The second case was carried out in the federal court in Manhattan
English singer Ed Sheeran took another win as he beat the second lawsuit filed against him that claims he plagiarized Marvin Gaye's Let's Get It On. The copyright lawsuit stated that there were too many similarities between the song and Sheeran’s Thinking Out Loud.
The second case was carried out in the federal court in
Manhattan, with the case being presided over by District Judge Louis
Stanton. He dismissed the case, which was brought by Structured Asset Sales
LLC, saying that the sections of Let’s Get It On that Sheeran allegedly
plagiarized are far too common to be copyrighted.
The singer won
another case over the two songs in this same court previously which was
brought on by the heirs of co-writers that worked with Gaye on the song.
After the win, Sheeran stated:
“I'm just a guy with a guitar who
loves writing music for people to enjoy. I am not and will not allow myself
to be a piggy bank.”
He continued, adding: “I'm obviously very happy with the
outcome of the case and it looks like I'm not having to retire from my day
job after all. At the same time I'm unbelievably frustrated that baseless
claims like this are allowed to go to court at all. We've spent the last
eight years talking about two songs with dramatically different lyrics,
melodies and four chords which are also different and used by songwriters
every day all over the world.”