TVS RECORDS v. Island Def Jam Music Group

257 F. Supp. 2d 737, 2003 WL 23330991, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6853
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 23, 2003
Docket02 CIV. 6644
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 257 F. Supp. 2d 737 (TVS RECORDS v. Island Def Jam Music Group) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TVS RECORDS v. Island Def Jam Music Group, 257 F. Supp. 2d 737, 2003 WL 23330991, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6853 (S.D.N.Y. 2003).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

MARRERO, District Judge.

In anticipation of the damages phase of the trial of this matter, plaintiffs TVT Records and TVT Music, Inc. (collectively “TVT”) have filed a Motion In Limine To Exclude From Evidence Reference To © IDJ’s And Cohen’s Purported Consent To The CMC Album And (ii) Gotti’s Purported Delivery of CMC Tracks To TVT, dated *739 April 16, 2003, and a Motion In Limine’ To Permit TVT To Submit Evidence Of Its Legal Expenses To The Jury As Part Of Its Punitive Damages Case, dated April 16, 2003. Defendants The Island Def Jam Music Group (“IDJ”) and Lyor Cohen (“Cohen”) (collectively “Defendants”) have filed a Notice Of Motion In Limine To Exclude Evidence Of Net Worth, dated April 16, 2003 and a Notice Of Motion In Limine To Preclude Certain Evidence And/Or Argument Related to Punitive Damages, Consistent With Recent United States Supreme Court Precedent, dated April 16, 2003. 1 The Court has reviewed the parties’ submissions in support of and in opposition to these various motions. The following discussion will address the issues raised in turn. For the reasons discussed below, the motions are GRANTED IN PART, DENIED IN PART.

I. DISCUSSION

A. THE MARCH 7, 2003 SIDE LETTER AGREEMENT AND CORRESPONDING IDJ APPROVAL MEMORANDUM

TVT seeks to preclude references to and admission of the version of the Side Letter Agreement signed and delivered to TVT on March 7, 2003. For the reasons articulated on the record on March 10, 2003 and in the Court’s Decision and Order dated March 21, 2003 (the “March 21 Decision”), 2 the signing and delivery on March 7, 2003 of the Side Letter Agreement is of dubious legal effect given the history of the parties’ dealings up to that point, thus undermining the probative value and, indeed, the reliability, of the representations expressed. At best, as already stated more fully in the March 21 Decision, that document, when transmitted to TVT on March 7, 2003, represents, perhaps, an offer to consent or a purported grant of consent to the Side Letter Agreement, a contract that IDJ had formally repudiated on August 14, 2002. Nonetheless, as explained, such an offer or putative consent being expressed in the form of a signed (yet legally ineffective) acceptance of the Side Letter Agreement — a matter at the very heart of this litigation — was deemed by the Court to be more prejudicial than probative. The Court concluded, for various expressed reasons, that such a result would obtain insofar as the purported consent likely would have misled the jury into overvaluing IDJ’s offer, given its timing and the form in which it was conveyed. The Court was concerned that the jury could improperly be led to believe that TVT had thereby received the benefit of the contract it bargained for and, as a result, could not have been measurably injured. Such evidence was excluded from the liability phase of this trial on this basis.

TVT likewise seeks to exclude that evidence now from the damages phase. The Court finds that the same legal barriers and prejudicial risks previously identified on the record on March 10, 2003 and in the March 21 Decision require the continued exclusion of IDJ’s attempted consent to the Side Letter Agreement during the damages phase. Seeing IDJ’s purported consent expressed in the form of a signed (yet legally ineffective) acceptance of the Side Letter Agreement is likely to mislead the jury. The jury is no less likely at this stage to overvalue the import of a document that has no legal effect, and to ignore other practical considerations regarding the likelihood of the CMC Album project’s completion as well as less tangi *740 ble cooperation by IDJ necessary to the process of creating and exploiting the CMC Album, and thus to conclude that TVT is as free now to exploit a CMC Album as it would have been in the absence of any of the wrongs the jury already concluded were committed by IDJ and/or Cohen. Such a misapprehension would result in the jury undervaluing the extent of the damages to which, properly valued, TVT may be entitled, whatever that may be. Or, indeed, the jury may conclude, as a consequence of relying on that legally ineffective document, that TVT has not been harmed at all. As before, because it is not likely that a curative instruction could properly account for and explain the significance of such evidence, the prejudice to TVT cannot be overcome absent exclusion of the document and testimony related to it.

On March 8, 2003, a Memorandum dated March 3, 2003 (the “Approval Memo”) was delivered to TVT that, on its face, indicated IDJ’s internal approvals for IDJ’s participation in the CMC Album project via the Side Letter Agreement. Because this five-sentence memorandum (plus attachments) references not only Irv Gotti’s (“Gotti”) February 26, 2003 delivery to TVT of certain materials for the CMC Album 3 but also, more importantly, IDJ’s entering into the March 7, 2003 version of the Side Letter Agreement, which is attached and incorporated to the Approval Memo, this material cannot be considered by the jury independently. For, even if the attachments were removed and references to it redacted, the necessary import of an approval memorandum on a given topic, in light of past testimony on the matter, is that the Side Letter Agreement had been or was soon to be signed by IDJ. In this way, the Approval Memo imports the same concerns identified above regarding the March 7, 2003 version of the Side Letter Agreement executed by IDJ. Additionally, the Approval Memo inaccurately characterizes the material delivered to TVT on February 26, 2003 as “master recordings,” when, in fact, Gotti himself testified during the Lability phase that these materials were so-called “roughs.” Introduction of this document would require clarification of this discrepancy, thereby drawing the jury into yet another distracting sidetrack in regards to this evidence. The Approval Memo also characterizes Gotti’s intent by referencing and presumably reaffirming contractual obligations to TVT, thus potentially implying to a lay juror that the Heads of Agreement between TVT and Gotti and Ja Rule (the “Artists”) had not been breached and that, accordingly, TVT has not been damaged. For these various reasons, the Approval Memo must also be precluded from evidence as more prejudicial than probative.

B. GOTTI’S FEBRUARY 26, 2003 DELIVERY OF CMC “ROUGHS” AND SURROUNDING CORRESPONDENCE

TVT also seeks to preclude as more prejudicial than probative evidence of Got-ti’s delivery to TVT of so-called “rough” tracks for the CMC Album on February 26, 2003. This request is denied. Gotti’s attempted delivery itself would not create a misimpression of a legally binding obligation arising out of the March 7, 2003 version of the Side Letter Agreement and, accordingly, is not so likely to mislead the jury into believing that TVT’s position has not been impaired by the Defendants’ actions.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Russo v. National Grid, USA.
E.D. New York, 2025
Marcoux v. Farm Service and Supplies, Inc.
290 F. Supp. 2d 457 (S.D. New York, 2003)
TVT Records v. Island Def Jam Music Group
279 F. Supp. 2d 366 (S.D. New York, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 F. Supp. 2d 737, 2003 WL 23330991, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tvs-records-v-island-def-jam-music-group-nysd-2003.