On Friday, December 8, Connecticut Judge Janet C. Hall officially ended the saga of the WWE Network Royalties lawsuit which had been brought by plaintiffs Marcus âBuffâ Bagwell and Scott âRavenâ Levy against World Wrestling Entertainment. Judge Hall signed an order which granted the âStipulation of Dismissalâ which had been filed jointly by plaintiffs and defendants one day earlier. Importantly, the dismissal affirmed that Bagwell & Levyâs claims were against WWE were being dismissed with prejudice. Furthermore, WWEâs counterclaim against Mr. Levy was dismissed without prejudice (noting that âWWE shall be free reassert such counterclaim only if Levy ever brings anyêŠ claim against WWE in the future, which, in whole or in part, alleges that WWE breached some contract with Levy.â)
The lawsuit had begun in August 2016 when Bagwell filed the original class action complaint against WWE. Levy joined the complaint as a plaintiff in September 2016. Mr. Bagwell & Mr. Levy filed their in June 2017 alleging and entitled the performers to diârect sales royalties which included revenues generated by the WWE Network.
In October, WWE responded with the which stated that Levy had âbreached the non-disparagement provision of the Early Contract Releaseâ when he made comments on a November 25, 2015 âTalk is Jerichoâ where he âcriticized,đ disparaged, injured or harmed the reputation of WWE and/or WWEâs Chairman and CEO, Vince McMahon.â In particular, Levy hï·œad suggested that Mr. McMahon had âpaid a bribe to Judge Dorsey as a quid pro quo for Judge Dorseyâs dismissal of a prior lawsuit (brought by Levy)â.
While the lawsuit caused a âsignificant expense to WWEâ in legal bills, a new filing makes it clear that WWE did not make any confidential payments to either Bagwell or Levy to convince them to drop the lawsuit. Rather, the WWEâs ââ filing explicitly states that âno money was paid by WWE to either Bagwell or Levy in consideration for the dismissal of Plaintiffsâ claims with prejudice.â
The filling also notes that WWEâs counsel insisted that both Levy & Bagwellâs claims be dismissed with prejudice (meaning neither plaintiff could refile their suit and make these same claims against WWE in a futuđre suit):
âOriginally, Plaintiffâs counsel indicated they intended to dismiss Levyâs claims with prejudice but Bagwellâs claims without prejudice. WWEâs counsel responded that WWE would not stipulate to a dismissal on that basis, and insisted that the dismissal of all claims be with prejudice. Plaintiffsâ counsel ultimately agreed.â
Furthermore, WWE is noâw submitting a Bill of Costs against Plaintiffs Marcus Bagwell and Scott Levy for $6,105.40. They submitted taxable costs for deposition costs đŠ($5,098.05) and pre-trial transcripts ($1,007.35) because they are âentitled as the prevailing partyâ.
WWE has submitted for âBill of Costsâ after prevailing in other lawsuits such as when Larry Zbyszê§ko sued in 2004 and when âPretty Boyâ Doug Somers sued in 2013 over