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Blake Lively vs Justin Baldoni Settlement: What Happens When Most Claims Are Dismissed but Retaliation Claims Remain?

5th May 2026
When Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni settled their lawsuit over It Ends With Us just weeks before trial, the timing raised a more important legal question than the dispute itself. If most claims in a lawsuit are dismissed, why does legal risk still remain strong enough to force a settlement? The answer is that dismissal does not eliminate exposure. It concentrates it. In this case, a federal court in New York removed the majority of Lively’s claims, including harassment and defamation, and also dismissed Baldoni’s counterclaims. What remained were three narrower but legally durable claims: breach of contract, retaliation, and aiding and abetting retaliation. Those claims were sufficient to keep the case on track for a May 2026 trial and, ultimately, to drive both parties toward settlement. The key legal point is straightforward. Courts do not decide cases in a single step. They filter them. Early rulings remove claims that do not meet legal thresholds, but what survives is typically what can be tested in front of a jury. That transition matters because it shifts the dispute from broad allegations to specific, evidence-driven questions. At that stage, the legal risk becomes more defined and, in many cases, more difficult to manage. Retaliation claims sit at the centre of that risk. Under U.S. employment law principles, a retaliation claim does not require proof that the original complaint such as harassment, was ultimately valid. Instead, the legal focus is on whether a complaint was made and whether the response to that complaint created a disadvantage or harm. This means liability can arise from how an organisation reacts, not just from what is alleged to have happened. That distinction explains why cases like this continue even after major allegations are dismissed. Once a complaint is raised, internal conduct becomes the primary area of scrutiny. Decisions, communications, and contractual obligations are examined in detail. The legal question becomes whether those actions could reasonably be interpreted as retaliatory. This is often where exposure develops, particularly in environments where reputational and professional consequences are closely linked. The procedural posture of the case reinforces that point. By the time the settlement was reached, the litigation had moved beyond early dismissal arguments and toward a trial phase where factual disputes would be tested. Both parties faced the prospect of testimony, document disclosure, and jury evaluation. At that stage, the risk is no longer theoretical. It is operational. Outcomes depend on how evidence is interpreted, and that uncertainty is often enough to justify settlement even when the scope of the case has been reduced. From a governance perspective, the implications are wider than the individuals involved. This pattern is consistent across sectors. Allegations trigger internal processes, but it is the handling of those processes that frequently determines legal exposure. Organisations often assume that if the most serious claims fail, the issue has been resolved. In practice, the opposite can occur. Surviving claims, particularly those linked to retaliation or contractual obligations can create a more focused and actionable risk profile. This is why the moment of dismissal is not a resolution point. It is a transition point. Legal risk shifts from broad narrative claims to specific conduct-based liability. That shift is significant because it narrows the issues while increasing the importance of evidence and decision-making. For boards and in-house counsel, this is typically the stage where a dispute moves from being monitored to requiring active risk management. The settlement between Lively and Baldoni ends the case without a final judgment, meaning there is no precedent set on the surviving claims. However, the absence of a ruling does not reduce the relevance of the underlying legal structure. The case illustrates a recurring principle in litigation: exposure is not defined by the number of claims filed, but by the strength and resilience of the claims that remain after judicial review. For organisations, the practical takeaway is clear. Legal risk does not depend solely on whether allegations are proven. It depends on whether the response to those allegations creates a separate and sustainable basis for liability. Once that threshold is crossed, the dispute tends to move away from the underlying allegation and towards the conduct that followed, with the central question becoming whether those actions can be justified under legal scrutiny. This is not an unusual outcome, as courts often narrow cases to a smaller number of claims that carry more defined exposure, and it is at that stage, when the issues are clearer and more dependent on evidence, that many disputes resolve before a final ruling. In practice, settlement is driven less by the original allegation and more by the strength of the claims that remain after judicial review, particularly where those claims present a realistic prospect of liability.

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