Experience Hendrix, L.L.C., the Hendrix family music company which owns
and administers the Jimi Hendrix music rights, recently obtained a
stipulated court order of almost $900,000 against music entrepreneur
Ed Chalpin. The payment to Experience Hendrix was the culmination of
a 2006 lawsuit commenced in New York against Chalpin and two of his
related companies. During the course of this litigation Federal District
Court Judge Lewis A. Kaplan, held Chalpin in contempt of court.
Seattle, WA -- April 13, 2007 -- Experience Hendrix, L.L.C., the
Hendrix family music company which owns and administers the Jimi Hendrix
music rights, recently obtained a stipulated court order of almost
$900,000 against music entrepreneur Ed Chalpin. The payment to Experience
Hendrix was the culmination of a 2006 lawsuit commenced in New York
against Chalpin and two of his related companies. During the course
of this litigation Federal District Court Judge Lewis A. Kaplan, who
described Chalpin as "a singularly uncredible witness," held Chalpin in
contempt of court.
The case dates back to a 2001 lawsuit in the UK High Court by Experience
Hendrix against Chalpin and his PPX Enterprises to enforce a 1973 consent
decree, which limited Chalpin's rights in Hendrix recordings to 33 masters
largely recorded in 1965 when Hendrix was an unknown backing guitarist
for the R&B combo Curtis Knight & The Squires. In 2003 the UK court
ruled in favor of Experience Hendrix, requiring that Chalpin and PPX
make royalty payments for the PPX/Curtis Knight master recordings to
Experience Hendrix, as successor to the Jimi Hendrix estate. That case
resulted in an award of œ304,173 to Experience Hendrix that was not paid.
Later in 2003, a New York State Court upheld the UK court's decision and
held that Chalpin owed Experience Hendrix $725,868, the UK judgment
expressed as a dollar amount. For several years Chalpin ignored both
judgments and made no payment.
In 2006, Chalpin offered the 33 Hendrix masters at an auction held by
the company Ocean Tomo, through a different PPX company that was not
subject to the prior judgments. Experience Hendrix sued him for
fraudulent conveyance, since judgment debtor PPX Enterprises had
originally owned the 33 masters. Judge Kaplan immediately enjoined
Chalpin from disposing of these assets. The judge noted, "Mr. Chalpin was
engaged in a game of three card Monte with his creditors. He was moving
the pea from one walnut shell to another." In February 2007, Chalpin
was held in contempt of court by Judge Kaplan, and shortly thereafter
Chalpin finally agreed to a litigation settlement under which he paid
the full amount of the judgment debt as well an amount close to the
total accrued interest since 2003.
That is like saying because you decided to hold an auction on the steps
of the courthouse in which Mr. Chalpin is going to sell the George
Washington Bridge, the lack of bids would mean it has no value. The
lack of bids would mean that somebody understands that the Port
Authority owns it.
Chalpin's attorney had complained that Experience Hendrix' actions and
statements had devalued the Hendrix properties that he offered for sale,
and that those actions had scared off prospective bidders. The Judge
responded by stating, "That is like saying because you decided to hold
an auction on the steps of the courthouse in which Mr. Chalpin is going
to sell the George Washington Bridge, the lack of bids would mean it has
no value. The lack of bids would mean that somebody understands that the
Port Authority owns it."
The two court cases referenced in this release include:
Stipulated order of Settlement filed March 20, 2007
U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York
Judge Leon A. Kaplan
Case 1:06 - CV09926 LAK
Case HQ0102014 filed June 28, 2001
High Court of Justice, Queen's Bench Division, London.
Experience Hendrix, L.L.C. v. PPX Enterprises Inc. and Edward Chalpin
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