Calvin Harris wins $13.5 million judgment against ex-manager

Calvin Harris has secured a $13.5 million arbitration award in his legal dispute with former business manager Thomas St. John over a failed real estate venture. The ruling covers an unpaid loan tied to the CMNTY Culture Campus project in Hollywood. Further claims of fraud and an equity investment remain unresolved.

Calvin Harris, whose real name is Adam Wiles, initiated arbitration proceedings against Thomas St. John this summer, accusing him of fraudulently diverting $22 million from the DJ's accounts in 2023 to fund the CMNTY Culture Campus, a planned Hollywood recording studio and office space that never materialized. The funds consisted of a $10 million loan and a $12 million equity investment. St. John has denied the allegations as "categorically false," insisting Harris was a willing participant.

In a December ruling made public on January 7, retired federal judge Michael R. Wilner, overseeing the confidential arbitration, held St. John and his associated entities jointly liable for $13,438,666.55. This sum includes the $10 million principal, $2,666,666.56 in interest, a $200,000 origination fee, a $200,000 exit fee, and a $371,999.99 late charge. The decision addresses only the loan repayment; the $12 million equity stake and broader fraud accusations will proceed in ongoing arbitration.

The CMNTY Culture project originated from the 2020 sale of songwriter Philip Lawrence's catalog of Bruno Mars hits. Lawrence initially partnered with St. John for tax benefits but later exited due to financial troubles, leaving St. John in charge. St. John then sought investments from Harris and others, securing a $35 million loan from Parkview Financial. The venture stalled amid a Los Angeles office market downturn, pivoting unsuccessfully to residential development before defaulting. Parkview foreclosed on the property in December, purchasing it for $25 million, and filed a lawsuit against St. John on January 13 for the remaining $16 million plus interest.

St. John's professional woes mount: his U.S. management firm, Thomas St. John Group, filed for bankruptcy last year and is liquidating assets. Separately, EDM artist Eric Prydz sued St. John in November, alleging $269,000 in unauthorized commissions, which St. John called "wholly fabricated." Representatives for both parties did not comment on January 14.

관련 기사

Clara Shinta and lawyer at South Jakarta press conference vowing countersuit over Rp10.7 billion VCS evidence claim.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Clara Shinta faces Rp10.7 billion claim from Tri Indah R over VCS evidence

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Clara Shinta has received a legal notice from Tri Indah Ramadhani demanding Rp10.7 billion over the disclosure of alleged explicit video call evidence involving her husband. At a press conference in South Jakarta on April 14, 2026, Clara and her lawyer vowed to respond with a countersuit. The dispute stems from evidence discovered during a vacation in Bangkok in late March 2026.

Vendors involved with the collapsed Grand Slam Track league are seeking court permission to sue Olympic champion Michael Johnson and investor Winners Alliance for $25 million, alleging fraud and mismanagement. The creditors claim Johnson improperly paid himself $500,000 and that Winners Alliance led the league into financial ruin despite promises of support. A bankruptcy court hearing on the matter is scheduled for Thursday.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Following a judge's April 13 ruling dismissing most claims in Bilaal Salaam's $3 million emotional distress lawsuit against her, Jada Pinkett Smith is pursuing nearly $49,000 in attorneys' fees from the former friend of her husband Will Smith.

Paris Jackson has accused the executors of her late father Michael Jackson's estate of bullying her over questions about estate spending, including payments to law firms, bonuses, and fees. In court filings, the 28-year-old singer claims John Branca and John McClain are mocking her and seeking media attention, while the executors counter that she is the one courting the press. This follows her earlier objections to biopic costs.

AI에 의해 보고됨

A Johannesburg High Court judgment has ordered former VhaVenda king Toni Mphephu, his nephew Oscar Thobakgale and the Dzata Trust to repay R17.29-million linked to the VBS Mutual Bank scandal. The 2 March ruling by Judge Johann Gautschi found the payments from Vele Investments to be dispositions without value. Respondents failed to demonstrate any value received by the bank in return.

A jury found Kanye West, now known as Ye, and his companies liable for sampling an unreleased demo track in an early version of his song Hurricane.

AI에 의해 보고됨

A judge ruled Friday that Ray J's countersuit against Kim Kardashian and Kris Jenner must proceed in private arbitration rather than court. The decision stems from their contract over a sex tape settlement.

 

 

 

이 웹사이트는 쿠키를 사용합니다

사이트를 개선하기 위해 분석을 위한 쿠키를 사용합니다. 자세한 내용은 개인정보 보호 정책을 읽으세요.
거부