuing to evaluate these comments, but for purposes of this SNPRM,
the Office continues to propose a rule that relies on the preliminary
analysis and conclusions regarding the Exception, as detailed in the
NPRM. Therefore, the Office does not propose to revise the portion of
the proposed rule that would make clear (1) that the Exception is
inapplicable to blanket licenses, and (2) that the Exception does not
affect copyright ownership.\39\ The Office, however, proposes to
further clarify that because the Exception is inapplicable to blanket
licenses, the Exception does not affect the identity of the applicable
royalty payee either.\40\ The Office proposes this clarification in
light of the distinction that can exist between the copyright owner and
the royalty payee.\41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See, e.g., A2IM & RIAA Reply Comments at 2; Authors All. et
al. Initial Comments at 2-3; BMG Rights Mgmt. Initial Comments at 2;
ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 6-7; Fishman & Garcia Initial
Comments at 1-4; King, Holmes, Paterno & Soriano LLP Initial
Comments at 1; North Music Grp. Reply Comments at 2; Recording
Academy Reply Comments at 2; SGA et al. Initial Comments at 2, 5;
SONA et al. Initial Comments at 2-3.
\38\ See NMPA Initial Comments at 2-3; NMPA Ex Parte Letter at
2-3 (Feb. 6, 2023); MPA Reply Comments at 2-5; see also A2IM & RIAA
Reply Comments at 2; Fishman & Garcia Initial Comments at 4.
\39\ The Office does not mean to suggest that someone could
theoretically be construed as the copyright owner based on the
Exception. See Howard Initial Comments at 5. Rather, the point of
the proposed language is to make that impossibility clear.
\40\ The Office makes this proposal based on Linda Edell
Howard's suggestion to change the proposed rule to refer to ``any
claim to any rights or revenue.'' Id.
\41\ Termination causes copyright ownership to revert to the
author (or heirs). After termination, the Exception only permits a
pre-termination derivative work to ``continue to be utilized under
the terms of the [terminated] grant.'' 17 U.S.C. 203(b)(1),
304(c)(6)(A); see H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, at 127 (1976), reprinted in
1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5659, 5742-43 (explaining that ``termination means
that ownership of the rights covered by the terminated grant
reverts'' to the author or heirs, and describing the Exception as a
``limitation on the rights of a copyright owner under a terminated
grant'') (emphasis added); Mills Music, Inc. v. Snyder, 469 U.S.
153, 173 (1985) (stating that ``[t]he purpose of the Exception was
to preserve the right of the owner of a derivative work to exploit
it, notwithstanding the reversion'') (emphasis added) (internal
citations and quotation marks omitted).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Requests for Additional Guidance
Various commenters, including the MLC, request guidance from the
Office regarding the application of the Exception to voluntary licenses
\42\ and other types of statutory mechanical licenses beyond the
blanket license,\43\ which the Office did not directly address in the
NPRM. With respect to non-blanket statutory mechanical licenses, the
MLC says that guidance is necessary to enable it to accurately match
works (and shares) associated with historical unmatched royalties.\44\
Regarding voluntary licenses, the MLC explains that guidance is
necessary because it must match and identify ownership for works used
under voluntary licenses so that royalties for uses of such works can
be deducted from DMP blanket license royalties.\45\ The Office notes
that the MLC must also do the same for uses under individual download
licenses.\46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 4-6; MLC Reply Comments
at 2; ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 6; ClearBox Rights Reply
Comments at 2; Howard Initial Comments at 5; Rights Recapture
Initial Comments at 1.
\43\ See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 6; MLC Reply Comments at
2; ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 6; ClearBox Rights Reply
Comments at 2; Howard Initial Comments at 5; King, Holmes, Paterno &
Soriano LLP Initial Comments at 1.
\44\ MLC Initial Comments at 6.
\45\ Id. at 4-6 (citing 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(G)).
\46\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(G)(i)(I)(bb). An ``individual download
license'' is ``a compulsory license obtained by a record company to
make and distribute, or authorize the making and distribution of,
permanent downloads embodying a specific individual musical work.''
Id. at 115(e)(12).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office agrees that further official guidance on these issues is
required. While some commenters express concern with the Office opining
on issues beyond the blanket license,\47\ the Office is persuaded that
doing so is necessary to enable the MLC to accurately carry out its
core statutory function to match and distribute royalties to copyright
owners.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ See A2IM & RIAA Reply Comments at 2; MPA Reply Comments at
2-5; NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 2-3 (Feb. 6, 2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
i. Matched Historical Royalties \48\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ As discussed below in Parts II.D and E, the MLC's market-
share-based distributions of unclaimed royalties, including
historical unmatched royalties that may become unclaimed royalties,
are beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office is inclined to conclude that the Exception does not
apply to any matched historical royalties. Historical unmatched
royalties were paid to the MLC by DMPs as one of the requirements for
the statutory limitation on liability for pre-2021 unlicensed uses and
not pursuant to the terms of any pre-2021 voluntary or statutory
license.\49\ Instead, where a DMP could not identify and locate an
applicable copyright owner, the statute directed the DMP to accrue and
hold royalties at the statutory license rate and ultimately transfer
such accrued royalties to the MLC if they remained unmatched as of
January 1, 2021.\50\ Likewise, the MLC's distribution of historical
unmatched
[[Page 65911]]
royalties is governed by the statute. Historical unmatched royalties
that remain unmatched long enough to become unclaimed royalties are
eligible to be distributed by relative market share,\51\ and historical
unmatched royalties that become matched historical royalties are to be
distributed to the ``copyright owner.'' \52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10); 37 CFR 210.10; see generally 86 FR
2176 (Jan. 11, 2021).
\50\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(B)(iv); see 37 CFR 210.10.
\51\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(J).
\52\ Id. at 115(d)(3)(I)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Terms of any pre-2021 license, including as those terms might
otherwise apply through the Exception, appear to have no bearing on how
the MLC must distribute matched historical royalties.\53\ This is
because the accrual and transfer of historical unmatched royalties to
the MLC and distribution of any such royalties by the MLC are governed
by statute and the Office's regulations. Even if the Exception applied
to a pre-2021 license, it would not affect the statutory directive that
the MLC must distribute matched historical royalties to the ``copyright
owner.'' \54\ The Office tentatively believes that, based on these
facts, the Exception does not apply to matched historical royalties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ To be clear, as the Office previously explained, a pre-2021
agreement can, however, affect the calculation of the accrued
royalties required to be transferred to the MLC to be eligible for
the limitation on liability. See 86 FR 2176, 2195 (``Only `accrued
royalties' for uses of unmatched works must be transferred to the
MLC, and these may not necessarily be the same as the royalties that
would otherwise be attributable to such usage under the statutory
rate in the absence of any voluntary agreements that may extinguish
or alter such royalty obligations for certain uses of certain
works.''); see also 37 CFR 210.10(c)(5)(i). The Office further notes
that it expresses no opinion at this time as to whether the
Exception may have any bearing on the calculation of relative market
share for distributions of historical unmatched royalties that
become unclaimed royalties. The distribution of unclaimed royalties
is beyond the scope of this proceeding.
\54\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(I)(ii); see id. at 203(b)(1),
304(c)(6)(A). This result would not necessarily bar a party from
seeking to recover unpaid royalties, at the statutory rate, for pre-
2021 unlicensed uses from a relevant DMP, even if the DMP is
shielded by the limitation on liability. Id. at 115(d)(10)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Pre-2021 Statutory Mechanical Licenses
Under the MMA's provisions governing the transition to the new
blanket licensing regime, most pre-2021 statutory mechanical licenses
do not appear to have continued in effect after the license
availability date.\55\ Section 115(d)(9)(A) provides that ``[o]n the
license availability date, a blanket license shall, without any
interruption in license authority enjoyed by such [DMP], be
automatically substituted for and supersede any existing compulsory
license previously obtained under [section 115] by the [DMP].'' \56\
That provision then has an exception, where the substitution does not
apply ``to any authority obtained from a record company pursuant to a
compulsory license to make and distribute permanent downloads.'' \57\
Section 115(d)(9)(B) adds that, except as provided in section
115(d)(9)(A), ``on and after the license availability date, licenses
other than individual download licenses obtained under [section 115]
for covered activities prior to the license availability date shall no
longer continue in effect.'' \58\ Read together, with respect to
covered activities, it appears that only record companies' pre-2021
individual download licenses and the authority obtained from them by
DMPs survived the license availability date.\59\ Because all other pre-
2021 statutory mechanical licenses to engage in covered activities are
no longer in effect pursuant to their own terms (i.e., the statutory
text), any application the Exception may or may not have had while they
were in force seems to have no bearing on the MLC's distribution of
royalties for post-2021 usage.\60\ The application of the Exception to
both pre- and post-2021 individual download licenses is discussed in
the next section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ Id. at 115(d)(9)(A)-(B).
\56\ Id. at 115(d)(9)(A).
\57\ Id.
\58\ Id. at 115(d)(9)(B). ``Covered activity'' means ``the
activity of making a digital phonorecord delivery of a musical work,
including in the form of a permanent download, limited download, or
interactive stream, where such activity qualifies for a compulsory
license under [section 115].'' Id. at 115(e)(7).
\59\ See H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 10 (2018) (``Because the new
blanket license replaces the previous work-by-work compulsory
license, the compulsory licenses obtained under notices of intent
served on musical work copyright owners prior to the availability of
the blanket license will no longer be valid.''); S. Rep. No. 115-
339, at 10 (2018) (same); Report and Section-by-Section Analysis of
H.R. 1551 by the Chairmen and Ranking Members of Senate and House
Judiciary Committees 8 (2018) (``Conf. Rep.''), https://www.copyright.gov/legislation/mma_conference_report.pdf (same).
\60\ See 17 U.S.C. 203(b)(1), 304(c)(6)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Individual Download Licenses
The Office tentatively believes that its legal analysis in the NPRM
for blanket licenses applies similarly to individual download licenses.
First, as a type of statutory mechanical license, the analysis
contained in Parts V.A.1 (discussing that the blanket license cannot be
terminated) and V.A.3 (discussing that applying the Exception to the
blanket license would lead to an extreme result) of the NPRM fully
applies to individual download licenses for the same reasons as for
blanket licenses.\61\ Second, the analysis under Part V.A.2 of the NPRM
(discussing that derivative works generally are not prepared pursuant
to the blanket license) also applies to the extent no sound recording
derivative is actually prepared pursuant to the individual download
license.\62\ In such cases, for the same reasons discussed in Part
V.A.2 of the NPRM, the individual download license ``is not part of any
preserved grants that make the Exception applicable.'' \63\ If sound
recording derivatives are prepared pursuant to an individual download
license, then the Exception still would not apply.\64\ As explained in
Part V.A.1 of the NPRM, a self-executing statutory license, like an
individual download license, cannot be terminated in the first
place.\65\ Third, the analysis contained in Part V.B of the NPRM is
essentially the same for individual download licenses as for blanket
licenses.\66\ The only difference is that the relevant terms of the
individual download license providing for payment to the ``copyright
owner'' is in a different location from the relevant provisions about
blanket licenses.\67\
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\61\ See 87 FR 64405, 64410-11.
\62\ See id.
\63\ See id.
\64\ See id.
\65\ See id.
\66\ See id. at 64411.
\67\ Under the statute, a notice must be served on the
``copyright owner'' to obtain an individual download license and
payments must be made in accordance with section 115(c)(2)(I). 17
U.S.C. 115(b)(2)(A), (3). Under section 115(c)(2)(I), royalties must
be paid in accordance with the Office's regulations. Id. at
115(c)(2)(I). Under the Office's regulations, individual download
licenses are subject to the same payment regulations as other non-
blanket statutory mechanical licenses. 37 CFR 210.11. Under those
regulations, payment is to be made to the ``copyright owner.'' Id.
at 210.6(g).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on the foregoing, the supplemental proposed rule provides
that the Exception would not apply to individual download licenses for
purposes of the MLC's efforts under section 115(d)(3)(G)(i)(I)(bb) and
37 CFR 210.27(g)(2)(ii).
iv. Voluntary Licenses
The application of the Exception to voluntary licenses requires
consideration of additional questions in light of the variety of
licenses that may exist. Because DMP voluntary licenses are not
statutory mechanical licenses, parts of the Office's analysis in the
NPRM specific to the nature of the blanket license as self-executing
and to the particular text of section 115 (i.e., Parts V.A.1, V.A.3,
and V.B) do not apply to them.\68\ The analysis contained in Part V.A.2
of the NPRM, however, would generally apply ``where no sound recording
derivative is prepared
[[Page 65912]]
pursuant to a DMP's [voluntary] license.'' \69\ In many cases, for the
reasons discussed in the NPRM, ``that [voluntary] license is not part
of any preserved grants that make the Exception applicable.'' \70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ See 87 FR 64405, 64410-11.
\69\ See id. The Office emphasizes that, as noted above, even
though it is relying on the preliminary analysis and conclusions
detailed in the NPRM for purposes of this SNPRM, it is continuing to
evaluate the comments concerning its legal analysis of the
Exception. The Office welcomes further comments and legal discussion
and, in particular, invites comments on the jurisprudence of the
Second Circuit, including the decisions in Woods v. Bourne Co., 60
F.3d 978 (2d Cir. 1995) and Fred Ahlert Music Corp. v. Warner/
Chappell Music, Inc., 155 F.3d 17 (2d Cir. 1998).
\70\ See id. (referring generically to any DMP ``musical work
licenses'' throughout the analysis).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
There may, however, be some situations where the result is
different, such as where a DMP's voluntary license is a ``pass-
through'' license.\71\ In such cases, even if no sound recording
derivative is prepared pursuant to the DMP's voluntary license, the
pre-termination copyright owner may still be entitled to post-
termination royalties for uses made pursuant to such a license. The
contractual payment terms between a DMP and a record company pursuant
to a voluntary pass-through license could be preserved by the Exception
along with other terms that are part of the same direct chain of
successive grants providing authority to utilize the relevant sound
recording derivatives (e.g., those among the songwriter, music
publisher, and record company).\72\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ When the copyright owner of a musical work authorizes a
record company (or someone else) to prepare a sound recording
derivative of the musical work, the musical work copyright owner can
also provide the record company with authority to engage in what is
often referred to as ``pass-through'' licensing. See U.S. Copyright
Office, Copyright and the Music Marketplace 131-32 (2015), https://copyright.gov/policy/musiclicensingstudy/copyright-and-the-music-marketplace.pdf (discussing pass-through licensing and describing it
as ``mimic[king] the traditional physical model, where record labels
ship product to stores and report sales back to publishers''); 86 FR
12822 (Mar. 5, 2021) (discussing prior rulemaking activity involving
pass-through licenses). Such authority would allow the record
company, to the extent permitted by its license with the musical
work copyright owner, to license the rights it possesses in the
underlying musical work to a third party, e.g., a DMP, as a part of
utilizing the sound recording embodying that musical work. Thus, a
DMP could potentially enter into a voluntary license with the record
company instead of the musical work copyright owner for uses of the
musical work. This is similar to how individual download licenses
operate, whereby ``record labels [can] obtain and pass through
[section 115] mechanical license rights [to DMPs] for individual
permanent downloads.'' H.R. Rep. No. 115-651 at 4; S. Rep. No. 115-
339 at 4; Conf. Rep. at 3; see 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(3).
\72\ See 17 U.S.C. 203(b)(1), 304(c)(6)(A); Mills Music, Inc.,
469 U.S. at 163-69.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, and in contrast to blanket and other statutory
mechanical licenses that cannot be terminated, if sound recording
derivatives are in fact prepared by a DMP pursuant to a voluntary
license before its termination, the Exception might apply to the extent
of the voluntary license's terms. The Exception could allow the DMP's
sound recording derivatives to ``continue to be utilized under the
terms of the [voluntary license] after its termination.'' \73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ See 17 U.S.C. 203(b)(1), 304(c)(6)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In sum, unlike statutory mechanical licenses, there are an
innumerable variety of voluntary licenses and related underlying
agreements that either currently exist or that could exist in the
future. Consequently, the Office is inclined to conclude that it would
not be prudent to attempt to craft a rule trying to account for how the
Exception may or may not apply in every possible situation. Even if the
Office could craft such a rule, it would be challenging, if not
impossible, for the MLC to evaluate each and every voluntary license to
determine the Exception's applicability based on whatever regulatory
criteria the Office might adopt. Accordingly, the Office believes that
the MLC should not exercise independent judgment regarding the
application of the Exception to a voluntary license or its underlying
grant of authority.\74\
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\74\ See The MLC, Dispute Policy: Musical Work Ownership, sec.
1.2 (Feb. 2021) (``The Collective does not judge or resolve
Conflicts or Disputes, or participate in the substantive resolution
of Conflicts or Disputes.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Instead of tasking the MLC with making such an evaluation, the
Office proposes that the MLC only act as directed pursuant to either:
(1) a notice from the copyright owner entitled to receive royalties
from the MLC under the Office's regulations that designates an
alternative royalty payee (such notices are discussed in Part II.F.1.iv
below); or (2) the resolution of a dispute with respect to the
applicability of the Exception to the relevant voluntary license or its
underlying grant of authority. Under the supplemental proposed rule,
the MLC's implementation of the Exception through its efforts under
section 115(d)(3)(G)(i)(I)(bb) and 37 CFR 210.27(g)(2)(ii), to confirm
uses of musical works subject to voluntary licenses and deduct
corresponding amounts from royalties that would otherwise be due under
the blanket license, would therefore depend on how the MLC is directed
to act. In the absence of any such direction, the Office proposes that
the Exception would not apply to the MLC's aforementioned efforts.
The first type of direction the MLC may receive, from the copyright
owner, is intended to accommodate situations where that owner may have
contractually agreed to an alternative payment arrangement such that
the MLC should act as if the Exception applies. The second type of
direction the MLC may receive, pursuant to the resolution of a dispute,
follows legal precedent holding that the pre-termination copyright
owner has the burden of proving that the Exception applies.\75\ This
approach would place the burden on the pre-termination copyright owner
to initiate a dispute regarding the application of the Exception. As
discussed below, after initiating a dispute, the MLC would hold
relevant royalties and interest pending its resolution. If the
resolution of the dispute--whether through settlement or adjudication--
requires the MLC to apply the Exception, then the MLC would be required
to act as directed (see Part II.G.4 below discussing the resolution of
disputes).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ Woods, 60 F.3d at 993-94; see Mills Music, Inc. v. Snyder,
469 U.S. at 188 & n.20 (White, J., dissenting) (``In attempting to
claim for itself the benefits of the [Exception], [the pre-
termination copyright owner] bears the burden of proof.''); see also
Norman J. Singer & Shambie Singer, Sutherland Statutes & Statutory
Construction sec. 47.11 (7th ed. 2014 & Supp. 2022) (explaining that
``all courts do agree that those who claim the benefit of an
exception have the burden of proving that they come within the
limited class for whose benefit the exception was established,'' and
collecting cases).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. The Copyright Owner at the Time of the Use Versus the Copyright
Owner at the Time of the Payment
To codify its preliminary conclusion that the statute entitles the
``current copyright owner'' to the royalties under the blanket license,
the Office proposed in the NPRM that the copyright owner of the musical
work as of the end of the monthly reporting period is the one who is
entitled to the royalties and any other related amounts (e.g.,
interest), including any subsequent adjustments, for the uses of the
work during that period.\76\ The NPRM explained the Office's reasoning
for its proposal and sought comments on it, including whether some
other point in time might be appropriate.\77\ The Office refers to the
approach proposed in the NPRM as distributing royalties to ``the owner
at the time of the use.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\76\ 87 FR 64405, 64411-12. The Office further explained that by
``uses,'' the Office means the covered activities engaged in by DMPs
under blanket licenses as reported to the MLC. Id. at 64412.
\77\ Id. at 64412 (citing to sections 115(c)(1)(C) and 501(b)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 65913]]
Commenters largely agree with the proposed approach.\78\ NMPA and
the Church Music Publishers Association (``CMPA'') propose a different
approach. Instead of distributing royalties to the owner at the time of
the use, they suggest that royalties should be distributed to the
copyright owner as of the date of the MLC's relevant distribution--
regardless of when the related use occurred.\79\ The Office refers to
this approach as distributing royalties to ``the owner at the time of
the payment.'' NMPA and CMPA state that this approach is better for
terminating songwriters because they would be the owner at the time of
the payment for any post-termination adjustments to pre-termination
periods.\80\ NMPA and CMPA refer to distributing royalties to the owner
at the time of the payment as ``industry practice,'' \81\ though NMPA
later commented that ``under current industry practice, once an
ownership transfer occurs, the party receiving subsequent adjustment
payments for usage of a musical work that occurred prior to the
transfer is typically handled pursuant to the agreement between the
previous owner and the new owner of the work.'' \82\ The MLC adds that,
``as is standard in the industry, royalties from general reprocessing
are normally paid to the current copyright owner, regardless of the
usage month at issue.'' \83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ See, e.g., ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 8
(``Attempting to identify, calculate and pay royalties by a specific
day of the month in which the musical work was streamed based on the
actual termination date would be administratively cumbersome and
ripe for disputes.''); Howard Initial Comments at 3; King, Holmes,
Paterno & Soriano LLP Initial Comments at 1; Miller Initial Comments
at 1; NSAI Initial Comments at 3; SGA et al. Initial Comments at 2,
5.
\79\ NMPA Initial Comments at 5-6; CMPA Initial Comments at 2.
\80\ NMPA Initial Comments at 6; CMPA Initial Comments at 2.
\81\ NMPA Initial Comments at 6 (explaining that ``any
adjustments or other payments made after an ownership transfer are
paid to the new owner of the composition, including for usage that
occurred prior to the transfer''); CMPA Initial Comments at 2.
\82\ NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 3 (Feb. 6, 2023); see also id. at 4
(``NMPA's draft legislation would have required the copyright owner
at the time of the usage to be paid for subsequent adjustments.'').
\83\ MLC Initial Comments at 9 n.9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regardless of whatever the industry norm may be under voluntary
agreements, the Office remains inclined to believe that the owner at
the time of the use is the more appropriate payee under the blanket
license, absent an agreement to the contrary. While the right to
royalties can be assigned via contract independently of ownership in
the copyright,\84\ that has no bearing on who the proper payee is where
no such agreement exists. In response to the claim that distributing
royalties to the owner at the time of the payment benefits terminating
songwriters, the Office notes that it is not seeking to adopt a rule
that is limited to the termination context. The Office is proposing a
rule to govern all MLC distributions under the blanket license,
including in contexts where ownership may be transferred by means other
than statutory termination.\85\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\84\ See, e.g., William F. Patry, 6 Patry on Copyright, sec.
21:19 (2023) (``An agreement to share royalties, or even assigning
all rights to royalties is not a `transfer of copyright'; instead,
it is merely a right to proceeds flowing from exploitation of an
exclusive right.'').
\85\ See ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 4 (June 28, 2023)
(stating that ``the same rules should apply for songs which have
ownership transferred in methods other than through terminations''
and that ``if a song is sold from one person to another, the person
who owns the work at the end of the reporting period should be
entitled to the royalties'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the statute does not explicitly address whether the proper
payee is the owner at the time of the use or the owner at the time of
the payment, various statutory provisions support the Office's view.
Under section 115(c)(1)(C), the payable royalties under the blanket
license are for ``every digital phonorecord delivery of a musical work
made under [the blanket] license.'' \86\ Thus, where the statute refers
to distributing royalties to the ``copyright owner,'' it most logically
means the copyright owner at the time that the applicable digital
phonorecord delivery is made.\87\ This understanding is supported by
sections 115(d)(4)(E)(ii)(II) and 501(b). Under section
115(d)(4)(E)(ii)(II), where a DMP's blanket license is terminated by
the MLC, ``[s]uch termination renders the making of all digital
phonorecord deliveries of all musical works (and shares thereof)
covered by the blanket license for which the royalty . . . has not been
paid actionable as acts of infringement under section 501.'' \88\
Section 501(b) provides that ``[t]he legal or beneficial owner of an
exclusive right under a copyright is entitled . . . to institute an
action for any infringement of that particular right committed while he
or she is the owner of it.'' \89\ Read together, it appears that,
absent an agreement to the contrary,\90\ the copyright owner who can
sue a DMP for infringement due to non-payment of royalties under the
blanket license is the copyright owner at the time the infringement was
committed--i.e., at the time of the use. It, therefore, seems
reasonable to the Office for that owner to be the one to whom such
royalties are paid by the MLC.\91\
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\86\ 17 U.S.C. 115(c)(1)(C).
\87\ See, e.g., id. at 115(d)(3)(G)(i)(I)-(III), (d)(3)(I).
\88\ Id. at 115(d)(4)(E)(ii)(II).
\89\ Id. at 501(b).
\90\ Courts have held that a `` `copyright owner can assign its
copyright but, if the accrued causes of action are not expressly
included in the assignment, the assignee will not be able to
prosecute them.' . . . In the event that accrued claims are not
expressly included in the assignment, `the assignor retains the
right to bring actions accruing during its ownership of the right,
even if the actions are brought subsequent to the assignment.' ''
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. DRK Photo, 882 F.3d 394, 404 (2d Cir.
2018) (quoting ABKCO Music, Inc. v. Harrisongs Music, Ltd., 944 F.2d
971, 980 (2d Cir. 1991)); see also NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 5 (Feb.
6, 2023) (explaining that ``who has the right to sue for
infringement for activity occurring prior to the ownership change''
would ``be addressed by private contract'').
\91\ The Office declines to propose the changes suggested by
ClearBox Rights to (1) omit the word ``monthly'' before ``reporting
period'' in case DMPs report semi-monthly, and (2) to clarify that
the relevant reporting period is the ``period of the [DMP's] actual
activity, and not the . . . period in which the MLC received and/or
distributed the royalties.'' ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 4-5
(June 28, 2023). Regarding the first suggestion, the statute does
not contemplate semi-monthly reporting. 17 U.S.C. 115(c)(2)(I),
(d)(4)(A)(i). On the second suggestion, the Office believes the
supplemental proposed rule is sufficiently clear, as it refers to
the period ``in which such musical work is used.''
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The Office's conclusion that the owner at the time of the use is
the more appropriate payee under the statutory mechanical license is
not a new one. It reached the same conclusion under the pre-MMA version
of the statute almost a decade ago.\92\ There, the Office determined
that while ``[t]he transactions transferring copyright ownership may
provide for a different result as a matter of private contract,''
``absent such an arrangement, any underpayment or overpayment stemming
from the reconciliation of final performance royalty payments may
properly be attributable to the copyright owner at the time of the
relevant use of the statutory license.'' \93\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ 79 FR 56190, 56193 (Sept. 18, 2014).
\93\ 79 FR 56190, 56193.
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With respect to private agreements, the Office is inclined to agree
with NMPA that it is important ``to allow parties to agree by contract
to a different payment arrangement and provide letters of direction to
the MLC pursuant to those agreements.'' \94\ Therefore, the
supplemental proposed rule would only establish the owner at the time
of the use as the default payee--i.e., the proper payee to whom the MLC
must distribute royalties and any other related amounts under the
blanket license in the absence of an agreement to the contrary. As
discussed below in Part II.F, the
[[Page 65914]]
supplemental proposed rule is designed to accommodate and give effect
to contractual payment arrangements that deviate from this default
rule.
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\94\ NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 4. (Feb. 6, 2023).
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D. Unclaimed Royalties
Commenters raise various questions about the MLC's distribution of
unclaimed royalties.\95\ With respect to the market-share-based
distributions of unclaimed royalties, the Office proposes to clarify
that the reporting and payment regulations in Sec. 210.29 do not
apply, as that section governs MLC distributions of royalties for
matched works.\96\ Beyond this clarification, the Office views the
market-share-based distributions of unclaimed royalties as beyond the
scope of this proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\95\ See, e.g., ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 4-5; ClearBox
Rights Ex Parte Letter at 5 (June 28, 2023); NMPA Initial Comments
at 6 n.10; North Music Grp. Reply Comments at 2; McAnally & North Ex
Parte Letter at 6-7 (Mar. 14, 2023).
\96\ With this clarification, the supplemental proposed rule
removes as redundant the reference to section 115(d)(3)(J) proposed
in Sec. 210.29(b)(4)(i) of the NPRM.
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E. Matched Historical Royalties
Similarly, commenters raise questions about the proposed rule and
matched historical royalties.\97\ Here, the Office proposes to clarify
that Sec. 210.29 does apply and the MLC must report and distribute
matched historical royalties in the same manner and subject to the same
requirements that apply to the reporting and distribution of blanket
license royalties. To avoid any confusion, the Office proposes to
further clarify that matched historical royalties should be treated as
accrued royalties distributable under Sec. 210.29(b)(1)(ii). They
would need to be included in applicable royalty statements and
separately identified and broken out from blanket license royalties so
copyright owners can easily ascertain the nature and source of the
payment made to them by the MLC. The Office proposes this approach
because, at least based on the current record, it generally sees no
reason to treat the reporting and distributing of matched historical
royalties and blanket license royalties differently.
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\97\ See, e.g., NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 4 (Feb. 6, 2023); CMPA
Initial Comments at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This would include the payee proposal discussed in Part II.C above,
whereby the MLC would distribute royalties to the copyright owner at
the time of the use, as opposed to the owner at the time of the
payment. Despite this proposal, the Office is inclined to agree with
NMPA that, given the age of some of the historical usage, there likely
will be greater difficulty in identifying and locating historical
copyright owners, and that requiring the MLC to pay the owner at the
time of the use ``may result in lower match rates and lower payouts of
historic unmatched royalties, even where the current copyright owner is
known, because the MLC may have possibly incomplete or unreliable
historical ownership data.'' \98\ The Office also recognizes Congress's
clear interest in generally ``reduc[ing] the incidence of unclaimed
royalties.'' \99\ Therefore, it seeks comments regarding whether it
should consider drawing a distinction between matched historical
royalties and blanket license royalties when it comes to the royalty
payee. For example, the MLC could be permitted to distribute matched
historical royalties to the copyright owner at the time of the payment
when the owner at the time of the use cannot be located and identified.
The Office further seeks comments on whether it has the authority to
adopt such a distinction or any other approach commenters may wish to
propose. For example, would it be appropriate to consider works matched
to the owner at the time of the payment, rather than the owner at the
time of the use, as being ``matched'' within the meaning of the
statute, or does the statute require that such works be considered
``unmatched'' and subject to eventual market-share-based distributions?
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\98\ See NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 4 (Feb. 6, 2023).
\99\ See Public Law 115-264, tit. I, sec. 102(f)(1), 132 Stat.
at 3722; 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(H)(i).
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F. Ownership Transfers and Other Changes to the Royalty Payee
Several commenters, including the MLC, seek additional guidance
from the Office on procedures concerning notice, documentation, timing,
and other matters relating to the MLC's implementation of a termination
notification.\100\ Having considered these comments, the Office agrees
that further guidance would be helpful to stakeholders. Specifically,
the Office proposes to adopt regulations governing the MLC's
administration of all transfers of copyright ownership and other
changes to the royalty payee entitled to distributions from the MLC.
The Office believes such a rule will help establish standards and
settle expectations for all parties with respect to such distributions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\100\ See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 10-11; ClearBox Rights
Initial Comments at 8; ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 5-6; Howard
Initial Comments at 3-5; Howard Reply Comments at 2-3; SGA et al.
Initial Comments at 2, 6-8.
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Under the supplemental proposed rule, current Sec. 210.30--
addressing a temporary exception to certain DMP reporting requirements
with a deadline that passed over two years ago--would be repealed and
replaced with an entirely new Sec. 210.30. Under paragraph (b) of the
newly proposed Sec. 210.30, the MLC would be prohibited from taking
any action to implement or give effect to a change in the royalty payee
unless it receives a notice about the change that complies with the
requirements of proposed paragraph (c) or is acting in connection with
the resolution of a dispute under proposed paragraph (f).\101\ Where
the requirements of proposed paragraph (c) are satisfied, the MLC would
be required to implement and give effect to the change in payee in
accordance with the provisions of proposed paragraph (d).
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\101\ Proposed paragraph (f) is discussed below in Part II.G.4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Notice of a Change to the MLC
Under proposed paragraph (c), the MLC would need to be
appropriately notified in writing about any change in the royalty
payee. The supplemental proposed rule would establish detailed and
tailored notice requirements based on the type of payee change. Several
of the proposed requirements--such as those about submission and
receipt, certification and signature, and the identification of the
relevant parties and musical works--are similar to the regulations
governing the notices of license that DMPs must submit to the MLC to
obtain a blanket license.\102\ Those requirements seem to be working in
the DMP context and there are sufficient parallels between the two
types of notices that the Office proposes to adopt them here. The
Office encourages the MLC to develop an electronic form to assist
submitters in completing notices about a change in payee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\102\ See 37 CFR 210.24(b), (b)(8), (c), (d). The Office's
rationale for originally adopting those requirements can be found in
the record of that proceeding. 85 FR 22518, 22519-21; 85 FR 58114,
58116-18.
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i. Transfers of Copyright Ownership Other Than by Will or Operation of
Law
Proposed paragraph (c)(1) addresses the requirements for a change
in payee due to a transfer of copyright ownership other than by will or
operation of law. Accordingly, these requirements would apply to a
contractual assignment of the copyright in the relevant musical work,
but not a reversion of the copyright resulting from the statutory
termination of a prior grant concerning the work. The Office proposes
that notices for the transfers covered by paragraph (c)(1) must
include: (1) all relevant dates required for the MLC to properly
implement and give effect to the transfer; (2) information identifying
the
[[Page 65915]]
transferor (i.e., the prior musical work copyright owner); (3)
information identifying the transferee (i.e., the new musical work
copyright owner); and (4) either (i) an identification satisfactory to
the MLC of any applicable catalog exclusions from the transfer (which
may state that there are no such exclusions, and that, therefore, the
whole catalog is subject to the transfer) or (ii) a list of all
transferred musical works identified by appropriate unique identifiers.
The Office further proposes that the required notice must be
submitted and signed by the transferor or its representative certifying
the accuracy of the information provided. This proposal is intended to
reduce both the possibility of fraudulent notices and the effort
required by the MLC to verify transfer claims where notice of the
transfer is provided solely by a purported transferee.
Where there are multiple transferors or transferees, the notice
would also need to identify any applicable ownership shares for the
transferred works. Where there are multiple transferors, the notice
would be effective only as to those transferors whose information is
provided in the notice and whom have signed and certified the notice.
Where there are multiple transferees, the notice would be effective
only as to those transferees whose information is provided in the
notice.
ii. Transfers of Copyright Ownership by Statutory Termination
Proposed paragraph (c)(2) addresses the requirements for a change
in payee due to a transfer of copyright ownership resulting from an
effective termination under section 203 or 304. The Office proposes
that the required notice for this type of payee change must include the
following requirements: (1) a copy of the statutorily required notice
of termination submitted to the Office for recordation; \103\ (2) a
copy of the statement of service submitted to the Office for
recordation, if one was submitted; \104\ (3) either (i) proof that the
notice of termination was recorded in the Office before the effective
date of termination, or (ii) if the Office has not yet recorded the
notice, proof that the notice was submitted to the Office for
recordation, so long as proof of timely recordation is delivered to the
MLC at a later date; \105\ and (4) information identifying the
terminating party (i.e., the new musical work copyright owner).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\103\ See 37 CFR 201.10(f)(1)(i)(A).
\104\ See id. at 201.10(f)(1)(i)(B).
\105\ See 17 U.S.C. 203(a)(4)(A), 304(c)(4)(A) (``A copy of the
notice shall be recorded in the Copyright Office before the
effective date of termination, as a condition to its taking
effect.'').
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With respect to the first three items, the supplemental proposed
rule would make clear that it is not necessary to provide the MLC with
official Copyright Office certifications for this information. If the
MLC has good reason to doubt the authenticity of the information
provided, it should seek verification from the Office. Where the
supplemental proposed rule refers to providing proof of recordation or
proof of submission for recordation, the Office means more than a
declaration by the terminating party or its representative. Adequate
proof of timely recordation could be demonstrated by either providing
the MLC with a copy of the certificate of recordation or the record as
reflected in the Office's online public catalog. Adequate proof of
submission to the Office for recordation could take the form of courier
tracking or a delivery confirmation, a return receipt from the
Office,\106\ or some other communication from the Office confirming
receipt.\107\
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\106\ See 37 CFR 201.10(f)(2)(iii).
\107\ Proof of submission would not need to include proof of
proper fee payment to the Office because an incorrect fee can be
remedied without affecting the relevant date of recordation. Id. at
201.10(f)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The MLC requests the inclusion of additional information and
documentation.\108\ The Office declines to propose these additional
requirements. It agrees with other commenters that the MLC's requests
exceed what is necessary to effectuate a statutory termination under
the law.\109\ The Office also shares commenters' concerns about the
ability of terminating parties to provide some of what the MLC
requests.\110\ The Office continues to ``remain convinced that the
required contents of the notice [of termination] must not become unduly
burdensome to grantors, authors, or their successors, and must
recognize that entirely legitimate reasons may exist for gaps in their
knowledge and certainty.'' \111\ The intent of the Office's proposal is
to generally provide the MLC with the necessary information to process
the termination without unduly burdening terminating parties.\112\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ MLC Initial Comments at 11 (proposing, among other things,
documents sufficient to ``identify the grants that the post-
termination claimant claims have been terminated by the relevant
termination notice'' and to ``show that the post-termination
claimant or its assignor owns the termination interest'').
\109\ ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 5-6; Howard Reply
Comments at 2-3; see 17 U.S.C. 203, 304(c); 37 CFR 201.10; U.S.
Copyright Office, Compendium of U.S. Copyright Office Practices,
sec. 2310.3(D)(1)(c) (3d ed. 2021) (``In most cases, the party
issuing the notice of termination may not have a copy of the grant
that is being terminated or may not have access to a copy. For these
reasons, the terminating party does not need to identify the
location of the grant, offer to produce a copy of the grant, or
attach a copy of the grant to the notice.'').
\110\ Howard Reply Comments at 2-3 (describing the MLC's
proposal as ``a list of documents that will be impossible for an
author or his/her statutory heirs to provide''); see ClearBox Rights
Reply Comments at 5-6.
\111\ 42 FR 45916, 45918 (Sept. 13, 1977); see id. at 45917
(``[T]he preparation of notice of termination will be occurring at a
time far removed from the original creation and publication of a
work and, in many cases, will involve successors of original authors
having little, if any, knowledge of the details of original creation
or publication.''); id. at 45918 (recognizing that ``it will
commonly be the case that the terminating author, or [other
terminating party], will not have a copy of the grant or ready
access to a copy'').
\112\ For example, the Office's regulations governing the
content of statutory notices of termination already provide for an
identification of each: (1) grant, 37 CFR 201.10(b)(1)(iv),
(b)(2)(v); (2) pre-termination copyright owner, 37 CFR
201.10(b)(1)(ii), (b)(2)(ii), (d)(2); (3) terminating party, 37 CFR
201.10(b)(1)(vii), (b)(2)(vii), (c)(2)-(3); (4) work, 37 CFR
201.10(b)(1)(iii), (b)(2)(iv); and (5) effective date of
termination, 37 CFR 201.10(b)(1)(v), (b)(2)(vi).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office appreciates that part of the MLC's proposal is geared at
``maintaining basic fraud protection and avoiding unnecessary
disputes.'' \113\ While the Office supports those aims, it is concerned
that the MLC's proposed measures could result in legitimate terminating
parties being unable to exercise their rights because they are unable
to provide the information the MLC seeks. Instead, the Office proposes
a notice and dispute process as an alternative means of achieving the
MLC's stated goals in this context.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\113\ MLC Initial Comments at 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Evaluating and potentially disputing a termination on the merits is
the duty of the pre-termination copyright owner, not the MLC. The
proposed notice and dispute process (discussed in more detail below)
would provide the pre-termination copyright owner with an opportunity
to dispute a termination before the MLC would be required to implement
it, thereby reducing the likelihood of the MLC acting on a fraudulent
notice.\114\
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\114\ The Office also notes that with respect to fraud, federal
law prohibits (and may punish with fine or imprisonment), ``in any
matter within the jurisdiction of the executive, legislative, or
judicial branch of the Government of the United States,'' the making
of any ``knowingly and willfully'' ``materially false, fictitious,
or fraudulent statement or representation'' or the provision of
``any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any
materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry.'' 18
U.S.C. 1001(a)(3). This provision applies to submissions to the
Office, including where a notice of termination is submitted for
recordation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nevertheless, the Office recognizes that a valid notice of
termination might not provide the MLC with sufficient information to
process and implement the ownership change. In those cases, the Office
proposes that the MLC should
[[Page 65916]]
engage in best efforts to identify the minimum necessary information,
including through correspondence with both the terminating party and
pre-termination copyright owner (or their respective representatives).
This may be a better approach than requiring terminating parties to
provide additional information to the MLC at the outset that they may
not readily have and which may not be needed to implement the change.
Similar to other transfers, the Office proposes that the required
notice must be submitted and signed by either the terminating party or
the pre-termination copyright owner (or their respective
representatives) certifying the accuracy of the information
provided.\115\ The Office agrees with ClearBox Rights that a
terminating party should not be ``held hostage'' by needing to wait for
a pre-termination copyright owner's acknowledgement that the
termination is valid and effective before the MLC can act on the
notice.\116\ At the same time, however, the Office believes that pre-
termination copyright owners must have a fair opportunity to dispute
the validity of a termination where the MLC is notified of the payee
change unilaterally by the terminating party.
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\115\ The Office declines to propose Linda Edell Howard's
suggestion to require the pre-termination copyright owner to be the
one to notify the MLC of the termination. Howard Initial Comments at
4. While the supplemental proposed rule would permit the pre-
termination owner to provide the notice, the Office does not propose
to require that they be the one to provide it, in part, because it
is not clear what the remedy for noncompliance would be.
\116\ ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 8; see also ClearBox
Rights Reply Comments at 6; Howard Reply Comment at 3 (``[T]he
default should be reversion of rights and royalties to the
termination owners and the burden placed on the publisher to bring
suit to challenge a Notice before the MLC could ignore one.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, if the notice to the MLC is submitted by the terminating
party, the Office proposes additional requirements similar to those
suggested by ClearBox Rights.\117\ First, the MLC would be required to
inform the pre-termination copyright owner about the notice within 15
days of receiving either the notice or the last piece of information
necessary for the MLC to implement the change, whichever is later.
Second, after being so notified, a pre-termination copyright owner who
disputes the termination would have 30 days to initiate its dispute
with the MLC. Third, if the pre-termination copyright owner does not
initiate a dispute within the allotted time, then the MLC would be
required to implement and give effect to the ownership transfer
resulting from the termination in accordance with the proposed
implementation requirements discussed in Part II.F.2 below. The
supplemental proposed rule would make clear that even if the pre-
termination copyright owner misses the regulatory deadline and the MLC
implements the change, nothing prevents that owner from disputing the
termination with the MLC at a later date or challenging the termination
in court. The purpose of the proposal is not to limit a pre-termination
copyright owner's right or ability to oppose a purported termination,
but rather to help ensure that the implementation of a terminating
party's notification to the MLC is not unduly delayed by a pre-
termination copyright owner's inaction.\118\
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\117\ See ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 6.
\118\ See ClearBox Rights Initial Comments at 8 (``There is very
little incentive for the pre-termination owner to send an
acknowledgement, and even if they don't have an issue with doing so,
administratively it could take them weeks, months, or in some cases,
years.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Where there are multiple terminating parties or pre-termination
copyright owners, the notice would need to identify any applicable
ownership shares for the works subject to the termination. Where there
are multiple terminating parties, the notice would be effective only as
to those terminating parties whose information is provided in the
notice. Also, the Office proposes that where there are multiple
terminating parties, a notice that is signed and certified by any one
of them would be sufficient as to all terminating parties. The Office
invites comments on this proposal.
iii. Other Transfers of Copyright Ownership
Proposed paragraph (c)(3) addresses changes in payees due to any
other type of ownership transfer, such as a transfer by will or through
intestate succession. For these types of changes, the Office declines
to propose any specific requirements at this time, but welcomes
comments on whether it should adopt any. Under the supplemental
proposed rule, such changes would be subject to any additional
reasonable notice requirements established by the MLC.
iv. Designating an Alternative Royalty Payee
The last type of payee change covered under proposed paragraph (c)
involves the circumstance where the copyright owner entitled to receive
royalties from the MLC under the Office's regulations \119\ designates
an alternative royalty payee to whom the MLC must distribute the
royalties instead. This part of the supplemental proposed rule would
apply where there is no transfer of copyright ownership. Instead, it
addresses the situation where the regulatorily entitled copyright owner
might voluntarily elect or be compelled by private agreement to request
that the MLC distribute the royalties to someone else--e.g., a party
contractually entitled to such royalties. The Office proposes this
process as the means by which the supplemental proposed rule would
accommodate and give effect to contractual payment arrangements that
deviate from the proposed default payee rules discussed above.\120\
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\119\ This would include regulations governing both blanket
license royalties and matched historical royalties.
\120\ See NMPA Ex Parte Letter at 4 (Feb. 6, 2023) (requesting
that the rule ``allow parties to agree by contract to a different
payment arrangement and provide letters of direction to the MLC
pursuant to those agreements'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed notice requirements for this type of payee change are
similar to the requirements for contractual ownership transfers
discussed above. The Office proposes that the required notice must
include: (1) all relevant dates required for the MLC to properly
implement and give effect to the request; (2) information identifying
the copyright owner entitled to receive royalties from the MLC under
the Office's regulations; (3) information identifying the current
royalty payee if different from such copyright owner (i.e., the
previously designated royalty payee who is being superseded by a new
designated payee); (4) information identifying the designated royalty
payee (i.e., the new payee designated by the relevant copyright owner
to receive royalty distributions from the MLC that would otherwise be
paid to such owner under the Office's regulations); and (5) either (i)
an identification satisfactory to the MLC of any applicable catalog
exclusions from the request (which may state that there are no such
exclusions, and that, therefore, the whole catalog is subject to the
request) or (ii) a list of all musical works subject to the request
identified by appropriate unique identifiers.
The Office proposes that the required notice must be submitted and
signed by the copyright owner entitled to receive royalties from the
MLC or its representative certifying the accuracy of the information
provided. Where there are multiple copyright owners or designated
royalty payees, the notice would also need to identify any applicable
ownership shares for the relevant works. Where there are multiple
copyright owners, the notice would be effective only as to those owners
whose information is provided in the notice and whom have signed and
[[Page 65917]]
certified the notice. Where there are multiple designated royalty
payees, the notice would be effective only as to those payees whose
information is provided in the notice.
In addition to the foregoing, the Office proposes to adopt the
Songwriters Guild of America et al.'s (``SGA et al.'s'') proposal for
the scenario where the MLC is asked by the terminating party to
implement an agreement directing the MLC to pay post-termination
royalties to the pre-termination copyright owner.\121\ SGA et al.
states that, without additional safeguards, it ``will inadvertently
open the door to . . . acts of contractual overreaching by
publishers,'' and that the ``execution of `anticipatory [letters of
direction]' as part of publishing agreements has become common
practice.'' \122\ Based on the current record, the proposal seems to be
a reasonable safeguard, even if there is no such overreach at present.
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\121\ SGA et al. Initial Comments at 2, 6-8.
\122\ Id. at 2, 7-8 (``[T]he coerced signing by an author of
such [a letter of direction] concerning the disposition by the MLC
of post-termination royalties--as a pre-condition set by the
publisher for execution of the underlying publishing agreement with
such author--is easily within the future scope of imaginable,
attempted publisher overreach should the Proposed Rulemaking be
adopted without amendment.''); see also Howard Reply Comments at 2
(agreeing with SGA et al.'s proposal and the reasons behind it).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consequently, the Office proposes that where the relevant copyright
owner is the terminating party and the designated royalty payee is the
pre-termination copyright owner, the following additional notice
requirements should apply: (1) the notice must be signed after the
effective date of termination; (2) the notice must acknowledge the
deviation from the standard royalty payee under the Office's
regulations; and (3) the notice must provide that neither the notice
nor the distribution of royalties by the MLC in accordance with the
notice prejudices the legal rights of either party.
v. Multiple Changes
The Office proposes that where multiple ownership transfers occur
prior to providing notice of the change to the MLC, a compliant notice
for each transfer in the chain must be delivered to the MLC. For
example, where there is a termination followed by an assignment of the
copyright in the musical work, both a notice for the termination and a
notice for the subsequent assignment would need to be provided.
Similarly, the Office proposes that where an ownership transfer and a
request to designate or change an alternative royalty payee are
related, a compliant notice for both the transfer and request must be
delivered to the MLC. For example, where there is an assignment of the
copyright in the musical work that includes a contractual right for the
new owner to also be entitled to future royalty distributions for
periods predating the transfer, both a notice for the assignment and a
notice for the designation of the alternative royalty payee would need
to be provided.
The Office proposes these requirements to assist the MLC in
verifying claimed changes in payees and to further the MLC's duty to
maintain an accurate public database of musical works and their owners.
This includes tracking historical changes in ownership.\123\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\123\ 37 CFR 210.31(f).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Implementation of a Change by the MLC
Proposed paragraph (d) sets out how the MLC would need to implement
and give effect to a change in payee.
i. Timing
The Office agrees with the MLC that some amount of processing time
must be given between the time when the MLC receives the notice and the
time by which the change must be implemented.\124\ As the MLC
requests,\125\ and based on the Office's current rules governing its
processing of DMP voluntary licenses,\126\ the Office proposes to give
the MLC at least 30 days to operationalize a payee change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\124\ MLC Initial Comments at 10-11.
\125\ Id.; see also ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 5
(agreeing ``that a minimum 30-day notice of a termination be
required before the MLC has to implement the requested actions'').
\126\ 37 CFR 210.24(f) (``[T]he mechanical licensing collective
shall not be required to undertake any obligations otherwise imposed
on it by this subpart with respect to any voluntary license for
which the collective has not received the description required by
paragraph (b)(8) of this section at least 30 calendar days prior to
the delivery of a report of usage for such period, but such
obligations attach and are ongoing with respect to such license for
subsequent periods.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The supplemental proposed rule contains two scenarios of general
applicability. The first covers where the MLC receives a compliant
notice before the start of the first monthly reporting period to begin
after the relevant change is effective. In such cases, the MLC would
need to implement and give effect to the change beginning with the
first distribution of royalties for that reporting period.\127\
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\127\ For example, if the MLC receives a notice of a contractual
ownership transfer on September 20, 2023, for a transfer that, under
the terms of the agreement, is effective on September 1, 2023, then
the MLC would need to implement the change starting with the January
2024 royalty distribution (because the first monthly reporting
period to commence after the effective date of the transfer would be
the October 2023 reporting period, and the first distribution of
royalties for that period would occur in January 2024).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The second scenario covers where the MLC receives the notice on or
after the start of that reporting period. In those cases, the MLC would
need to implement and give effect to the change beginning no later than
the first distribution of royalties based on the first ``payee
snapshot'' taken by the MLC at least 30 days after it receives the
notice.\128\ By ``payee snapshot,'' the Office means the royalty payee
information contained in the MLC's records as of a particular date that
it will use for a particular monthly royalty distribution. According to
the MLC, it currently takes the payee snapshot 10 days after the end of
the monthly reporting period, and it is this information that it uses
to make the royalty distribution for that reporting period, which
occurs about 65 days later.\129\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\128\ For example, if the MLC receives a notice of a contractual
ownership transfer on October 15, 2023, for a transfer that, under
the terms of the agreement, is effective on September 1, 2023, then
the MLC would need to implement the change no later than the
February 2024 royalty distribution (because the first payee snapshot
to occur at least 30 days after the MLC's receipt of the notice
would be the December 2023 snapshot, which would be for the November
2023 reporting period, and the first distribution of royalties for
that period would occur in February 2024).
\129\ The MLC, Blanket Royalty Distributions, https://www.themlc.com/blanket-payments (last visited Sept. 20, 2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The supplemental proposal rule also contains a variant of both of
these scenarios to accommodate the additional 45 days needed for the
notice and dispute mechanism discussed above regarding a pre-
termination copyright owner's ability to initiate a dispute with the
MLC.
ii. Additional Provisions for Termination-Related Changes
The supplemental proposed rule contains two additional MLC
implementation provisions concerning termination-related changes.
First, the Office proposes that where the MLC needs additional
information to implement the change and such information is received
after the notice, the timing requirements discussed above would apply
based on the date that the MLC receives the last piece of necessary
information.
The second provision relates to where a compliant notice is
accompanied by proof that the statutory notice of termination was
submitted to the Office for recordation, but not proof that it was
timely recorded. The supplemental proposed rule would prohibit the MLC
[[Page 65918]]
from implementing any termination unless and until proof of timely
recordation is received.\130\ It would also make clear that the
eventual receipt of proof that the statutory notice has been timely
recorded should be treated as a type of additional information with
respect to the timing of the MLC's implementation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\130\ See 17 U.S.C. 203(a)(4)(A), 304(c)(4)(A) (``A copy of the
notice shall be recorded in the Copyright Office before the
effective date of termination, as a condition to its taking
effect.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Even though the MLC would not implement the termination, to
accommodate the fact that recordation is not an automatic process, the
Office proposes that, after receiving notice that submission to the
Office for recordation has been made, the MLC hold applicable royalties
pending receipt of proof of timely recordation. After the MLC receives
proof of timely recordation, it would need to implement the change in
accordance with the above-discussed requirements, which would include
distributing the held funds to the terminating party. If, on the other
hand, the Office refuses to record the notice or the notice is recorded
on or after the effective date of termination, and the termination is
not effective, then the MLC would need to release the held funds to the
pre-termination copyright owner. Under the supplemental proposed rule,
if proof of timely recordation is not received within 6 months, the MLC
would need to contact the Office to confirm the status of the relevant
recordation submission and then act accordingly.
iii. Effect of Implementation
Multiple commenters, including the MLC, raise the issue of whether
the MLC's implementation of a payee change should only be forward-
looking or whether the MLC should be required to implement the change
going back to the effective date of the change, regardless of when it
implements it.\131\ For example, Linda Edell Howard explains that in
the termination context ``there will be a substantial delay in
notifying the MLC (sometimes years) as to the correct and legal
owner(s) of the copyright,'' and expresses concern that, as a result,
there is ``little doubt the MLC will innocently misdirect royalty
payments'' to the pre-termination copyright owner.\132\ The MLC states
that implementation ``on a retroactive basis would require The MLC to
design, implement, and manage a new, manual process to benefit a small
group of members that would divert the limited resources of The MLC
from critical services and activities that benefit all copyright
owners.'' \133\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\131\ See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 8; MLC Reply Comments
at 2; Howard Initial Comments at 3-4; ClearBox Rights Ex Parte
Letter at 5 (June 28, 2023).
\132\ Howard Initial Comments at 3-4.
\133\ MLC Initial Comments at 8; see also MLC Reply Comments at
2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office welcomes further comments on this issue, including with
regard to Linda Edell Howard's termination-related concerns and what is
standard in the industry. At this time, the Office is inclined to agree
with the MLC that retroactive implementation may be too
administratively burdensome to require for every payee change. Notably,
the Office only requires prospective implementation with respect to the
MLC's processing of DMP voluntary licenses.\134\ The Office does not,
however, wish to foreclose the possibility that there may be certain
payee changes that the MLC could implement retroactively with little or
no difficulty. Therefore, where a relevant change is effective prior to
the MLC's implementation of it, the Office proposes to permit, but not
require, the MLC to implement the change going back to its effective
date, if the notice to the MLC requests it.\135\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\134\ 37 CFR 210.24(f) (``[T]he mechanical licensing collective
shall not be required to undertake any obligations otherwise imposed
on it by this subpart with respect to any voluntary license for
which the collective has not received the description required by
paragraph (b)(8) of this section at least 30 calendar days prior to
the delivery of a report of usage for such period, but such
obligations attach and are ongoing with respect to such license for
subsequent periods.'').
\135\ The Office declines to propose Linda Edell Howard's
suggested solution involving the Office's records. Howard Initial
Comments at 4. At least based on the current record, it is not clear
how the mechanics of that proposal would work in practice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Relatedly, the Office proposes a savings clause to help allay Linda
Edell Howard's concern that the pre-termination copyright owner ``will
claim they were the `copyright owner' of record as of the last day of
the monthly reporting period (because of the terminating party's delay)
and refuse to turn over the misdirected royalties to the rightful
copyright owners.'' \136\ The proposed savings clause would make clear
that even though the MLC may not be required to implement a change
going back to its effective date, that fact does not affect a party's
right to royalties previously distributed by the MLC to someone else or
that party's ability to collect those royalties from that prior
payee.\137\ For example, if the MLC is not required to implement a
payee change until six months after it is effective, the MLC would have
made several royalty distributions to the prior payee instead of the
new payee. The fact that the supplemental proposed rule would not
require the MLC to recover the previously distributed royalties from
the prior payee and redistribute them to the new payee does not mean
that the new payee is not still legally entitled to those royalties or
cannot seek to collect them from the prior payee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\136\ Id. at 3.
\137\ To be clear, this proposed provision does not address the
situation where the MLC simply makes a mistake. Where the MLC
distributes royalties to the wrong payee due to an error on the
MLC's part (as opposed to where the MLC does not receive
sufficiently advanced notice of a payee change to implement it
before it is effective), the MLC must correct its error in a timely
fashion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
G. Disputes
The MLC requests guidance from the Office on several matters
relating to termination-related disputes.\138\ The Office proposes to
provide such guidance and to further elaborate on other dispute-related
issues where it believes regulations would be helpful.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\138\ MLC Initial Comments at 11-14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Royalty Holds
The MLC requests guidance ``as to the types of disputes concerning
termination claims for which The MLC should place relevant royalties on
hold pending resolution.'' \139\ It also states that its ``general
policy is to place royalties on hold when a legal proceeding is
commenced that would impact the proper payee for those royalties,'' and
asks the Office for clarification if it disagrees.\140\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\139\ Id. at 11-12.
\140\ Id. at 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under section 115(d)(3)(K)(i), the MLC must ``establish policies
and procedures'' ``for copyright owners to address in a timely and
equitable manner disputes relating to ownership interests in musical
works licensed under this section and allocation and distribution of
royalties by the mechanical licensing collective.'' \141\ Section
115(d)(3)(K)(ii) then requires the MLC's ``policies and procedures'' to
``include a mechanism to hold disputed funds . . . pending resolution
of the dispute.'' \142\ Therefore, if there is a bona fide dispute
among purported copyright owners over the ownership of a musical work
(or share), the applicable funds must be held pending resolution of the
dispute.\143\ Because a dispute as to the
[[Page 65919]]
validity of a statutory termination--regardless of the grounds for the
dispute--is a dispute as to the identity of the rightful copyright
owner, it is an ownership dispute for which the MLC must hold
applicable royalties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\141\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(K)(i).
\142\ Id. at 115(d)(3)(K)(ii).
\143\ In the NPRM, the Office proposed that the MLC be permitted
to distribute royalties as directed ``by the mutual written
agreement of the parties to an ownership dispute.'' 87 FR 64405,
64412. The supplemental proposed rule would not allow this. On
reflection, the Office is concerned about the administrative
challenges that could ensue if distributed royalties need to be
recovered. The Office, thus, seeks further comments on this issue,
including as to whether it is permissible under the statute. See 17
U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(K)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In contrast, a dispute as to the application of the Exception is
not a dispute over ownership, but rather over the legal effect of a
concededly valid termination. The Office's final analysis and
conclusions on the law in the current proceeding will govern the MLC's
treatment of the Exception. As a result, a disagreement over the
application of the Exception would generally not constitute grounds for
the MLC to hold related royalties. There are, however, two potential
exceptions.
The first is where litigation is commenced over the issue. In such
cases--as with any type of dispute that is subject to a legal
proceeding--the MLC should hold all applicable royalties pending the
outcome of the proceeding unless the adjudicator orders otherwise.
While the statute may not compel the MLC to implement legal holds in
disputes unrelated to ownership, the Office believes it is prudent for
the MLC to hold royalties whenever a litigation or other formal dispute
procedure (e.g., arbitration) is initiated that implicates the
disposition of royalties.
Second, based on the Office's initial analysis, it recognizes that
the Exception could potentially apply to at least some types of DMP
voluntary licenses. Consequently, the Office proposes that a pre-
termination copyright owner be able to initiate a dispute with the MLC
over the application of the Exception to a particular voluntary license
or its underlying grant of authority, and that the MLC should hold
applicable royalties pending resolution of such a dispute.
2. Process and Documentation for Termination-Related Disputes
Under the supplemental proposed rule, only the pre-termination
copyright owner or its representative would be permitted to initiate a
termination-related dispute with the MLC. A terminating party would not
need to initiate such a dispute because it would always have the
ability to submit the notice of a payee change to the MLC that would
obligate the MLC to implement the termination in the absence of a
dispute.
The Office agrees with the MLC that a pre-termination copyright
owner should provide certain information to initiate the dispute and
substantiate that it is bona fide.\144\ The Office proposes
requirements similar to those suggested by the MLC, but with some
additions.\145\ It proposes that the minimum information that must be
delivered to the MLC to substantiate, and trigger a royalty hold for, a
dispute as to the validity of a termination consists of: (1) a detailed
explanation of the grounds for the dispute; (2) documentation
sufficient to support those grounds, consisting of copies of (i) each
grant in dispute, (ii) any other document necessary to support the
grounds for the dispute, and (iii) any other reasonable information
required by the MLC's dispute policy; (3) an identification
satisfactory to the MLC of each musical work in dispute; and (4) an
appropriate certification regarding the accuracy of the information
made by the submitter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\144\ MLC Initial Comments at 13.
\145\ Id. (listing proposed requirements).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Where the dispute is over the application of the Exception to a
voluntary license, the Office proposes to additionally require: (1) a
copy of each voluntary license at issue; (2) an identification
satisfactory to the MLC of each relevant sound recording that
constitutes a derivative work prepared with appropriate authority; and
(3) the date of preparation for each such sound recording, which must
be before the effective date of termination.
The Office proposes that any and all documentation provided to the
MLC in connection with a termination-related dispute be shared with all
parties to the dispute. If a party to the dispute is not a party or a
successor to a party to an otherwise confidential document, then the
supplemental proposed rule would require the disclosure to be subject
to that party's acceptance of an appropriate written confidentiality
agreement. The Office believes that all parties to a dispute have a
right to know the basis for the dispute and to see the other party's
supporting evidence. The proposed approach seeks to safeguard that
right while ensuring that confidential information is not made public.
3. Disclosure and Confidentiality
The MLC seeks guidance as to whether it ``should be required to
disclose information about the royalties being held to the parties
involved,'' stating that it ``typically does not disclose the amount of
royalties on hold to the parties in a dispute pending agreement or
resolution of a dispute.'' \146\ The Office is inclined to agree with
ClearBox Rights that the MLC should disclose information about such
royalties to the parties to a dispute.\147\ All parties to the dispute
should know the amount in controversy so that they are on equal footing
in developing a strategy for resolving the dispute, including the
negotiation of a settlement. Therefore, the Office proposes an
exception to its confidentiality regulations to clarify that such
disclosures are required.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\146\ Id. at 13-14.
\147\ ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The supplemental proposed rule would further recognize that there
are other circumstances, unrelated to an ownership dispute, where the
MLC may put amounts on hold. In such cases, including where the MLC
initiates the hold unilaterally (e.g., in connection with an
investigation),\148\ the affected parties should have a right to know
the grounds for the hold.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\148\ See Letter from U.S. Copyright Office to The MLC (Apr. 20,
2023), https://copyright.gov/ai/USCO-Guidance-Letter-to-The-MLC-Letter-on-AI-Created-Works.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The supplemental proposed rule, thus, would require that where the
MLC is holding royalties or other monies, it must disclose the amount
being held and the reason for the hold to anyone with a bona fide legal
claim to the funds. More specifically, the Office proposes that the MLC
provide the equivalent of monthly royalty statements for the amounts
held along with monthly updates concerning the status of the hold. The
Office encourages the MLC to disclose required information and provide
updates through its member portal.
4. Dispute Resolution
Though not raised by the commenters, the Office proposes
regulations governing the resolution of disputes among purported
copyright owners or royalty payees and the associated release of held
funds. The Office proposes these regulations to provide certainty to
both the MLC and disputing parties about what constitutes the
resolution of a dispute, how held funds should be released, and how the
MLC should implement any related change in payee that results from the
resolution of the dispute. The Office also believes that it may be
useful to adopt a rule to prevent the MLC having to hold disputed funds
indefinitely. Indeed, the statute requires disputes to be ``address[ed]
in a timely and equitable manner.'' \149\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\149\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(K)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, the supplemental proposed rule contemplates three
scenarios. The first is where the dispute is resolved through the
mutual
[[Page 65920]]
agreement of the relevant parties. In such cases, released funds would
be paid in accordance with the agreement. If the agreement changes the
royalty payee, then the release of the held funds would be subject to
the same notice and implementation requirements discussed above in Part
II.F, except that payments would need to be made for applicable
reporting periods predating the MLC's implementation of the change.
The second scenario is where the dispute is resolved by order of an
adjudicative body (e.g., a court or arbitrator). In such cases,
released funds would be paid in accordance with the order. The MLC's
implementation of any associated payee change would be in accordance
with the order, rather than the above-discussed notice and
implementation requirements. Absent a stay issued by the adjudicatory
body, the appeal or request for reconsideration of such order would not
delay the distribution of the affected monies.
The last scenario is focused on preventing disputed funds from
being held indefinitely. It would enforce a proposed requirement that
all funds held by the MLC pursuant to a dispute among purported
copyright owners or royalty payees be subject to active dispute
resolution by the relevant parties.\150\ It would do so by providing
that if the disputed funds have been held for at least one year, and no
legal proceeding has been commenced, then during every subsequent 6-
month period the parties to the dispute would need to submit a jointly
signed notice to the MLC stating that they are continuing to engage in
active dispute resolution. If the MLC does not receive such notice, it
would be required to release the funds to the party who would have
received them if the funds had not been placed on hold. This would put
the onus on the party who initiates the dispute to eventually commence
a legal proceeding to maintain the hold. The Office proposes this
approach because the initiating party is the one seeking to change the
status quo. It welcomes comments on this proposal, including whether
there are any industry analogues to consider.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\150\ To be clear, this proposal would not cover other types of
potential disputes that may arise in connection with the MLC's
administration of the blanket license, such as a dispute involving a
DMP or the MLC itself.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H. Corrective Royalty Adjustment
In the NPRM, the Office proposed to require the MLC to adjust any
royalties distributed under its (now-suspended) termination dispute
policy within 90 days.\151\ The Office explained that the purpose of
this proposal is to make copyright owners whole for any distributions
the MLC made based on an erroneous understanding and application of the
Exception.\152\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\151\ 87 FR 64405, 64412.
\152\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response, several commenters, including the MLC, seek further
guidance from the Office as to how the proposed corrective royalty
adjustment should work.\153\ For example, Promopub states that the
adjustment process ``may take an unacceptably long time if the MLC must
recoup sums from publishers whose other mechanical royalties are
insufficient for full and prompt recoupment. In such instances, it may
be appropriate to require such publishers to return the royalties
received in error from their own funds rather than extending the
adjustment period.'' \154\ ClearBox Rights says that the MLC ``should
be responsible to recoup all payments known to have been incorrectly
made to original publishers for effectively terminated works, and
should not wait until recoupment of the sums incorrectly paid before
paying the correct royalties to the terminated owners.'' \155\ ClearBox
Rights explains that this ``is standard operating procedure for many if
not most of the publishers in the industry when incorrect payments are
made.'' \156\ ClearBox Rights further states that ``it is fair that any
party that was ultimately overpaid in error, including publishers,
writers, and other third party recipients, should be eligible to have
their overpaid royalties recouped from future funds in order to correct
the issue.'' \157\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\153\ See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 6-8; ClearBox Rights
Reply Comments at 3-4; ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 2-4 (June
28, 2023); Howard Initial Comments at 6; Promopub Initial Comments
at 2; Promopub Reply Comments at 3; North Music Grp. Reply Comments
at 2.
\154\ Promopub Initial Comments at 2.
\155\ ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 4 (June 28, 2023)
(proposing that the MLC `` `borrow' from the unallocated,
unidentified funds pool'').
\156\ Id.
\157\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The MLC requests that the Office make clear that the MLC ``is not
required to pay [previously distributed] royalties to a new payee until
The MLC is able to fully recover those royalties from the previously-
paid payee.'' \158\ The MLC further asks the Office to confirm that it
``may recover those royalties at any time from any funds payable to the
previously-paid payee, since there may not be any additional royalties
payable to that payee for the works in question given that such payee's
rights to those works have now been terminated.'' \159\ The MLC, as
well as other commenters, also raise questions about the recovery of
royalties from publishers who have already distributed a portion of
those royalties to songwriters.\160\ Additionally, commenters disagree
over how complicated and burdensome it might be to administer the
corrective royalty adjustment, with some opposing the proposed
adjustment on this basis.\161\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\158\ MLC Initial Comments at 7.
\159\ Id. at 7-8.
\160\ See, e.g., MLC Initial Comments at 7-8; ClearBox Rights
Reply Comments at 3-4; ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 3-4 (June
28, 2023); Promopub Reply Comments at 3; NMPA Initial Comments at 5;
CMPA Initial Comments at 2; McAnally & North Ex Parte Letter at 5-6,
9 (Mar. 14, 2023).
\161\ See, e.g., ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 3-4; ClearBox
Rights Ex Parte Letter at 2-4 (June 28, 2023) (stating that
``[c]ompanies like ClearBox Rights . . . do these types of
calculations all the time'' and that it ``is laughable'' to suggest
the process would be burdensome for the MLC); SONA et al. Reply
Comments at 3 (``It is not `undue hardship' to request a government-
mandated body undertake a retroactive accounting--not where such an
outcome could and should have been avoided by the very body that
would undertake such an accounting.''); Promopub Reply Comments at 3
(``We are confident that most, if not all, of the publishers who
have benefitted from the Policy . . . have the means to promptly
refund all royalties paid them in error[.]''); McAnally & North Ex
Parte Letter at 3-4 (Mar. 14, 2023) (``Any suggestion that
publishers cannot render retroactive payments or that doing so would
be so difficult the process should require a change in the law is
inconsistent with our lived experience.''); Howard Reply Comments at
2; NMPA Initial Comments at 5 (``This would create a significant
administrative and financial burden on the MLC, as well as on
publishers or other recipients of these royalty payments who likely
already distributed some portion of those amounts pursuant to their
contractual obligations with their songwriters.''); CMPA Initial
Comments at 2 (``[T]he likelihood of recovering what was previously
paid out to the songwriter(s) in order to create an accounting to
the post-termination owner, whether or not that be the songwriter(s)
themselves, would be both unlikely, and an onerous obligation to
place on the pre-termination publisher.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on its review of these comments to date, the Office proposes
to replace its original proposed rule with a more detailed one that
would lay out the operational procedures for the corrective royalty
adjustment. In making this proposal, the Office reiterates that it is
continuing to evaluate comments regarding its authority to adopt
regulations concerning a corrective royalty adjustment and welcomes
further comments on the subject. By seeking comments on the revised
proposal, the Office does not mean to suggest that it has reached any
final conclusions about its authority to adopt the proposal.
While the Office welcomes comments on the relative burdens
associated with its proposal versus some alternative adjustment
process, it is inclined to disagree with commenters suggesting that
there should not be any corrective adjustment because of the potential
[[Page 65921]]
burdens involved. Corrective royalty adjustments are common in the
music industry \162\ and explicitly contemplated by the statute and the
Office's existing regulations.\163\ Nothing in the current record
suggests that this adjustment would be any more or less burdensome than
others, whether for the MLC, publishers, or songwriters. Indeed, the
MLC's own guidelines provide that adjustments, including ``a correction
of an overpayment,'' ``may be made by The MLC retroactively to January
1, 2021 (i.e., the License Availability Date).'' \164\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\162\ See, e.g., Promopub Reply Comments at 2 (``[T]he concept
of retroactive royalty adjustments is one with which the NMPA's
members should be familiar because other collecting organizations
regularly employ retroactive royalty adjustments when music
publishing royalties have been paid erroneously.''); McAnally &
North Ex Parte Letter at 3-5 (Mar. 14, 2023) (explaining that ``it
is of the essence of the role of publishers large and small,
including collectives like The MLC, to be able to make allocation
corrections involving adjusting debits and credits,'' that ``[t]hese
adjustments necessarily require retroactive payments,'' and that
``these bread-and-butter adjustments [are] a matter of routine
practice'').
\163\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(4)(A)(iv)(II); 37 CFR 210.10(k),
210.27(k).
\164\ The MLC, Guidelines for Adjustments secs. 2.1, 3.4 (Jan.
2022), https://f-hubspotuser-content40.net/hubfs/8718396/files/2022-02/MLC%20Guidelines%20for%20Adjustments.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For similar reasons, the Office declines to propose any specific
procedures at this time regarding where a publisher has already
distributed a portion of the applicable royalties to its songwriters.
That is a possibility with any type of adjustment for an overpayment.
For example, at least one commenter asserts that ``many of the standard
songwriter agreements allow the publishers to recoup any overpayment
made by the publishers to the writers.'' \165\ The Office welcomes
further comments on this issue, including on the feasibility of
ClearBox Rights' proposal that the MLC only recoup the publisher's
share.\166\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\165\ ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 4 (June 28, 2023).
\166\ See id. at 3-4; ClearBox Rights Reply Comments at 3-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office's proposal reflects its preliminary conclusions about
the Exception discussed above in Part II.B. Under the supplemental
proposed rule, the corrective adjustment would apply where the MLC's
prior erroneous application of the Exception, whether or not through
its termination dispute policy, affected: (1) the distribution of
blanket license royalties or matched historical royalties; (2) the
holding of such royalties; \167\ or (3) the deduction from a DMP's
payable blanket license royalties made by matching usage to voluntary
licenses or individual download licenses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\167\ The Office proposes to include held royalties to reflect
the fact that the MLC states that it is presently holding applicable
royalties pending the outcome of the current rulemaking proceeding.
See The MLC, Policies, https://www.themlc.com/dispute-policy (last
visited Sept. 20, 2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to previous distributions, the MLC would be required
to recover any overpayment from the prior payee and distribute it to
the proper payee (i.e., the payee legally entitled to the royalties
under the correct interpretation of the Exception under current law).
The MLC would have thirty days from publication of the final rule to
notify the prior payee of the overpayment, and then the prior payee
would have thirty days to return it. If the prior payee fails to do so,
then the MLC would be required to debit its future royalties, for all
works (and shares), until the full amount of the overpayment is
recovered. The Office proposes that the debit be limited to 50% of
payable amounts to the prior payee each month.
While the Office is sympathetic to commenters calling for the
corrective adjustment to be made quickly, it is also concerned that
smaller publishers, who may no longer be in possession of the
applicable funds, may be unable to repay the full overpayment all at
once or financially withstand the debiting of most of their mechanical
royalties each month. Additionally, the Office does not propose that
the MLC should borrow against the pool of unclaimed royalties.\168\
Assuming, without deciding, that the statute would even allow it,\169\
the Office does not believe it would be prudent for the MLC to do so at
this time. The total sum of such royalties is not yet known because of
the adjustments DMPs will be making in connection with the recent final
determination in the Copyright Royalty Judges' Phonorecords III Remand
proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\168\ See, e.g., ClearBox Rights Ex Parte Letter at 4 (June 28,
2023) (proposing that the MLC ```borrow' from the unallocated,
unidentified funds pool'').
\169\ See 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(7)(C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to deducted royalties related to voluntary licenses or
individual download licenses, the Office proposes that the same
recovery procedures apply as for previously distributed royalties. For
such purposes, the prior payee from whom the MLC would need to recover
the royalties would be the copyright owner to whom the relevant usage
was originally (and erroneously) matched. As for royalties the MLC is
already holding, the supplemental proposed rule would give it thirty
days after the effective date of the final rule to distribute them to
the proper payee.
Lastly, the supplemental proposed rule would clarify that the
Office's adoption of the corrective adjustment mechanism would not
prejudice the proper payee's right or ability to otherwise recover the
overpayment from the prior payee outside of the above-described
process. If the overpayment, however, is recovered directly or a legal
proceeding is commenced, the MLC would need to be notified by the
parties. The MLC would then be required to discontinue the above-
described recovery efforts.\170\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\170\ The Office proposes that the same rule also apply if there
is a bona fide dispute regarding the application of the Exception to
a relevant voluntary license or its underlying grant of authority.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
List of Subjects in 37 CFR Part 210
Copyright, Phonorecords, Recordings.
Proposed Regulations
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the U.S. Copyright
Office proposes amending 37 CFR part 210 as follows:
PART 210--COMPULSORY LICENSE FOR MAKING AND DISTRIBUTING PHYSICAL
AND DIGITAL PHONORECORDS OF NONDRAMATIC MUSICAL WORKS
0
1. The authority citation for part 210 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 17 U.S.C. 115, 702.
0
2. Amend Sec. 210.22 as follows:
0
a. Redesignate paragraphs (d), (e), (f), (g), (h), (i), and (j) as
paragraphs (e), (g), (h), (i), (j), (m), and (n), respectively.
0
b. Add paragraphs (d), (f), (k), and (l).
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 210.22 Definitions.
* * * * *
(d) The term derivative works exception means the limitations
contained in 17 U.S.C. 203(b)(1) and 304(c)(6)(A).
* * * * *
(f) The term historical unmatched royalties means the accrued
royalties transferred to the mechanical licensing collective by digital
music providers pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10) and Sec. 210.10.
* * * * *
(k) The term matched historical royalties means historical
unmatched royalties attributable to a musical work (or share thereof)
matched after being transferred to the mechanical licensing collective.
(l) The term pre-termination copyright owner means the owner of the
relevant copyright immediately prior to:
[[Page 65922]]
(1) The effective date of termination for an effective termination
under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304; or
(2) The purported effective date of termination for a claimed,
disputed, or invalid termination under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 210.27 as follows:
0
a. Redesignate paragraph (g)(2)(ii) as paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(A).
0
b. Add paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(B).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 210.27 Reports of usage and payment for blanket licensees.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii)(A) * * *
(B) To the extent applicable to the mechanical licensing
collective's efforts under paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(A) of this section:
(1) The derivative works exception does not apply to any individual
download license and no individual or entity may be construed as the
copyright owner or royalty payee of a musical work (or share thereof)
used pursuant to any such license based on the derivative works
exception.
(2) The derivative works exception does not apply to any voluntary
license and no individual or entity may be construed as the copyright
owner or royalty payee of a musical work (or share thereof) used
pursuant to any such license based on the derivative works exception,
unless and only to the extent that the mechanical licensing collective
is directed otherwise pursuant to:
(i) The resolution of a dispute under Sec. 210.30(f) regarding the
application of the derivative works exception to a particular voluntary
license or its underlying grant of authority; or
(ii) A notice submitted under Sec. 210.30(c)(4) designating or
changing an alternative royalty payee.
* * * * *
0
4. Amend Sec. 210.29 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a):
0
i. Remove ``reporting obligations'' and add in its place ``reporting
and payment obligations''.
0
ii. Add two sentences at the end of the paragraph.
0
b. Add paragraphs (b)(4), (j), and (k).
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 210.29 Reporting and distribution of royalties to copyright
owners by the mechanical licensing collective.
(a) * * * This section also prescribes reporting and payment
obligations of the mechanical licensing collective to copyright owners
for the distribution of matched historical royalties. This section does
not apply to distributions of unclaimed accrued royalties under 17
U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(J).
(b) * * *
(4)(i)(A) The copyright owner of a musical work (or share thereof)
as of the last day of a monthly reporting period in which such musical
work is used pursuant to a blanket license is entitled to all royalty
payments and other distributable amounts (e.g., accrued interest),
including any subsequent adjustments, for the uses of that musical work
occurring during that monthly reporting period. As used in the previous
sentence, the term uses means all covered activities engaged in under
blanket licenses as reported by blanket licensees to the mechanical
licensing collective.
(B) The derivative works exception does not apply to any blanket
license and no individual or entity may be construed as the copyright
owner or royalty payee of a musical work (or share thereof) used
pursuant to a blanket license based on the derivative works exception.
(ii) Subject to the requirements of and except to the extent
permitted by Sec. 210.30, the mechanical licensing collective shall
not distribute royalties in a manner inconsistent with paragraph
(b)(4)(i) of this section.
* * * * *
(j) Matched historical royalties. The mechanical licensing
collective shall report and distribute matched historical royalties and
related accrued interest and adjustments in the same manner and subject
to the same requirements as apply to the reporting and distribution of
royalties for musical works licensed under the blanket license, as if
such matched historical royalties were royalties payable for musical
works licensed under the blanket license, but subject to the following
clarifications:
(1) Matched historical royalties shall be treated as accrued
royalties distributable under paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section and
shall be separately identified in applicable royalty statements.
(2) With respect to the requirements of paragraph (b)(2) of this
section, royalty distributions based on adjustments to matched
historical royalties reflected in cumulative statements of account
delivered to the mechanical licensing collective by digital music
providers pursuant to Sec. 210.10(b)(3)(i) shall be made by the
mechanical licensing collective at least once annually, upon submission
of one or more statements of adjustment delivered to the mechanical
licensing collective by digital music providers pursuant to Sec.
210.10(k), to the extent any such statement of adjustment is delivered
to the mechanical licensing collective during such annual period.
(k) Corrective royalty adjustment. Any distribution under paragraph
(b) of this section (including any distribution of matched historical
royalties, including related accrued interest or adjustments) or
deduction under Sec. 210.27(g)(2)(ii) made by the mechanical licensing
collective before [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE] and based on an
application of the derivative works exception that is inconsistent with
paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section (including as such paragraph
applies to matched historical royalties through paragraph (j) of this
section) or Sec. 210.27(g)(2)(ii), as each of those provisions exist
on [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE], shall be adjusted by the mechanical
licensing collective. Such adjustment shall also apply to any amounts
held by the mechanical licensing collective in connection with such
application of the derivative works exception as of [EFFECTIVE DATE OF
FINAL RULE]. The adjustment shall be made as follows:
(1) To the extent required by this paragraph (k), where a royalty
payee (the prior payee) received amounts from the mechanical licensing
collective that such prior payee would not have received had the
distribution been made in a manner consistent with the application of
the derivative works exception embodied in paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this
section, the mechanical licensing collective shall recover such
overpayment from such prior payee and shall distribute it to the
royalty payee (the proper payee) who is entitled to such funds under
the application of the derivative works exception embodied in paragraph
(b)(4)(i) of this section. The following requirements shall apply to
the recovery and distribution of any such overpayment:
(i) The mechanical licensing collective shall notify the prior
payee of such overpayment no later than [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE],
and request that the prior payee return such overpayment no later than
30 calendar days after receipt of the notice. Any returned amounts
shall be distributed to the proper payee with the next regular monthly
royalty distribution.
(ii) If such overpayment is not returned in full in accordance with
paragraph (k)(1)(i) of this section, then beginning with the first
distribution of royalties to occur after the deadline specified in that
paragraph, 50 percent of any and all accrued royalties and other
distributable amounts (e.g.,
[[Page 65923]]
accrued interest) that would otherwise be payable to the prior payee
from the mechanical licensing collective each month, regardless of the
associated work (or share), shall instead be distributed to the proper
payee until such time as the full amount of the overpayment is
recovered. Where more than one proper payee is entitled to a corrective
royalty adjustment from the same prior payee for different musical
works, any amounts recovered and distributed under this paragraph
(k)(1)(ii) shall be apportioned equally among such proper payees.
(2) Where, as of [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE], the mechanical
licensing collective is holding amounts that would constitute an
overpayment under paragraph (k)(1) of this section if such amounts had
been distributed to the prior payee, such amounts shall be distributed
to the proper payee no later than [DATE 30 DAYS AFTER EFFECTIVE DATE OF
FINAL RULE].
(3) The recovery and distribution processes described in paragraphs
(k)(1) and (2) of this section shall also apply, as applicable, to
amounts deducted, or held pending deduction, by the mechanical
licensing collective under Sec. 210.27(g)(2)(ii) where the proper
payee is not the copyright owner to whom the relevant usage was
originally matched. For purposes of this paragraph (k)(3), the
copyright owner to whom the relevant usage was originally matched shall
constitute the prior payee as that term is used in paragraphs (k)(1),
(2), and (4) of this section. Where this paragraph (k)(3) applies, the
mechanical licensing collective shall flag the change in payee,
including by specifying the affected reporting periods, in the next
response file delivered to the relevant digital music provider after
[EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE].
(4) Nothing in this paragraph (k) shall be construed as prejudicing
the proper payee's right or ability to otherwise recover such
overpayment from the prior payee outside of the adjustment process
detailed in this paragraph (k). Where the overpayment is recovered
outside of such adjustment process, a legal proceeding is commenced
seeking recovery of the overpayment, or, with respect to paragraph
(k)(3) of this section, a dispute is initiated with the mechanical
licensing collective pursuant to Sec. 210.30(e) regarding the
application of the derivative works exception to a particular voluntary
license or its underlying grant of authority, the mechanical licensing
collective must be notified. Upon receipt of such notice, the
mechanical licensing collective shall discontinue any recovery efforts
engaged in under this paragraph (k).
0
5. Revise Sec. 210.30 to read as follows:
Sec. 210.30 Transfers of copyright ownership, designating or changing
an alternative royalty payee, and related disputes.
(a) General. This section prescribes rules governing the mechanical
licensing collective's administration of transfers of copyright
ownership, the designating or changing of an alternative royalty payee,
and related disputes.
(b) Requirements for the mechanical licensing collective to
implement a change. The mechanical licensing collective shall not take
any action to implement or give effect to any transfer of copyright
ownership (including a transfer resulting from an effective termination
under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304) or request to distribute royalties to a
payee other than the copyright owner identified in Sec.
210.29(b)(4)(i) (or request to change such alternative royalty payee),
unless the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section are satisfied
or the mechanical licensing collective is acting in connection with the
resolution of a dispute pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section.
Where the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section are satisfied,
the mechanical licensing collective shall implement and give effect to
such transfer or request in accordance with paragraph (d) of this
section.
(c) Notices of change. The mechanical licensing collective must be
appropriately notified in writing with respect to any transfer or
request described in paragraph (b) of this section. Subject to the
further requirements of this paragraph (c), such notice must comply
with any reasonable formatting and submission requirements established
by the mechanical licensing collective and made publicly available on
its website. No fee may be charged for submitting such a notice. Upon
submitting such a notice, or any additional information related to such
notice, the submitter shall be provided with a prompt response from the
mechanical licensing collective confirming receipt of the notice, or
additional information, and the date of receipt.
(1) Specific requirements for notices about transfers of copyright
ownership, other than transfers by will or operation of law, are as
follows:
(i) The required notice shall include all of the following
information:
(A) All relevant dates required for the mechanical licensing
collective to properly implement and give effect to the transfer.
(B) The transferor (i.e., the prior musical work copyright owner),
identified by name and any known and appropriate unique identifiers,
and appropriate contact information for the transferor or their
administrator or other representative.
(C) The transferee (i.e., the new musical work copyright owner),
identified by name and any known and appropriate unique identifiers,
appropriate contact information for the transferee or their
administrator or other representative, and, if the transferee is not
already receiving royalty distributions from the mechanical licensing
collective, any additional information that is necessary for the
transferee to receive royalty distributions from the mechanical
licensing collective.
(D) A satisfactory identification of any applicable catalog
exclusions from the transfer or a list of all transferred musical works
identified by appropriate unique identifiers.
(ii) The required notice shall be submitted and signed by the
transferor (or its duly authorized representative). Such signature
shall be accompanied by the name and title of the person signing the
notice and the date of the signature. The notice may be signed
electronically. The person signing the notice shall certify that they
have appropriate authority to submit the notice to the mechanical
licensing collective and that all information submitted as part of the
notice is true, accurate, and complete to the best of the signer's
knowledge, information, and belief, and is provided in good faith.
(iii) Where there is more than one transferor or transferee, the
required notice shall include a satisfactory identification of any
applicable ownership shares for the transferred musical works. Where
there is more than one transferor, the notice shall be effective only
as to those transferors whose information is provided in accordance
with paragraph (c)(1)(i)(B) of this section and whom have signed and
certified the notice in accordance with paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this
section. Where there is more than one transferee, the notice shall be
effective only as to those transferees whose information is provided in
accordance with paragraph (c)(1)(i)(C) of this section.
(2) Specific requirements for notices about transfers of copyright
ownership resulting from an effective termination under 17 U.S.C. 203
or 304 are as follows:
(i) The required notice shall include all of the following
information:
(A) A true, correct, complete, and legible copy of the signed and
as-served
[[Page 65924]]
notice of termination submitted to the Copyright Office for recordation
pursuant to Sec. 201.10.
(B) A true, correct, complete, and legible copy of the statement of
service submitted to the Copyright Office for recordation pursuant to
Sec. 201.10, if one was submitted.
(C) Either:
(1) Proof that the notice of termination was recorded in the
Copyright Office before the effective date of termination; or
(2) If the Copyright Office has not yet recorded the notice of
termination, proof that the notice of termination was submitted to the
Copyright Office for recordation, provided that proof that the notice
of termination was recorded in the Copyright Office before the
effective date of termination is delivered to the mechanical licensing
collective at a later date.
(D) The terminating party (i.e., the new musical work copyright
owner), identified by name and any known and appropriate unique
identifiers, appropriate contact information for the terminating party
or their administrator or other representative, and, if the terminating
party is not already receiving royalty distributions from the
mechanical licensing collective, any additional information that is
necessary for the terminating party to receive royalty distributions
from the mechanical licensing collective.
(ii) With respect to the information required by paragraphs
(c)(2)(i)(A) through (C) of this section, providing an official
Copyright Office certification for any such information shall not be
required. If the mechanical licensing collective has good cause to
doubt the authenticity of any such information, the mechanical
licensing collective shall seek verification from the Copyright Office.
(iii) Where the information required by paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this
section is insufficient to enable the mechanical licensing collective
to implement and give effect to the termination, the mechanical
licensing collective shall engage in best efforts to identify the
relevant musical works or other necessary information. To the extent
necessary, the mechanical licensing collective shall correspond with
the terminating party and the pre-termination copyright owner (or their
respective representatives) to attempt to obtain the minimum necessary
information.
(iv) The required notice shall be submitted and signed by either
the terminating party or the pre-termination copyright owner (or their
respective duly authorized representatives). Such signature shall be
accompanied by the name and title of the person signing the notice and
the date of the signature. The notice may be signed electronically. The
person signing the notice shall certify that they have appropriate
authority to submit the notice to the mechanical licensing collective
and that all information submitted as part of the notice is true,
accurate, and complete to the best of the signer's knowledge,
information, and belief, and is provided in good faith. If the notice
is submitted by the terminating party, the following additional
requirements shall apply:
(A) The mechanical licensing collective shall notify the pre-
termination copyright owner about the terminating party's notice within
15 calendar days of receiving either the notice or the last piece of
information necessary for the mechanical licensing collective to
implement the change, whichever is later.
(B) If the pre-termination copyright owner does not initiate a
dispute with the mechanical licensing collective regarding the
termination, in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section, within
30 calendar days of receiving such notice, the mechanical licensing
collective shall implement and give effect to the transfer of copyright
ownership resulting from the termination, in accordance with paragraph
(d) of this section. Nothing in this paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(B) shall
prevent the pre-termination copyright owner from disputing the
termination with the mechanical licensing collective at a later date or
challenging the termination in a legal proceeding.
(v) Where there is more than one terminating party or pre-
termination copyright owner, the required notice shall include a
satisfactory identification of any applicable ownership shares for the
musical works that are subject to the termination. Where there is more
than one terminating party, the notice shall be effective only as to
those terminating parties whose information is provided in accordance
with paragraph (c)(2)(i)(D) of this section. Where there is more than
one terminating party, a notice that is signed and certified by any one
terminating party in accordance with paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this
section is sufficient as to all terminating parties.
(3) Any transfer of copyright ownership that is not covered by
paragraphs (c)(1) or (2) of this section (e.g., transfers by will or
intestate succession) shall be subject to any reasonable notice
requirements established by the mechanical licensing collective and
made publicly available on its website.
(4) Specific requirements for notices requesting that the
mechanical licensing collective distribute royalties to a payee other
than the copyright owner identified in Sec. 210.29(b)(4)(i) and
notices requesting to change such alternative royalty payee are as
follows:
(i) The required notice shall include all of the following
information:
(A) All relevant dates required for the mechanical licensing
collective to properly implement and give effect to the request.
(B) The copyright owner identified in Sec. 210.29(b)(4)(i),
identified by name and any known and appropriate unique identifiers,
and appropriate contact information for the copyright owner or their
administrator or other representative.
(C) If the copyright owner identified in paragraph (c)(4)(i)(B) of
this section is not also the current royalty payee, the current royalty
payee (i.e., the previously designated royalty payee who is being
superseded by the payee identified in paragraph (c)(4)(i)(D) of this
section), identified by name and any known and appropriate unique
identifiers, and appropriate contact information for the payee or their
administrator or other representative.
(D) The designated royalty payee (i.e., the new payee designated by
the copyright owner identified in Sec. 210.29(b)(4)(i) to receive
royalty distributions from the mechanical licensing collective that
would otherwise be paid to such owner under Sec. 210.29(b)(4)(i)),
identified by name and any known and appropriate unique identifiers,
appropriate contact information for the payee or their administrator or
other representative, and, if the payee is not already receiving
royalty distributions from the mechanical licensing collective, any
additional information that is necessary for the payee to receive
royalty distributions from the mechanical licensing collective.
(E) A satisfactory identification of any applicable catalog
exclusions from the request or a list of all musical works subject to
the request identified by appropriate unique identifiers.
(ii) The required notice shall be submitted and signed by the
copyright owner identified in paragraph (c)(4)(i)(B) of this section
(or its duly authorized representative). Such signature shall be
accompanied by the name and title of the person signing the notice and
the date of the signature. The notice may be signed electronically. The
person signing the notice shall certify that they have appropriate
authority to submit the notice to the mechanical licensing collective
and that all
[[Page 65925]]
information submitted as part of the notice is true, accurate, and
complete to the best of the signer's knowledge, information, and
belief, and is provided in good faith.
(iii) Where the required notice is made in connection with a notice
about a transfer of copyright ownership resulting from an effective
termination under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304 submitted under paragraph (c)(2)
of this section, and the copyright owner identified in paragraph
(c)(4)(i)(B) of this section is the terminating party and the
designated royalty payee identified in paragraph (c)(4)(i)(D) of this
section is the pre-termination copyright owner, the following
additional requirements shall apply:
(A) The notice must be signed after the effective date of
termination.
(B) The notice must set forth in plain language an acknowledgement
that the requested action alters the royalty payee from the standard
royalty payee established by Sec. 210.29(b)(4)(i).
(C) The notice must include a clear statement stipulating that
neither the notice nor the distribution of royalties by the mechanical
licensing collective in accordance with the notice prejudices the
rights of either party.
(iv) Where there is more than one copyright owner or designated
royalty payee, the required notice shall include a satisfactory
identification of any applicable ownership shares for the musical works
subject to the request. Where there is more than one copyright owner,
the notice shall be effective only as to those copyright owners whose
information is provided in accordance with paragraph (c)(4)(i)(B) of
this section and, subject to paragraph (c)(4)(iii) of this section to
the extent it applies, whom have signed and certified the notice in
accordance with paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section. Where there is
more than one designated royalty payee, the notice shall be effective
only as to those payees whose information is provided in accordance
with paragraph (c)(4)(i)(D) of this section.
(v) The references to Sec. 210.29(b)(4)(i) in paragraphs (b) and
(c)(4) of this section shall, as applicable, be read to incorporate
Sec. 210.29(j).
(5) Where multiple transfers of copyright ownership occur prior to
providing notice of the change to the mechanical licensing collective,
a compliant notice for each transfer must be provided to the mechanical
licensing collective. For example, where there is a termination
followed by an assignment of the copyright in the musical work, notice
of the termination under paragraph (c)(2) of this section and notice of
the subsequent assignment under paragraph (c)(1) of this section must
both be provided to the mechanical licensing collective.
(6) Where a transfer of copyright ownership and a request to
designate or change an alternative royalty payee are related, a
compliant notice for both the transfer and request must be provided to
the mechanical licensing collective. For example, where there is an
assignment of the copyright in the musical work that includes a
contractual right for the assignee to also be entitled to future
royalty distributions for periods predating the transfer, notice of the
assignment under paragraph (c)(1) of this section and notice of the
designation of an alternative royalty payee under paragraph (c)(4) of
this section must both be provided to the mechanical licensing
collective.
(d) Implementation of a change. Upon receiving a notice that
complies with the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section, the
mechanical licensing collective shall implement and give effect to the
identified transfer or request as follows:
(1)(i) Except as provided by paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section,
where the mechanical licensing collective receives the notice before
the first day of the first monthly reporting period to commence after
the change is effective, the mechanical licensing collective shall
implement and give effect to the change, on a prospective basis,
beginning with the first distribution of royalties for such reporting
period.
(ii) Where the notice concerns a transfer of copyright ownership
resulting from an effective termination under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304
submitted by the terminating party under paragraph (c)(2) of this
section, and the pre-termination copyright owner does not initiate a
dispute as described in paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(B) of this section, then
the mechanical licensing collective shall implement and give effect to
the change as follows: Where the mechanical licensing collective
receives the notice at least 45 calendar days before the first day of
the first monthly reporting period to commence after the change is
effective, the mechanical licensing collective shall implement and give
effect to the change, on a prospective basis, beginning with the first
distribution of royalties for such reporting period.
(2)(i) Except as provided by paragraph (d)(2)(ii) of this section,
where the mechanical licensing collective receives the notice on or
after the first day of the first monthly reporting period to commence
after the change is effective, the mechanical licensing collective
shall implement and give effect to the change, on a prospective basis,
beginning no later than the first distribution of royalties based on
the first payee snapshot taken by the mechanical licensing collective
at least 30 calendar days after the mechanical licensing collective
receives the notice. As used in the previous sentence and in paragraph
(d)(2)(ii) of this section, the term payee snapshot means the royalty
payee information in the mechanical licensing collective's records as
of a particular date that will be used for a particular monthly royalty
distribution.
(ii) Where the notice concerns a transfer of copyright ownership
resulting from an effective termination under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304
submitted by the terminating party under paragraph (c)(2) of this
section, and the pre-termination copyright owner does not initiate a
dispute as described in paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(B) of this section, then
the mechanical licensing collective shall implement and give effect to
the change as follows: Where the mechanical licensing collective
receives the notice less than 45 calendar days before the first day of
the first monthly reporting period to commence after the change is
effective, the mechanical licensing collective shall implement and give
effect to the change, on a prospective basis, beginning no later than
the first distribution of royalties based on the first payee snapshot
taken by the mechanical licensing collective at least 30 calendar days
after the pre-termination copyright owner's deadline to dispute under
paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(B) of this section.
(3) Where additional information related to the notice is required
to enable the mechanical licensing collective to implement and give
effect to the change, and such information is received after receipt of
the notice, the timing requirements described in paragraphs (d)(1) and
(2) of this section shall be based on the date that the last piece of
necessary information is received by the mechanical licensing
collective.
(4) Where the change is effective as to one or more monthly
reporting periods for which the mechanical licensing collective
distributed royalties before implementing and giving effect to the
change, the mechanical licensing collective may, but is not required
to, make a corrective royalty adjustment if the notice requests one.
(5) Where the notice concerns a transfer of copyright ownership
resulting from an effective termination under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304
submitted under paragraph (c)(2) of this section, and the notice is
accompanied by proof that the notice of termination was
[[Page 65926]]
submitted to the Copyright Office for recordation, but not that it was
recorded in the Copyright Office before the effective date of
termination, the mechanical licensing collective shall act as follows:
(i) The receipt of proof that the notice of termination was
recorded in the Copyright Office before the effective date of
termination shall be treated as a type of additional information under
paragraph (d)(3) of this section. The mechanical licensing collective
shall not implement or give effect to any such termination unless and
until such proof is received.
(ii) Notwithstanding paragraph (d)(5)(i) of this section, the
mechanical licensing collective shall hold applicable accrued royalties
and accrued interest pending receipt of proof that the notice of
termination was recorded in the Copyright Office before the effective
date of termination as follows:
(A) The mechanical licensing collective shall commence holding such
amount no later than the implementation deadline that would apply under
paragraphs (d)(1) through (3) of this section, as applicable, if proof
of recordation had been provided with the notice.
(B) After proof that the notice of termination was recorded in the
Copyright Office before the effective date of termination is received,
the mechanical licensing collective shall implement and give effect to
the termination as provided by paragraphs (d)(1) through (4) and (5)(i)
of this section, as applicable.
(C) Where the Copyright Office refuses to record the notice of
termination or the notice of termination is recorded on or after the
effective date of termination, such that the termination is not
effective, the mechanical licensing collective shall release the held
funds to the pre-termination copyright owner.
(D) If proof that the notice of termination was recorded in the
Copyright Office before the effective date of termination is not
received by the mechanical licensing collective within 6 months after
the mechanical licensing collective commences holding applicable
accrued royalties and accrued interest, the mechanical licensing
collective shall contact the Copyright Office to confirm the status of
the relevant recordation submission. If the submission remains pending
at that time, the mechanical licensing collective shall continue to
check its status monthly. Upon confirmation from the Copyright Office
regarding whether the applicable notice of termination has been timely
recorded or not, the mechanical licensing collective shall act in
accordance with paragraph (d)(5)(ii)(B) or (C) of this section, as the
case may be, except that no further proof shall be required to be
submitted to the mechanical licensing collective for it to act.
(6) No action or inaction by the mechanical licensing collective
with respect to implementing and giving effect to a payee change shall
affect any party's right to royalties pursuant to such change or such
party's ability to collect such royalties from someone other than the
mechanical licensing collective if such royalties were not distributed
to such party by the mechanical licensing collective.
(e) Termination disputes. The following requirements shall apply to
any dispute initiated with the mechanical licensing collective
regarding a termination under 17 U.S.C. 203 or 304:
(1) Such a dispute must be with regard to the validity of the
termination or the application of the derivative works exception to a
particular voluntary license or its underlying grant of authority.
(2) Only the pre-termination copyright owner (or its
representative) may initiate such a dispute.
(3) If the pre-termination copyright owner (or its representative)
initiates such a dispute and delivers the information required to
substantiate the dispute to the mechanical licensing collective under
paragraph (e)(4) of this section, the mechanical licensing collective
shall hold applicable accrued royalties and accrued interest pending
resolution of the dispute.
(4) The minimum information that must be delivered to the
mechanical licensing collective to substantiate a termination-related
dispute shall consist of the following:
(i) A cognizable explanation of the grounds for the dispute,
articulated with specificity.
(ii) Documentation sufficient to support the grounds for the
dispute, which shall consist of the following:
(A) A true, correct, complete, and legible copy of each grant in
dispute.
(B) A true, correct, complete, and legible copy of any other
agreement or document necessary to support the grounds for the dispute.
(C) Such other documentation or substantiating information as the
mechanical licensing collective may reasonably require pursuant to a
dispute policy adopted under 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(K).
(iii) A satisfactory identification of each musical work in
dispute.
(iv) A certification that the submitter has appropriate authority
to initiate the dispute with the mechanical licensing collective and
that all information submitted in connection with the dispute is true,
accurate, and complete to the best of the submitter's knowledge,
information, and belief, and is provided in good faith.
(v) If the dispute concerns the application of the derivative works
exception to a particular voluntary license or its underlying grant of
authority:
(A) A true, correct, complete, and legible copy of each voluntary
license at issue.
(B) A satisfactory identification of each relevant sound recording
that constitutes a derivative work within the meaning of 17 U.S.C. 101
that was prepared pursuant to appropriate authority.
(C) The date of preparation for each such sound recording, which
must be before the effective date of termination.
(5) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary that may be contained
in Sec. 210.34, any and all documentation provided to the mechanical
licensing collective pursuant to paragraph (e)(4) of this section shall
be disclosed to all parties to the dispute. If a party to the dispute
is not a party or successor to a party to an otherwise confidential
document, such disclosure shall be subject to an appropriate written
confidentiality agreement.
(f) Resolution of a dispute and release of disputed funds. All
disputed funds held by the mechanical licensing collective pursuant to
a dispute among purported copyright owners or royalty payees must be
subject to active dispute resolution by the relevant parties. Such
funds shall no longer be considered to be in dispute and the mechanical
licensing collective shall release such funds under the following
circumstances, which shall constitute the resolution of the dispute as
to such funds:
(1) Where the mechanical licensing collective is directed to do so
by mutual agreement of the relevant parties. Funds released under this
paragraph (f)(1) shall be paid in accordance with such agreement,
subject to the relevant requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this
section if the agreement changes the royalty payee, except that,
notwithstanding paragraph (d)(4) of this section, payments of released
funds shall be made for applicable monthly reporting periods predating
the mechanical licensing collective's implementation of the change.
(2) Where the mechanical licensing collective is directed to do so
by order
[[Page 65927]]
of an adjudicative body with appropriate authority. Funds released
under this paragraph (f)(2) shall be paid in accordance with such
order.
(3) Except where a legal proceeding is commenced, where, during any
6-month period starting one year after the disputed funds are placed on
hold, the mechanical licensing collective does not receive a joint
notice signed by all relevant parties that they are continuing to
engage in active dispute resolution. Such notice must comply with any
reasonable formatting and submission requirements established by the
mechanical licensing collective and made publicly available on its
website. Funds released under this paragraph (f)(3) shall be paid to
the party who would have received such funds if the funds were not
placed on hold pursuant to a dispute.
0
6. Amend Sec. 210.34 as follows:
0
a. Add paragraph (c)(6).
0
b. In paragraph (c)(5), remove ``to paragraph (c)(4) of'' and add in
its place ``to paragraph (c)(4) or (c)(6) of''.
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 210.34 Treatment of confidential and other sensitive
information.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(6)(i) Notwithstanding paragraph (c)(1) of this section, where the
mechanical licensing collective has placed any accrued royalties,
accrued interest, or other monies on hold with respect to particular
reported usage or a particular work (or share thereof) (e.g., where
there is an ownership dispute or a legal proceeding has been
commenced), the mechanical licensing collective shall disclose the
amount being held and reason for the hold to any individual or entity
with a bona fide legal claim to such funds or a portion thereof.
(ii) Such disclosure shall be made to each such claimant no later
than 10 business days after placing the amount on hold, where the
mechanical licensing collective is aware of the claimant's claim at
that time. Where the mechanical licensing collective is not aware of a
claimant's claim when the amount is placed on hold, such disclosure
shall be made to that claimant no later than 10 business days after
becoming aware. For any amounts placed on hold before [EFFECTIVE DATE
OF FINAL RULE], where the mechanical licensing collective is aware of a
claimant's claim at that time, such disclosure shall be made to such
claimant no later than [DATE 10 BUSINESS DAYS AFTER EFFECTIVE DATE OF
FINAL RULE]. Where the mechanical licensing collective is not aware of
a claimant's claim as of [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE], such
disclosure shall be made to that claimant no later than 10 business
days after becoming aware.
(iii) Disclosure of the amount being held with respect to
particular reported usage or a particular work (or share thereof) shall
be accompanied by a statement that complies with the requirements of
Sec. 210.29 as if such held amount were to instead be distributed
pursuant to Sec. 210.29. Disclosure of the reason for the hold shall
be made with specificity. The mechanical licensing collective shall
provide all claimants with monthly updates concerning the status of the
hold and the amount being held. The mechanical licensing collective
shall respond to any inquiry from a claimant about the hold within 10
business days and shall provide any reasonably requested additional
information about the hold within a reasonable period of time
commensurate with the request.
* * * * *
Dated: September 21, 2023.
Suzanne V. Wilson,
General Counsel and Associate Register of Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 2023-20922 Filed 9-25-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410-30-P