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Nelly Wins $67K Fine From Lawyer Who Filed ‘Baseless’ Lawsuit Over ‘Country Grammar’

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If you sue Nelly, you’d better be sure you’re right.

A federal judge ruled Thursday (May 28) that attorneys for one of his former St. Lunatics bandmates must repay more than $67,000 that the star spent on legal bills defeating a “frivolous” lawsuit over the rights to his debut album Country Grammar.

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The case, filed by ex-St. Lunatics member Ali (Ali Jones), was voluntarily dropped last year after Nelly (Cornell Haynes) argued it was filed years after the statute of limitations had expired. But a judge later ruled that the case was so bad that Ali’s lawyer should reimburse the star’s legal bills as punishment.

On Thursday, a judge handed Ali’s attorney the tab: $67,586 for more than 150 hours of legal work done by Nelly’s three lawyers. The lawyer, Precious Felder Gates, had argued that Nelly’s pricey demands were excessive, but the judge largely rejected those arguments.

The ruling highlights the risk of filing lawsuits against well-heeled defendants — and a potential weapon for top musicians who have complained about a rise in such cases. Ed Sheeran, Cardi B, Jay-Z and many other stars have warned that such lawsuits are often aimed at extracting quick settlements by exploiting the hassle and expense of litigation.

Felder Gates did not immediately return a request for comment. Nelly’s lead counsel, Kenneth D. Freundlich, said: “Courts have limited patience for litigation used as a weapon rather than a remedy. Frivolous litigation isn’t free.”

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Nelly was sued in 2024 by his former bandmates in the St. Lunatics, a hip-hop group also composed of Murphy Lee (Tohri Harper), Kyjuan (Robert Kyjuan) and City Spud (Lavell Webb). It centered on Country Grammar, the star’s debut solo album that spent five weeks atop the Billboard 200 and helped launch a career that reached superstar heights with his 2002 chart-topping singles “Hot in Herre” and “Dilemma.”

The case claimed Nelly cut his former crew out of the credits and royalty payments after they worked on the hit solo album. But three of them quickly dropped out, saying they had never actually wanted to sue and hadn’t given authorization to the lawyers who filed the case. Ali initially moved ahead alone, but dropped the case entirely in April 2025 after Nelly’s lawyers argued the decades-delayed case was clearly not allowed under the Copyright Act’s three-year statute of limitations.

Though the lawsuit was over, Nelly’s attorneys refused to let Ali and his lawyers walk away. They asked for sanctions — meaning legal penalties — over a “vexatious” lawsuit that “should never have been brought.” And in October, a judge agreed, ruling that it should have been “patently obvious” to Felder Gates that the case was doomed but that she had instead “doubled down.”

After Nelly’s lawyers asked for $78,007, Felder Gates argued it was unreasonable — that the hours worked were excessive and that the hourly rates were too high. But the judge was unswayed, ruling that the case required detailed work and that the rates were “in line with both the prevailing market rates and the rates charged by attorneys of similar experience.”


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