elusive moonwalker
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While the Agreement may establish the Los Angeles County Superior Court as the only venue that has the authority to resolve a dispute about which arbitrator to select when there is a continued conflict between the parties and their surrogates on that point, the plain language of the Arbitration Provision does not support a finding that the parties intended that court to be the only forum for other disputes. The parties’ instant disagreement is not about who should serve as the arbitrator, but rather whether arbitration should be compelled in the first instance. Therefore, the Court would deny Plaintiff’s Motion to Remand.
Because the Court has not yet decided whether it or the arbitrator will decide arbitrability, it will hold off from addressing the arguments in regards to the arbitrability issue.
HBO did not win anything, they have 7 more days to come up with a new defense.. They are saying HBO won only because they bought more time.
PS. I received a lead time up to 30 days to get the May 23rd transcripts. It does have a price tag to it, not nearly as high as if I were to rush deliver it and get it before the MJ Estate gets it... Is it your opinion I should just start aiming and planning for the next hearing on June 24th since we already know the ruling is to basicall give HBO a re-do?
June 4th, HBO has to submit their new defense.. By June 17th, The MJ Estate has to respond.. June 24th they go back to court..
Meaning we could get big news on the 10 year anniversary... June 25th! How is this not intentional?
All Judge Wu has decided is that he is not remanding to state court and that he, and not an arbitrator, will decide whether the dispute is subject to arbitration. Sometimes parties agree to arbitrate and ALSO agree to let the arbitrator decide if their dispute can be arbitrated
Unlike question of who decides arbitrability, question of whether a dispute is arbitrable favors arbitration. Supreme Court says that if the agreement is ambiguous at all, the courts must interpret in favor of arbitrability .
Its (HBO's) arguments that the Estate's case is "frivolous" or whatever are irrelevant to that issue. HBO must show that the parties NEVER agreed to arbitrate. Given the contract, I don't see how HBO can show that.
I think you are being very optimistic. I understand that the decision on 24th June will be just about whether matter is 'arbitrable'. After that, they will have to decide what the results of the arbitration will be....so one more likely court date at a minimum.
(Alternatively, if the judge decides it is not 'arbitrable', I don't know if the Estate can appeal..that would be a longer process again).
A person with legal knowlege has tweeted:
Also:
And:
(With many thanks to this very helpful fan / legal advisor on Twitter)
myosotis;4259032 said:"
HBO must show that the parties NEVER agreed to arbitrate. Given the contract, I don't see how HBO can show that. "
(With many thanks to this very helpful fan / legal advisor on Twitter)
The Supreme Court has repeatedly and recently reminded courts that they “should not assume that the parties agreed to arbitrate arbitrability unless there is clear and unmistakable evidence that they did so.”
The court documents seem to be making a thing of the proof coming the other way. Is there an impasse with this situation due to current AAA rules?
I don't think so. In this case the Court will decide arbitrability, not the arbitrator.
Footnote: WHY is every court case relating to MJ so COMPLICATED for we poor non-legal fans? Can't we (and MJ) catch a break?
All power to Mr Steinsapir on this one. Hope he 'does the biz' with his and the Estate legal team's next 7 pages of allowable submission. I doubt I'll understand a word of it.....
.Because the Court has not yet decided whether it or the arbitrator will decide arbitrability
I'm confused because the court doc says
.
I've never looked at anyone else's court cases before so I don't know if it's usually this complicated lol
The Court adopts its tentative ruling (provided to the parties at the start of the hearing on the motion to remand...) 1. The motion to remand is denied and 2. The motion to compel arbitration is denied insofar as it contends that the gateway issue of arbitrability is to be decided by the arbitrator rather than the Court, pursuant to clear and unmistakable evidence. As to the arbitrability issue itself, the court will allow supplemental briefing as follows....
... The Court did NOT say whether the dispute is or is not arbitrable. Rather, he said he will decide that on June 24 after some further arguments. Note that on this argument, the Estate is at an advantage ...
myosotis;4259069 said:Maybe confusion but more likely malice. Anything for an anti-MJ headline. (Truly, they are the Enemy). I wish some of these journalists bothered to READ. The WHOLE POINT of the arbitration claim was that it Could be held in OPEN COURT.:
‘Leaving Neverland’ case to remain open as judge rejects Jackson estate’s arbitration request
HBO faced legal action ahead of the film's premiere earlier this year
HBO has won the first round of Michael Jackson‘s estate’s Leaving Neverland lawsuit, it has been reported.
Directed by Dan Reed, the documentary focuses on testimony by Wade Robson, 36, and James Safechuck, 41, who both claim that Jackson sexually abused them when they were children.
Ahead of its premiere in March, Jackson’s estate sued the HBO network while protesting the late star’s innocence. Claiming that his accusers are seeking financial gain, the complaint to Los Angeles Superior Court read: “Michael is an easy target because he is not here to defend himself, and the law does not protect the deceased from defamation, no matter how extreme the lies are.”
Now, it has been reported that the case will remain open in court. Following a hearing last week, a federal judge has rejected a motion from Jackson’s estate to throw the case to an arbitrator.
The plaintiff alleges that Leaving Neverland constitutes a breach of a non-disparagement clause in an agreement that is 27 years old. It’s said that the deal provided the network with rights to air a Michael Jackson live show around the time of his 1991 album, ‘Dangerous’
The estate doesn’t want to litigate in open court, but instead invoked an arbitration clause in the old deal, aiming to resolve the conflict before the American Arbitration Association.
HBO previously claimed that the decades-old deal had expired, and therefore does not cover the Leaving Neverland film. The broadcasters hit out at legal action set in motion by Jackson’s estate, claiming it was a “transparent effort to bolster their publicity campaign against the documentary”.
Michael Jackson denied any wrongdoing before his death in 2009.
Meanwhile, pop star Aaron Carter has recently spoken out on how Jackson behaved inappropriately “one time” during their friendship. The singer, who was friends with the King of Pop when he was a teenager, had previously slammed accusations made in Leaving Neverland.
Read more at https://www.nme.com/news/leaving-ne...bitration-request-2502695#2qYZ07shWV3CVLjT.99
Update: MJ Estate v HBO hearing date on 6/24/19 has been continued until 7/15/19 due to scheduling conflicts for the HBO attorneys. New hearing date is July 15, 2019.
They've changed the date again. The next hearing won't be on 24th June after all.
HBO delaying this thing as long as they possibly can.
HBO delaying this thing as long as they possibly can.