British singer Edward Christopher Sheeran AKA Ed Sheeran poses on the red carpet prior the 23rd NRJ Music Awards ceremony at the Palais des Festivals British singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran on Wednesday won his copyright trial at London’s High Court after a judge ruled that his hit song “Shape of You” did not lift musical phrases from another track. Judge Antony Zacaroli said that Sheeran “neither deliberately nor subconsciously” copied a phrase from British grime track, “Oh Why”, when writing the worldwide smash hit. “Shape of You”, released in 2017, remains the most-streamed song ever on Spotify, with more than three billion streams. It won Sheeran, 31, a Grammy for Best Pop Solo Performance. He, along with several others, has a writing credit on the track. But two other songwriters, Sami Chokri and Ross O’Donoghue, alleged that the song had musical similarities to one they wrote called “Oh Why”, performed under Chokri’s stage-name Sami Switch. Sheeran said he was “obviously happy” with the result, but added that “baseless” copyright claims were “damaging to the songwriting industry.” Judge Zacaroli ruled on Wednesday that “there are obvious similarities” between hooks in the two songs, but that there were also “important differences”. While both hooks drew from the minor pentatonic scale, “there are countless songs in the pop, rock, folk and blues genres where the melody is drawn exclusively” from the same scale, he said. Zacaroli also said that the two phrases “play very different roles in their respective songs.” The claimants hook “is the central part of the song” whereas in Sheeran’s hit, it is “something catchy to fill the bar before each repeated phrase ‘I’m in love with your body’.” ‘SHOCKED’ — Sheeran reacted to the ruling on Instagram, saying: “Whilst we’re obviously happy with the result, I feel like claims like this are way too common now… even if there’s no base for the claim. “It’s really damaging to the songwriting industry. There’s only so many notes and very few chords used in pop music – coincidence is bound to happen,” he added. “This really does have to end.” Sheeran and the song’s other credited writers launched legal action against Chokri and McDaid in 2018, asking the High Court to declare they had not infringed Chokri and O’Donoghue’s copyright. This prompted the pair to launch their own claim for “copyright infringements, damages and an account of the profit in relation to the alleged infringement”. Lawyer Andrew Sutcliffe, representing the aggrieved songwriters, told the judge Sheeran was a “magpie” who “borrows ideas” and will sometimes not acknowledge them. Chokri told the trial he was “shocked” when he first heard “Shape of You” on the radio. Sheeran’s lawyers told the High Court that he and his co-writers have no memory of having heard the song “Oh Why” at the time. The PRS for Music, which pays out royalties for the use of music, has temporarily halted royalty payments. Attendees at the high-profile trial inadvertently heard a snippet for free when an unreleased track was accidentally aired in court. “That’s a song I wrote last January,” a confused Sheeran told his lawyers as the clip of the hitherto unplayed song was heard in London’s High Court. “How have you got that?” One of the lawyers said the incident happened “by mistake” through the use of an iTunes account on the computer of Steven McCutcheon, one of the co-writers of “Shape of You”.