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Charlie Sheen's Lawsuit Over Men Firing Will Not Go to Trial

Charlie Sheen's $100 million lawsuit against Warner Bros. Television and Two and a Half Men co-creator Chuck Lorre will not go to trial, Deadline reports. Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Alan Goodman ruled Wednesday that the suit will have to be settled in arbitration. Charlie Sheen sues Warner Bros., Chuck Lorre for $100 million Sheen's attorney, Marty Singer, had pushed...

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Kate Stanhope

Charlie Sheen's $100 million lawsuit against Warner Bros. Television and Two and a Half Men co-creator Chuck Lorre will not go to trial, Deadline reports.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Alan Goodman ruled Wednesday that the suit will have to be settled in arbitration.

Charlie Sheen sues Warner Bros., Chuck Lorre for $100 million

Sheen's attorney, Marty Singer, had pushed for a public trial, but Sheen's Two and a Half Men contract contained a clause that required that any lawsuits be handled through arbitration. According to the judge's ruling, the arbitrator will decide whether the case is handled publicly or privately.

Sheen, 45, filed suit 10 days after he was fired by Warner Bros. from the hit CBS sitcom.

"We're very gratified by the court's ruling enforcing the parties' arbitration agreement," Warner Bros. Television said in a statement after the ruling.

"The court made the appropriate ruling in denying Mr. Sheen's request to stay the arbitration in referring his lawsuit against Warner Bros and Chuck Lorre to arbitration as his contract calls for," Lorre's lawyer, Howard L. Weitzman, said. "This matter will now proceed in an orderly fashion as the parties agreed to."