26 Feb 2012 15:37:09
In the papers, filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, the Philip K. Dick Testamentary Trust moved to have its claims dismissed without prejudice. Earlier this month, Judge Otis D. Wright II dismissed a number of the claims from the original lawsuit, which was filed in October 2011.
Dick's trust had sought damages plus interest from director/writer George Nolfi, producer Michael Hackett, MRC II Distribution an Oaktree Entertainment Inc., claiming that they had tried to skirt paying for the rights on the Philip K. Dick short story "The Adjustment Team" by claiming it was in the public domain.
The suit contended that the defendants initially agreed to purchase the rights to the story for between $1 million and $2 million, depending on the film's budget, plus another $100,000 once the film broke even -- and then stopped payment when they found that the story's copyright may have expired.
"otivated solely by greed, defendants seek to establish themselves as a de facto 'Adjustment Bureau' of Hollywood," the suit reads. "Using heavy-handed means, they seek to 'adjust' agreements entered into long-ago agreed, 'adjust' determinations made long ago by the U.S. Copyright Office, and even 'adjust' history so as to hoard any and all monies rightfully earned by the estate of the man whose genius inspired what is indisputably a highly successful film."
While the short story was first published in a magazine in 1954, which would have placed it in the public domain, the trust claimed that the first authorized publication of "The Adjustment Team" was in the 1973 collection "The Book of Philip K. Dick."
According to Box Office Mojo, "The Adjustment Bureau" has made nearly $128 million worldwide, on a production budget of $50.2 million.