sid and marty krofft
Sid and Marty Krofft - photo courtesy of Kathy Hutchins on shutterstock

Television creator and puppeteer Sid Krofft is entitled at age 94 to an expedited trial of his lawsuit against his brother, Marty Krofft, and related Krofft entities for allegedly being late in paying nearly $500,000 owed as part of a buyout of the plaintiff’s business interests, Sid Krofft’s attorneys state in new court papers.

The Burbank Superior Court lawsuit also names Sid and Marty Krofft Productions and Sid and Marty Krofft Pictures Corp. among the other defendants. The allegations include breach of contract, negligence, financial elder abuse and unjust enrichment.

On Wednesday, Sid Krofft’s lawyers brought court papers with Judge Frank M. Tavelman requesting a trial within 120 days of the scheduled Sept. 1 hearing on the motion.

Sid Krofft suffers from melanoma that for a year has required him to undergo surgery and be treated via immunotherapy, according to a sworn statement by his attorney, Todd M. Wolfe. The treatments have left Sid Krofft with chronic pain and associated side effects resulting in fever, headaches, chills, fatigue, loss of taste and dry mouth, which has made eating difficult and both weakness and malaise, according to Wolfe.

The plaintiff also has atrial fibrillation, putting him at risk for blood clots, strokes and heart failure, Wolfe says.

In his suit filed Jan. 30, Sid Krofft seeks at least $470,000 in compensatory damages as well as punitive damages, plus a declaration of the rights of the parties and a court order allowing him to inspect corporate records of all funds received since May 2017.

But in their court papers, defense attorneys deny any liability on the part of their clients.

“The complaint is completely devoid as to any specific allegations against these individuals or what the basis of liability against them could be and they should be dismissed with prejudice,” the defense lawyers argue in their court papers.

Sid and the 86-year-old Marty Krofft, both born in Montreal, made numerous children’s television and variety show programs, mostly in the 1970s, including “H.R. Pufnstuf,” “Land of the Lost” and “Sigmund and the Sea Monsters.”

The Sid Krofft court papers state that over the years, Sid Krofft was frugal and Friday lives in the same home he moved into in 1974, but that his sibling “lived large” and that the plaintiff loaned Marty Krofft hundreds of thousands of dollars when requested by his sibling to do so.

Sid Krofft’s generosity later put him in the “humiliating” position of having to ask his brother to pay for the plaintiff’s living expenses, according to Sid Krofft’s court papers.

Marty Krofft began showing “aggressive and irrational behavior” in the “seesaw nature” of their personal and financial relationship, so in May 2017 the two sides agreed that Marty Krofft and the Krofft companies would buy out the plaintiff’s shares in the entities and leave a zero balance, the Sid Krofft court papers state.

The accord called for Sid Krofft to be provided a car and $10,000 a month for life beginning in July 2017, but the payments stopped in February 2019, the Sid Krofft court papers allege.

Since February 2019, Marty Krofft has “defrauded Sid into believing any number of facts about the Krofft entities’ solvency” while promising to pay his sibling the money due him, according to Sid Krofft’s court papers.

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