Publishers Lunch
The complicated publication path of EL
James' FIFTY SHADES trilogy has finally yielded legal action, as James' first
publisher, Australian-based The Writers Coffee Shop owner Amanda Hayward, was
sued last week in a Texas state court by her former business partners Jennifer
Pedroza and Christa Beebe, for a share of the massive proceeds from the
trilogy.
According to the 48-page complaint,
obtained by Courthouse
News, "This is a case about greed and self-dealing by Amanda Hayward
in conning her business partner Jenny Pedroza out of her rightful partnership
interest in advances and royalties flowing from the New York Times best-selling
'Fifty Shades of Grey' trilogy and in fraudulently inducting both plaintiffs
into entering into contracts with a sham entity...It appears that Hayward also
defrauded, among others, [nonparties] Random House, and E.L. James, author of
the 'Fifty Shades' trilogy."
Pedroza claimed in her suit that she, along
with Beebe and a third unnamed individual, were partners in The Writers Coffee
Shop, and that without consulting any of the others, Hayward "tried to
convert Coffee Shop into TWCS, an Australian sole proprietorship that she,
alone, owned. She signed a contract with Random House for the rights to the
'Fifty Shades' trilogy, in exchange for millions in advances and future
royalties but, because of her chicanery, all payments flowed to her and not to
the partnership."
As such, "Hayward told her partners
that the partnership prospectively needed to be restructured into an entity
solely owned by her for 'tax reasons.' She then fraudulently induced Pedroza
and Beebe into signing 'service agreements' with TWCS, and subsequently
terminated both of them."
Pedroza and Beebe, represented by
Dallas-based lawyer Michael Farris with Vincent, Lopez, Serafino and Jenevien,
seek "equitable relief, including injunctive relief, the imposition of a
constructive trust, damages, and to trap funds not yet paid by Random
House."
Fort Worth Weekly wrote
about the controversy in January, and at the time they said the third
individual was Jennifer McGuire. In the article, Pedroza says, "You live
and you learn. Don't just take a handshake." Pedroza said then that
after Random House acquired rights to 50 Shades, "Amanda came to us and
told us we had to sign contracts and incorporate for tax reasons. I never
got a lawyer. I just trusted." Pedroza became chief marketing officer of
the publisher, but was fired in November 2013.
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