You can't look at the settlement as "blinking', settlements in and of themselves are generally not admissions of liability or non-liability, despite the fact that in this case one of the "terms" of the settlement agreement was an admission of liability by the defendant.
Sorry, you CAN when a Defendant (up until said Settlement) was saying:
- "I will NOT settle for two 15 minute episodes. The Backers want a full movie. That's what was promised, and that's what must be made..."
- "I will take this case ALL THE WAY TO THE U.S. SUPREME COURT!"
Then - (as per said settlement):
- "And we get to make two 15 minute segments...so yes, I WON!"
The fact is:
Once the Judge rulled:
- Axanar's 'Fair Use' defense as invalid...
- ALL of Axanar's and Alec Peters financial records WERE material to the case AND could be introduced and analyzed in a trial and shown to a Jury...
Alec Peters QUICKLY accepted the same Settlement offer that it was later found CBS had originally offered nearly a year earlier.
So, yeah, sorry - after blowing most of the remaining Axanar pledge funds he hadn't already spent on himself/his friends/the failed studio on filing fees and deposition related fees and costs (That stuff isn't free/covered in 'Pro Bono' - the client pays ALL filing and court fees, as well as deposition costs including renting of space for said deposition, paying any expert witnesses his side called in to testify, the court reporter fees for his side's part of the deposition, etc.) <--- Even with no attorney fees, the rest of this wasn't cheap...
Bottom line: Yes, Mr. peters saw the writing on the wall (IE that CBS/Paramount WOULD get a Judgement against Mr. Peters and it would involve MASSIVE punative damages...so yeah, in the end (and probably after a big rant to his pro bono legal team who I think had a real hard time both controlling their client and convincing him of this fact);
Mr. Peters BLINKED...HARD!
ETA: I said Pweters was a Plaintiff when he was in fact, the Defendant - so I corrected...
