Los Angeles Times

Disney settles suit over sitcom

‘Home Improvemen­t’ producers had accused firm of shorting them on profits

- By Ryan Faughnder

The producers of “Home Improvemen­t” had accused the company of cheating them out of profits.

Walt Disney Co. has settled a lawsuit brought six years ago by the producers of the popular ABC sitcom “Home Improvemen­t” who complained about the amount of profits they received from the show.

“Home Improvemen­t” creator Wind Dancer Production Group in 2013 sued ABC parent Disney for breach of contract in Los Angeles County Superior Court, saying the company sold syndicatio­n rights to the Tim Allen hit “at well below market value,” limiting the pool of profits the producers could collect.

For example, Wind Dancer alleged Disney offered syndicatio­n rights in New York, a key market, for “no monetary considerat­ion” and “failed and refused to consult” with the creators about how the show would be exploited.

An outside attorney for Disney on Wednesday confirmed that the sides had reached a settlement in the case, which was set to go to trial in the coming weeks.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

A Disney spokesman did not respond to a request for comment, and a representa­tive for Wind Dancer Production Group declined to comment.

Plaintiffs in the case also included “Home Improvemen­t” creators Matt Williams, Carmen Finestra and David McFadzean. Wind Dancer previously sued Disney in 1997 in one of the first legal actions to stem from the co-called vertical integratio­n of media companies.

The lawsuit alleged that Disney sold the show to ABC below market rates after the Burbank company’s 1996 purchase of Capital Cities/ ABC.

The dispute was settled out of court for an undisclose­d sum.

In another recent highprofil­e profit case, Fox this year was hit with a $178.7-million judgment in its dispute with the team behind the hit series “Bones” after an arbitrator ruled the network cheated the show’s creators out of profits from the show. A California judge later ruled that Fox didn’t have to pay $128 million in punitive damages.

In 2011, a jury ordered Disney to pay $319 million in a profit participat­ion case over “Who Wants to Be a Millionair­e.”

 ?? Touchstone Pictures & Television ?? TIM ALLEN, left, starred in the 1990s sitcom “Home Improvemen­t.” Terms of the deal between the makers and Disney weren’t disclosed.
Touchstone Pictures & Television TIM ALLEN, left, starred in the 1990s sitcom “Home Improvemen­t.” Terms of the deal between the makers and Disney weren’t disclosed.

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