
“We are pleased by this result for Mr. Lamar as it recognizes the key role he played in the origin of the world’s most recognizable headphones,” said Susman Godfrey partner Brian D. Melton, who served as lead trial counsel to Lamar. “We are thankful to the jury for providing this long-sought vindication for him.”
Lamar filed the suit in 2014 claiming that a 2007 royalty agreement required Dr. Dre and Iovine to pay royalties on the sale of every Beats headphone modeled after the original “Studio” design. The trial court initially granted summary judgment to Dr. Dre and Iovine, but a 2016 decision by the California Court of Appeal in the Second Appellate District reversed that and remanded it back for trial.
The jury awarded Lamar royalties for several Beats models: $7.45 million on the Studio 2 Remastered, $14.86 million on the Studio 2 Wireless and $2.94 million on the Studio 3, which is still being sold.
The Susman Godfrey team also included partners Chanler A. Langham and Stephen E. Morrissey and associates Davida Brook and Steven Seigel.
The case is Jibe Audio LLC et al. v. Jimmy Iovine et al., case number BC533089, in the Superior Court of the State of California, County of Los Angeles.