Ivy you remember the IRS had included the full 17 million in the tax liability showing that the estate had this as income. The estate had responded that they did not recover the money from Lloyds or words to that effect. Now maybe we can tell how much Lloyds paid out if we see some new millions added to the next accounting?
because Lloyd could not prove that MJ committed fraud when he answered his question on the form. that is why they settle. because in order to do so, they would have to prove that 1) MJ knew that he was on drugs as in illegal drugs when he was filling in the form in April 2009, which is impossible. 2)moreover they would have to prove that MJ was using Propofol in April 2009,which is also impossible.
worse, the estate could easily proven that Lloyd had engaged several times in dodgy insurance practices, even covering those artists (e.g Aerosmith) they knew was on drugs, then undercutting their very own claim that they would not have covered MJ if they knew he was a drug addict.
The Estate settling was pretty much the plan since day one given that they had already settled with two other U.S insurance firms. so settling with Lloyd was just another formality.
Lloyd was acting in bad faith and got caught really badly. They had to give in in the end.
Good news just keep coming
Next on the line - Tohme
Completely disagree. Because the estate made good arguments that mj didn't commit fraud in the insurance document that somehow means lloyds was under some obligation to settle? Just because someone doesn't commit fraud in filling out an ins policy doesn't mean they automatically get a pay out from an ins company when they make a claim. Mj might not have been using prop in april when the ins was taken out but he was obv using it in june as he died of it. You really think it would be easy in a trial to argue that mj's death from prop shd be classed as an 'accident' under this ins policy? - i find that really surprising coming from you as you claim in other threads that mj was playing russian roulette with his own life in using murray to administer prop. Russian roulette is a text book example of what is not classed as an 'accident'. I've no idea how much the settlement wd be, but i would say the estate wd be lucky to get the premium back.It's quite safe to assume they paid at least half i.e $8.75m
because Lloyd could not prove that MJ committed fraud when he answered his question on the form. that is why they settle. because in order to do so, they would have to prove that 1) MJ knew that he was on drugs as in illegal drugs when he was filling in the form in April 2009, which is impossible. 2)moreover they would have to prove that MJ was using Propofol in April 2009,which is also impossible.
What 'dodgy practises' and 'dirty dealings' are you trying to suggest lloyds get up to - are insurance companies not allowed to cover artists who have drug issues.passy said:worse, the estate could easily proven that Lloyd had engaged several times in dodgy insurance practices, even covering those artists (e.g Aerosmith) they knew was on drugs, then undercutting their very own claim that they would not have covered MJ if they knew he was a drug addict.
Lloyd was acting in bad faith and got caught really badly. They had to give in in the end.
Ivy didn't the estate say to the judge that they needed another year before they could close probate? I thought I saw that in the last statements we had around the time of the last accounting.
Mj might not have been using prop in april when the ins was taken out but he was obv using it in june as he died of it. You really think it would be easy in a trial to argue that mj's death from prop shd be classed as an 'accident' under this ins policy? - i find that really surprising coming from you as you claim in other threads that mj was playing russian roulette with his own life in using murray to administer prop. Russian roulette is a text book example of what is not classed as an 'accident'.
What 'dodgy practises' and 'dirty dealings' are you trying to suggest lloyds get up to - are insurance companies not allowed to cover artists who have drug issues.
Re mj's estate paying out all the prod costs, actually over $35m not $24m, to aeg without waiting for the insurance policy taken out by mj/aeg to pay out, i just don't understand your argument which isn't 'easy' or 'obvious' at all. Why on earth would the tii documentary if mj estate be held up for 4 yrs if mj's estate hadn't paid all the costs upfront - randy phillips and aeg were the ones who were desperately trying to get the footage made into a film as they saw the $$$ that could be made. All their post 25june statements were making it clear that they were the ones who owned the footage and randy phillips and gongaware were made producers on the doc. Where did the $60m go that sony paid for the doc? It's clear that aeg weren't relinquishing their rights to this footage, they saw it rightly as incredibly valuable. As far as i can see aeg were claiming after mj's death that they owned all the footage of tii made on their cameras, that mj owed them for all the productions costs to date on tii and that they were a party to mj/aeg's $17.5m insurance policy. I suppose that you can only admire their determination not to let mj's death prevent them from cleaning up.well the explanation for that is pretty easy and pretty obvious in my opinion. There were production costs in relation to TII - around $24 M or so (according to the audit Estate did on the costs). The AEG- MJ contract said that MJ was supposed to pay it. Even the filming crew for Michael were paid by AEG. If Estate wanted to release TII movie as soon as possible and capitalize on the high interest at MJ when he died, they were required to pay the production costs to AEG so that they can get the control of the footage quickly to release it as soon as possible. As you can see if they waited for Lloyds to pay up, 4+ years later they would be still waiting. And there was and still is no guarantee that Lloyds will ever pay them.
As far as i can see aeg were claiming after mj's death that they owned all the footage of tii made on their cameras, that mj owed them for all the productions costs to date on tii and that they were a party to mj/aeg's $17.5m insurance policy.
Bonnie, I believe you need to read definition of accident under CA insurance law
A policy that insures against "accidental death" requires only "that the insured's death was not designed or anticipated by the insured". Accidental death is unintended and undesigned result even if caused by the insured's voluntary act.
What definition? Where does this 'def of accident under ca insurance law' come from, it's not from the lloyds's contract
I just think that all of a sudden suggesting that the estate had a great case is odd.
Well both aeg and mj estate seemed to have access/control to tii footage - the sony deal seemed to have been done with both aeg/mj estate. The 90/10% split between mj estate/aeg of tii profits was only after tii exceeded $200m. Fortunately it did exceed that figure, $260+m, but only by becoming the biggest selling documentary of all time.the answer is here. yep that's exactly what they claimed and that's why Estate had to reimburse them to get the control/ownership of the footage. Everything else was 90-10% split between MJ Estate - AEG per MJ/AEG contract. And as AEG was reimbursed they no longer had any claim on the insurance policy.
So to me it is obvious and easy that rather than paying for 4.5 years for insurance settlement, Estate choose to reimburse AEG to get access/control to the footage quickly.
And lloyds can come back with different cases which show a more restrictive view of what constitutes an accidental death. And they can show depositions that shore up their pov. That's what lawyers do. Mj's death by propofol was an incredibly unusual death, to have it included under accidental insurance would really be widening the parameters of the type of things insurance companies cover.As I said it comes from California law and not Lloyds contract. Here are the sources with cases
Because i find it odd when there are some who change their opinion on the facts of a case depending on who is making the argument, for the aeg trial mj bears some responsibility for his death as he knew of the dangers and was warned aboaut them, but here the estate can successfully argue it was an accident and mj wasn't aware of the dangers.Why can't we modify or change our opinion as we learn more and get access to more information?
And lloyds can come back with different cases which show a more restrictive view of what constitutes an accidental death. And they can show depositions that shore up their pov. That's what lawyers do. Mj's death by propofol was an incredibly unusual death, to have it included under accidental insurance would really be widening the parameters of the type of things insurance companies cover.
Because i find it odd when there are some who change their opinion on the facts of a case depending on who is making the argument, for the aeg trial mj bears some responsibility for his death as he knew of the dangers and was warned aboaut them, but here the estate can successfully argue it was an accident and mj wasn't aware of the dangers.
The case is over I don't understand the going back and fourth about who had a stronger case. We should all be happy that Michael's business won't be put in the street like it was thanks to his family last time
I'm not confused at all. The law on what consitutes accidental death is dominated by issues relating to foreseeability, of what people knew or should have known, of awareness or not of dangers. I dont personally know that one heroin case, so can't extrapolate from that a principle that will apply to all other cases, as i know that all cases have a multitude of facts that allow a judge to come to a partic decision.I think that's probably because you are confused about the types of cases and the related laws surrounding them. this was a lawsuit about voiding an insurance claim and it's governed by insurance law. it's not about determining who is responsible for MJ's death. It's not about being aware of the dangers. It's about determining whether the death was accident or not.
Completely disagree. Because the estate made good arguments that mj didn't commit fraud in the insurance document that somehow means lloyds was under some obligation to settle? Just because someone doesn't commit fraud in filling out an ins policy doesn't mean they automatically get a pay out from an ins company when they make a claim. Mj might not have been using prop in april when the ins was taken out but he was obv using it in june as he died of it. You really think it would be easy in a trial to argue that mj's death from prop shd be classed as an 'accident' under this ins policy? - i find that really surprising coming from you as you claim in other threads that mj was playing russian roulette with his own life in using murray to administer prop. Russian roulette is a text book example of what is not classed as an 'accident'. I've no idea how much the settlement wd be, but i would say the estate wd be lucky to get the premium back.
What 'dodgy practises' and 'dirty dealings' are you trying to suggest lloyds get up to - are insurance companies not allowed to cover artists who have drug issues.
I certainly have never said mj committed fraud (?), my issue was with your assumption that as mj wasn't defrauding them on the policy doc re the drug issue, that meant that lloyds suddenly had to pay up on the policy adn that's why they settled. That's not the case - there's the issue of non-disclosure of mj's issues, eg insomnia and no disclosure of the risk of being put in a coma every night for presumably months on end. In insurance you just don't have a situation where you can say certain things on a ins policy, but afterwards do the exact opposite and still expect ins coverage for those things you decide to do after signing a doc - insurance doesn't work like that.The idea that MJ committed fraud is quite laughable. At the time MJ filled in the questionnaire he was not on crack nor was he even using propofol. also Mj was using propofol for medical reasons and that's hardly an abuse. the fact someone takes propofol does not automatically mean he's abusing drugs.
All sorts of reasons why settlements are made in civil cases.The bottom line is Lloyd realized they could win and so had to give in.
Where did lloyds say they didn't cover artists who abuse drugs? - i missed that. I'm pretty sure that they would have covered mj if he had disclosed his pres drug history, his issues seemed known to lloyds anyway, but that they might have asked for a higher premium and maybe included some conditions - like having one of their docs on the tour like the dangerous tour. But I'm also pretty sure they would't have covered propofol use, and in the highly unlikely event they would then they would include tons of safeguards.Covering artists that are abusing drugs, yet claiming that they don't cover artists who abuse drugs. that's dodgy.
I certainly have never said mj committed fraud (?), my issue was with your assumption that as mj wasn't defrauding them on the policy doc re the drug issue, that meant that lloyds suddenly had to pay up on the policy adn that's why they settled. That's not the case - there's the issue of non-disclosure of mj's issues, eg insomnia and no disclosure of the risk of being put in a coma every night for presumably months on end. In insurance you just don't have a situation where you can say certain things on a ins policy, but afterwards do the exact opposite and still expect ins coverage for those things you decide to do after signing a doc - insurance doesn't work like that.
All sorts of reasons why settlements are made in civil cases.
Where did lloyds say they didn't cover artists who abuse drugs? - i missed that. I'm pretty sure that they would have covered mj if he had disclosed his pres drug history, his issues seemed known to lloyds anyway, but that they might have asked for a higher premium and maybe included some conditions - like having one of their docs on the tour like the dangerous tour. But I'm also pretty sure they would't have covered propofol use, and in the highly unlikely event they would then they would include tons of safeguards.
they said they wouldnt have covered him if they knew he was abusing drugs implying they dont cover artist who abuse drugs. Yet they are on records for decades for covering hardcore substance abuser's. That is why the estate filled the motion about Aerosmiith, Britney Jean etcWhere did lloyds say they didn't cover artists who abuse drugs
I certainly have never said mj committed fraud (?), my issue was with your assumption that as mj wasn't defrauding them on the policy doc re the drug issue, that meant that lloyds suddenly had to pay up on the policy adn that's why they settled. That's not the case - there's the issue of non-disclosure of mj's issues, eg insomnia and no disclosure of the risk of being put in a coma every night for presumably months on end. In insurance you just don't have a situation where you can say certain things on a ins policy, but afterwards do the exact opposite and still expect ins coverage for those things you decide to do after signing a doc - insurance doesn't work like that.
yes, but in this case the motif is too obvious.All sorts of reasons why settlements are made in civil cases.
Where did lloyds say they didn't cover artists who abuse drugs? - i missed that. I'm pretty sure that they would have covered mj if he had disclosed his pres drug history, his issues seemed known to lloyds anyway, but that they might have asked for a higher premium and maybe included some conditions - like having one of their docs on the tour like the dangerous tour. But I'm also pretty sure they would't have covered propofol use, and in the highly unlikely event they would then they would include tons of safeguards.
FYI
I was looking to the exhibits attached to Estate's reply ( a few months back)
production expenses /costs that Estate reimbursed AEG is $34,199,688
However Estate received 90% of retained ticketing income which is $4,158,634.50
which makes Estate's net loss $30,041,053.50
Ivy, is this about the profit from the unreturned tickets? I know some have claimed that AEG likely made a profit from tickets that people kept as souvenirs, so it seems like that's not the case.