Also, Michael Jackson does not actually own the songs themselves. He owns the publishing rights, which basically gives him no control over the songs, but entitles him to share in the profits.
Thanks for filling me in about Sony's growing ownership against Jackson's borrowing, because I'm not keeping up with that like I should.
For this next portion, I did in fact break one of my own Rules of Engagement and turn to some of my references for clarification. Taken from Cecil Adams...
"The last reason not to feel sorry for Paul is that if he got skunked it's his own fault. In the 60s, to avoid confiscatory British taxes, he and Lennon turned their publishing rights over to newly-organized Northern Songs, a publicly-held company in which they owned sizable but apparently not controlling blocks of stock. In 1969 music mogul Lew Grade launched a takeover bid for Northern Songs in which he offered seven times the stock's original offering price. Lennon and McCartney, feuding as usual, were unable to organize an effective defense and the company was sold out from under them. This made them even more fabulously wealthy than they already were, since their stock was now worth seven times as much. However, they were still pissed on account of, you know, the principle of the thing. The Teeming Millions can surely sympathize."