Q: If my music publisher lied to me about the contract status, can I use it as evidence?
I have signed a digitially pre-signed music pubkishing deal with a UK publisher. The contract termination clause neither includes nor excludes mutual agreement, but says that it requires written notice. I asked the publisher to terminate contract, but he told me in an email message that I am free to go without one and the contract isn't valid yet since we haven't worked on any song yet. If what he is saying is a lie, and the contract is actually valid, can I use the email as evidence against him?
A:
Q. "the contract isn't valid yet since we haven't worked on any song yet"
A. Does the contract specifically state this?
Jack
A: Assuming the contract is construed under the laws of New York (unclear from your question and this is with a foreign entity), whatever the other party (the publisher) is telling you about the contract is mostly irrelevant. What matters are the terms of the contract not how the other side is interpreting it. You would either have to review the contract to determine what your rights and obligations are or have an attorney review it for you.
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