This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.
Legal
D12 lawsuit dismissed at appeal
By CMU Editorial | Published on Wednesday 25 March 2009
A lawsuit brought against D12 by the former manager of one of the group’s members has been dismissed at appeal by a court in Michigan.
Kenyatta Hudson claims to have signed a management contract with Ondre ‘Swift’ Moore to run from 1999 to 2003, as well as agreeing to manage D12 as a whole for a minimum of six months. However, when the group signed to Eminem’s Shady Records label later in 1999 they ditched him like a pair of old socks. He promptly sued them for “millions of dollars” of lost earnings. But on Friday Michigan’s Court Of Appeals upheld a previous ruling that Moore cannot enforce the contract as he never registered to become a licensed personnel agent – something required under Michigan law.
Hudson ain’t happy about it. Not one little bit. And he’s threatening to write a book about the whole thing, presumably in an attempt to get his money by other means. It doesn’t really sound like it would be a very interesting book, though. Maybe I’m missing something. Anyway, he told SOHH.com: “I think the courts are wrong in what they are saying. I haven’t spoken with my lawyer yet, but this is going to have to go to higher ground because there’s just no way for them to have found the way they did. I had a contract with D12 and that is not being honoured. In America, we are supposed to honour contracts. I’m considering writing a book about my experience in all of this”.