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Kevin Hart Sued for $1.8 Million for Allegedly Screwing Over Business Partner

Home / News / Kevin Hart Sued for $1.8 Million for Allegedly Screwing Over Business Partner

By TheBlast Staff on October 9, 2018 at 2:04 AM EDT

Kevin Hart is being accused of failing to pay commission on a big marketing deal and now the guy who put the contract together is suing the comedian for nearly $2 million.

According to court documents obtained by The Blast, iGo Marketing & Entertainment claims they entered into a deal with Hart to negotiate marketing and celebrity tie-in deals on his behalf. iGo has worked with Jerry Seinfeld, Jamie Foxx, John Legend and many others.

They claim their deal with Hart called for them to get paid 15% on any deal they negotiated for Hart.

In the lawsuit, iGo claims they secured numerous deals for Hart over the years with the likes of Miller-Coors, Coke-Zero, Vitamin Water, Electronic Arts, two deals with Caesars Entertainment, the Cosmopolitan Hotel and a deal with Verizon Wireless.

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They claim Hart always made good on the deal ... that is, until it came to a deal with Rally Healthcare in 2015.

iGo claims they negotiated a three-year deal between Kevin Hart and Rally that called for the comedian to get paid partly in cash and part in stock options.

In 2015, Hart then terminated the deal with iGo but they claim that didn’t allow him to stop paying the commission on deals they locked down. They claim Hart did not pay them their 15% on the third year option of the deal or for the value of the stock option.

They are suing for breach of contract and are seeking no less than $1.8 million from the comedian.

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Hart responded to the lawsuit, claiming he never had a written agreement with iGo. He also claimed since the third-year option to the Rally deal kicked in after they parted ways, he didn't owe them 15% of that money.

To add insult to injury, Hart then counter-sued iGo for allegedly using his name and likeness for marketing on their website without his permission.

The comedian is demanding the lawsuit against him be dismissed and he be awarded unspecified damages for the use of his image. He is also seeking an injunction against his ex-business partner from continuing to use his name and likeness to market themselves.

The case is ongoing.

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