Mariah Carey wins $92,000 in attorney fees | mcarchives.com

Wednesday 24 December 2025

Mariah Carey wins $92,000 in attorney fees

Mariah Carey has received a costly postscript victory in a dismissed copyright lawsuit over her perennial holiday hit "All I Want for Christmas Is You", with a federal judge ordering sanctions that include more than $92,000 in attorney fees payable to Carey. The ruling follows the court's earlier dismissal of claims brought by country artist Andy Stone, who performs as Vince Vance, and who alleged that Carey's 1994 song copied a 1988 Christmas track of the same name recorded by his band, Vince Vance & the Valiants.

In a sharply worded order, U.S. District Judge Mónica Ramírez Almadani concluded that Stone and his legal team advanced frivolous legal arguments and unsupported factual contentions, forcing Carey and other defendants to incur needless litigation expenses. Stone had sought $20 million in damages when he filed the lawsuit in November 2023, but the court ruled in March that neither Stone nor his co-writer, Troy Powers, produced sufficient evidence to establish copyright infringement.

The sanctions order makes clear that the court viewed the conduct at issue not as an isolated misstep, but as a cumulative pattern warranting financial penalties. While acknowledging that any single instance of misconduct might not have justified more than a reprimand, the judge found that the aggregate behavior rose to an egregious level. As a result, the court ordered a total of $109,983 in sanctions, allocating $92,300 to Carey, more than $14,000 to Sony Music, and additional portions to Kobalt Publishing and producer Walter Afanasieff, all of whom were named as co-defendants in the case.

Beyond the monetary penalties, the ruling raises ethical concerns for plaintiffs' counsel. Judge Ramírez Almadani noted that recent filings by Stone's attorneys failed to address the status or interests of co-plaintiff Powers, despite the fact that counsel had not formally withdrawn from representing him. The court emphasized that, absent leave to withdraw, attorneys remain under a professional duty to represent all clients competently and loyally. The judge expressly questioned whether that obligation had been met, signaling that the issue extends beyond a simple fee dispute.

Stone's attorneys, Gerard Fox and Douglas M. Schmidt, have been ordered to submit a written response by January 5 explaining why their failure to comply with the California Rules of Professional Conduct and applicable local rules should not result in disciplinary action. The court warned that failure to respond, or an inadequate explanation, could lead to additional sanctions, placing the spotlight squarely on counsel's conduct rather than the merits of the now-dismissed copyright claims.

For Carey, the order effectively closes a long-running legal challenge to one of the most commercially successful holiday songs in history, reinforcing the court's earlier conclusion that the lawsuit lacked evidentiary support. For the plaintiffs' legal team, however, the case remains very much alive procedurally, with potential professional consequences still looming as the January deadline approaches.

(USA Herald)



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