FX asserts that Dish's giveaway devalued FX's rights by tens of millions of dollars. The cable network says it didn't get what it paid for on those 22 movies, and adds that had it known that Dish intended to overexpose the movies in question (which aren't identified), it would have paid 10 to 15 percent less to the studios to license them.
"It is like FX agreed to purchase 22 low-mileage used cars from Disney and Sony, but before it received the cars, Dish grabbed the keys, hopped into the driver's seats and put an extra 50,000 miles on each car," says the plaintiffs' legal brief.
In turn, Dish is asking for summary judgment because it believes that it was contractually authorized to do its Starz giveaway. Furthermore, the satellite TV defendant is rebutting the tortious interference claim by claiming it "did not know about FX's studio contracts for the movies at issue" and rejecting the proposition that it formed the intent to interfere with these contracts.