
Seal and wife model Heidi Klum - Reuters photos LONDON (Reuters):
BRITISH POP star Seal has lost his appeal against an earlier court judgement that ordered him to pay his former manager 500,000 (US$980,000) in commission from his first two albums.
In a written ruling at London's High Court issued yesterday, judge Roger Toulson also ordered the Grammy-winning singer to pay his former manager's legal costs, with 175,000 to be paid up front.
Seal was not present during the appeal hearing earlier this month, but was in court last June. At that time, he had said that John Wadlow, his manager until 1995, had been like a surrogate father, but that he had later been "ripped off" by him.
Seal, whose real name is Henry Olusegun Adeola Samuel, had argued that Wadlow was not entitled to the commission, saying the agreements between them were the result of "undue influence" exerted by Wadlow.
The performer of hits, including Kiss From A Rose and Crazy, also told the court that in the five years after he parted company with Wadlow in 1995, he paid him US$4 million, which he said was "in my book a substantial amount of money."
Both of Seal's first two albums reached number one in the British charts. The overall cost of his court defeat has yet to be calculated, but estimates put it as high as 1 million.