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Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni have agreed to disagree.
Legal teams for both Lively and Baldoni told Judge Lewis Liman that “settlement discussions would be premature,” according to a joint letter filed in court and obtained by Fox News Digital.
The letter also noted that “the parties agree that mediation and the Discovery Protocols… are inappropriate for this case.”
The federal judge agreed with the “It Ends With Us” stars and granted the order Thursday.
Fox News Digital reached out to both sides for additional comment.
In December, Lively detailed allegations of sexual harassment, retaliation, intentional affliction of emotional distress, negligence, and more against Baldoni and film producer Jamey Heath in a complaint first filed with the California Civil Rights Department and later in federal court.
Baldoni, in his own lawsuit filed in January, insisted that Lively “falsely” had accused him in an attempt to repair her reputation amid the fallout around the movie’s press tour after the actress took control of the film.
Baldoni’s legal team claimed that Lively had no evidence of a deliberate smear campaign and instead worked to repair her reputation by accusing the actor and others of sexual harassment.
Both sides have denied the allegations against them.
Lively and her husband, Ryan Reynolds, have until Feb. 18 to file an amended version of their complaint against Baldoni.
The couple is also planning to file a motion to dismiss Baldoni’s $400 million lawsuit.
The deadline for Lively’s legal team to file the dismissal motion is March 20.
Lively and Reynolds’ legal team have also subpoenaed phone records of Baldoni and others involved in the courtroom showdown over the alleged plot to ruin the actress’s reputation.
“Ms. Lively has initiated discovery that will expose the people, tactics, and methods that have worked to ‘destroy’ and ‘bury’ her reputation and family over the past year,” Lively’s lawyers, Mike Gottlieb and Esra Hudson, told Fox News Digital in a statement.
“We will now receive all of the ‘receipts’ that, unsurprisingly, are nowhere to be found on Mr. Freedman’s website, and like Ms. Lively, those ‘receipts’ will have their day in court.”
Baldoni’s lawyer, Bryan Freedman, slammed the move as a “fishing expedition.”