-

WWE and Martha Hart settle lawsuit out of court

WWE and Martha Hart have finally ended their legal war out of court with an agreement reached to settle the lawsuit that Martha brought forward against WWE. Terms of the settlement were not announced. The settlement was announced yesterday by Martha Hart, WWE Chairman and CEO Vince McMahon and his wife and former CEO Linda McMahon according to the Associated Press.

The lawsuit was regarding WWE’s use of Owen Hart’s likeness and image in the Hart Family DVD that was released years ago.

In April 2012, a federal dismissed part of the lawsuit which involved both McMahons. Hart filed the lawsuit against WWE and the McMahon family when Linda was running for her first Senate seat in 2010.

The judge however allowed part of the lawsuit to stick as Martha was still after WWE for unpaid royalties from the DVD. The majority of the lawsuit had been dropped and even most claims against the company were dismissed, leaving only the unpaid royalties part.

WWE attorney Jerry McDevitt described the lawsuit at the time as a political stunt in an attempt to sabotage Linda McMahon’s now failed Senate run.

Colin Vassallo
Colin Vassallohttps://www.wrestling-online.com
Colin Vassallo has been editor of Wrestling-Online since 1996. He is born and raised in Malta, follows professional wrestling and MMA, loves to travel, and is a big Apple fan!

Stories you might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you

LATEST NEWS

WWE on A&E block (2024) ratings for week 5

Week five of WWE on A&E featured WWE Rivals: Hardy Boyz vs Dudley Boyz vs Edge & Christian and...

Becky Lynch reveals she’s in her final two months of her WWE contract

Appearing on the MMA Hour with Ariel Helwani to promote her new book, Becky Lynch revealed that she is...

Dynamite in Quebec tonight with Strickland and Ospreay in action

Dynamite remains in Canada for its second week as the show will be coming to you live from the...

Discover more from Wrestling-Online.com

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading