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Media Company Loses in Court

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From Times Wire Services

A California judge Friday affirmed a jury ruling against Bertelsmann, ordering the German media conglomerate to pay $260.8 million, plus interest, to two former executives as part of a contract dispute related to the sale of the company’s stake in AOL Europe.

In December, a Santa Barbara jury awarded Jan Buettner and Andreas von Blottnitz an estimated $250 million, saying the German media conglomerate short-changed the former consultants who had helped it earn a fortune on the Internet. Jurors found that the two men were promised a stake in the AOL Europe venture between Bertelsmann and Time Warner Inc.

Bertelsmann agreed to sell its 50% stake to Time Warner in 2000 for $6.75 billion.

But confusion over the jury’s verdict led Bertelsmann to argue that the award was $20 million, while lawyers for Von Blottnitz and Buettner said it was $300 million.

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Friday’s decision by Santa Barbara Superior Court Judge James Brown clears the way for Bertelsmann to ask the judge to reduce or overturn the award.

“There will be a lot of issues that could be raised on appeal,” including that the case should be retried in Germany, said Anthony Murray, a lawyer for Bertelsmann. “Everything was based on events that happened in Germany.”

In the trial, Buettner and Von Blottnitz claimed Bertelsmann and its former CEO, Thomas Middelhoff, promised them a stake in AOL Europe. They sought more than $3 billion.

But the media giant, whose assets include publishing business Random House and music unit BMG, denied that it offered the pair an equity stake and said it planned to seek a new trial. The company had tried to have the case moved to Germany.

The jury awarded the plaintiffs about $130 million each for Bertelsmann’s breach of contract, plus a separate award of $12 million each against Middelhoff for breach of oral contract and an additional $7 million each under a German law that compensates for harms from different breaches of contract, lawyers for the men said.

The judge Friday removed both the award against Middelhoff and the $7-million awards, saying there was no evidence to support the separate damage awards.

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The case was in Santa Barbara because the plaintiffs lived there. The contracts were in German, and the case hinged on the interpretation of a phrase Von Blottnitz and Buettner said meant “equity.” Bertelsmann said it meant a share in a company bonus system for executives.

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Bloomberg News was used compiling this report.

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