Former Journey frontman Steve Perry has withdrawn the lawsuit in opposition to his ex-bandmates over the emblems to twenty of the group’s largest songs.
In September of final yr, Perry – who exited Journey in 1998 after serving as its lead singer for a decade – filed a lawsuit in opposition to Freedom JN LLC. The submitting requested that the corporate, which holds the band’s emblems and is headed by Journey members Neal Schon and Jonathan Cain, be prevented from utilizing the emblems on any official attire or merchandise.
Included within the firm’s holdings have been the emblems to the Journey singles ‘Any Way You Want It’, ‘Open Arms’ and ‘Separate Ways’, amongst many others. Perry’s authentic lawsuit claimed that he, Schon and Cain had agreed to succeed in unanimous consent on any enterprise choices associated to the emblems, a situation which Perry claimed was not met on the time of submitting.
Now, Schon has taken to Twitter to disclose that Perry has withdrawn the 2022 lawsuit, sharing screenshots of the cancellation submitting on Saturday (January 7). “No more lawsuit with Steve,” Schon wrote within the accompanying caption. “Time to talk”. The hooked up paperwork define that Perry “filed a withdrawal” of the lawsuit on January 4, 2023, and that he can not relaunch the swimsuit because it was “denied with prejudice”.
No extra lawsuit with Steve.Time to speak ✌🏽 pic.twitter.com/JuLaMZxY0b
— NEAL SCHON MUSIC (@NealSchonMusic) January 7, 2023
In one other tweet, Schon additionally made reference to Cain, with whom he’s in a separate authorized battle round entry to Journey’s bank card and its information.
That lawsuit was filed by Schon in October of final yr, and accuses Cain of refusing to present Schon entry to the group’s American Express card. Cain denied the accusation, saying the “lawsuit… has absolutely no merit” and that “Neal has always had access to the credit card statements” (per Variety).
Meanwhile, in December of 2022, Schon despatched Cain a cease-and-desist to ban him from taking part in Journey’s songs on the Mar-a-Lago resort owned by Donald Trump. That lawsuit got here a month after Cain carried out the band’s 1981 observe ‘Don’t Stop Believin’ on the former president’s property, a set which Schon’s cease-and-desist claimed was a “harmful use” of Journey’s model.
So a lot for JC attempting to throw me underneath the bus as he claimed I used to be blatantly attempting to tear off SP whereas gathering the checks for the very diligent work my spouse and I did to guard our Merch. Time for espresso 👍🏽 pic.twitter.com/xsGQBr0wob
— NEAL SCHON MUSIC (@NealSchonMusic) January 7, 2023
Referencing Cain in his announcement of Perry’s dropped lawsuit, Schon wrote: “So much for [Cain] trying to throw me under the bus as he claimed I was blatantly trying to rip off [Perry] while collecting the checks for the very diligent work my wife and I did to protect our Merch.”
Despite the in-fighting between the longtime bandmates, Journey are set to embark on their Freedom Tour in the direction of the tip of this month. The tour – which can see Cain and Schon share the stage with authentic Journey vocalist Gregg Rolie for the primary time in 43 years – kicks off on January 27 in Oklahoma.