Estate of George Worrell, Jr. v. Thang, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 2026
Docket25-1863
StatusPublished

This text of Estate of George Worrell, Jr. v. Thang, Inc. (Estate of George Worrell, Jr. v. Thang, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of George Worrell, Jr. v. Thang, Inc., (6th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 26a0154p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ ESTATE OF GEORGE BERNARD WORRELL, JR., │ Plaintiff-Appellant, │ > No. 25-1863 │ v. │ │ THANG, INC.; GEORGE CLINTON, │ Defendants-Appellees. │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Flint. No. 4:22-cv-11009—F. Kay Behm, District Judge.

Argued: April 22, 2026

Decided and Filed: May 27, 2026

Before: BOGGS, BATCHELDER, and MOORE, Circuit Judges.

_________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: Richard S. Busch, KING & BALLOW, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellant. Erik W. Scharf, THE SCHARF APPELLATE GROUP, Miami, Florida, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Daniel D. Quick, DICKINSON WRIGHT PLLC, Troy, Michigan, Jonathan B. Koch, DICKINSON WRIGHT PLLC, Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellant. Erik W. Scharf, THE SCHARF APPELLATE GROUP, Miami, Florida, James P. Allen, Sr., Peter E. Doyle, SCHENK & BRUETSCH PLC, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellees. _________________

OPINION _________________

KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. The year was 1997, and George Bernard (“Bernie”) Worrell, Jr., stood on stage at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Rock & Roll Hall of No. 25-1863 Est. of Geo. Worrell, Jr. v. Thang, Inc. et al. Page 2

Fame, Parliament-Funkadelic’s Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Acceptance Speech | 1997 Induction, YouTube (June 15, 2020), https://youtu.be/EmOmNz5Ak-g. He was there for his induction as part of the pioneering funk group Parliament-Funkadelic (“P-Funk”). Although Worrell left P- Funk in the early 1980s, he played a central role in its rise, working as a composer, arranger, “keyboardist of astonishing ability,” and “one of a writing team of three . . . behind ‘hit after hit in the heyday of P-Funk.’” R. 133-3 (Exner Report ¶ 24) (Page ID #3568) (citation modified). Smiling to the side during Worrell’s remarks was the band’s charismatic leader, George Clinton, decked out in a gilt robe and frizzy white wig, sunglasses resting on his forehead.

Beneath the surface of this celebration, which honored one of the 1970s’ most groundbreaking and enduringly influential musical acts, lay a long-running and unresolved dispute. Clinton’s and Worrell’s musical synergies never translated into a smooth or simple legal relationship. Quite the opposite. Their decade of collaboration is littered with informal and contested agreements, including a purported 1976 contract (“1976 Agreement”) granting Thang, Inc. (Clinton’s company) full ownership of sound recordings that Worrell worked on, in exchange for royalties. On top of that, Clinton and Thang were allegedly not in the habit of paying Worrell, under the 1976 Agreement or otherwise. As Worrell’s wife Judie put it: Clinton “was busy hauling in the funky dollar bills and NOT sharing with those who made the MUSIC possible.” R. 134-12 (Judie Worrell Blog at 5) (Page ID #4199).

Worrell died in 2016. In 2019, his estate (the “Estate,” which is the plaintiff here) sued Thang in New York state court for breach of contract, a claim that Thang successfully defended on the ground that Worrell lacked a countersigned copy of the 1976 Agreement. In 2022, the Estate changed tack and sued in federal court, seeking a declaration of its joint ownership of recordings Worrell created with P-Funk and, in turn, an accounting of royalties due. Clinton and Thang moved for summary judgment, arguing that the statute of limitations on the Estate’s copyright claims had long since run. The district court agreed and entered judgment in the defendants’ favor.

This is not a contract case, as the Estate’s contract claims under the 1976 Agreement were decided in the New York court. Notwithstanding the 1976 Agreement’s invalidity, which is now res judicata, the Agreement remains the focus of the Estate’s statute-of-limitations No. 25-1863 Est. of Geo. Worrell, Jr. v. Thang, Inc. et al. Page 3

argument. Worrell, the Estate argues, justifiably understood that the Agreement, not federal copyright law, governed his recordings with P-Funk. Accordingly, the Estate insists, Worrell’s ownership rights under copyright law were not plainly and expressly repudiated until 2020 when Clinton and Thang denied the Agreement’s validity, at which point the copyright-ownership claims accrued. We agree with the Estate that genuine disputes of material fact preclude judgment as a matter of law. Viewing the case’s highly unusual facts in the light most favorable to the Estate, part of Worrell’s copyright-ownership claim is timely. We therefore REVERSE the district court’s judgment and REMAND for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

Worrell, “[a] classical-music child prodigy who attended the New England Conservatory of Music and Juilliard,” began his “journey to the funk . . . by hanging around George Clinton’s Newark, New Jersey barbershop.” R. 133-3 (Exner Report ¶ 33) (Page ID #3570). Worrell worked with Clinton and his bands between 1969 and 1981. R. 133 (Pl.’s Mot. for Summ. J. ¶ 2) (Page ID #3456); R. 145 (Defs.’ Resp. to Pl.’s Mot. ¶ 2) (Page ID #4591). Worrell’s legal relationship with Clinton and P-Funk was informal at the outset. Clinton recalled, for instance, an oral agreement according to which Worrell played at a rate of $200 per week. R. 133-5 (Clinton Dep. at 6–7) (Page ID #3613–14).1

There is little question as to Worrell’s creativity or the central role his efforts had in P- Funk’s recordings. His work spans hundreds of songs in the P-Funk discography between 1970 and 1981. See R. 133-19 (App’x of Sound Recordings) (Page ID #3769–77); R. 145-2 (Works by Year) (Page ID #4828–41). According to “The Authorized P-Funk Song Reference,” there is “clear evidence of [Worrell’s] involvement on all of the band’s most commercially successful tracks.” R. 133-3 (Exner Report ¶ 46) (Page ID #3572). And although Clinton’s top-down vision animated much of the group’s work, it was Worrell who “provide[d] [P-Funk] with the structural foundation,” creating a “sonic stew” and “radically charting the course of emerging keyboard technology during the golden age of analog synthesis.” R. 133-5 (Clinton Dep. at 98–

1Our recitation of the facts views the evidence, as we must, in the light most favorable to the Estate and draws reasonable inferences in the Estate’s favor. See Boyd v. N. Biomedical Rsch., Inc., 165 F.4th 424, 431 (6th Cir. 2026). No. 25-1863 Est. of Geo. Worrell, Jr. v. Thang, Inc. et al. Page 4

99) (Page ID #3631–32). Clinton viewed Worrell as “a founding member and Musical Director” of P-Funk. R. 133-14 (Clinton Website at 2) (Page ID #3702). In this capacity he both worked as a “musical arranger” and had a “significant role in the post-recording aspects of creating the final sound recording[s].” R. 133-2 (Kohn Report ¶¶ 78, 91) (Page ID #3518, 3524) (emphasis omitted).

In 1976, Thang and Clinton presented Worrell with a proposed contract—the 1976 Agreement—with the aim of layering a more formal legal structure atop the parties’ artistic relationship. See R. 133-7 (Judie Worrell Dep. at 16, 48–49) (Page ID #3658–60); R. 133-6 (1976 Agreement) (Page ID #3643–3655).2 The 1976 Agreement’s effective date was January 1, 1976, it would run for a one-year term, and Thang had the option to extend for up to two additional one-year terms. Id. ¶¶ 1(a), 16 (Page ID #3643, 3655). The 1976 Agreement required Worrell to render his services as a recording artist “exclusively to [Thang]” during its term and stated that “[a]ll masters recorded hereunder . . . , together with the performances embodied thereon, shall be entirely and forever the property of [Thang].” Id. ¶¶ 1, 3 (Page ID #3643–44).

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