Phil12
Well-Known Member
Oh, Roy did catch on. Back in 1953 Walt was sued by a shareholder for diverting funds from the studio to WED. The case was settled in 1955 rather than go to trial. And Roy always suspected that Walt would put his hand in the cookie jar again. But Walt was Roy's little brother and Roy let Walt do most anything.If Roy was the business brains and Walt was the creative, then how did Walt figure out how to raid the coffers of WDP without Roy catching on? Also, where does Retlaw fit into all this?
But what Roy feared was another shareholder lawsuit. And if such a lawsuit went to trial, it would bring the entire company down. To avoid that, Roy got a group of lawyers to perform a full accounting to determine the extent of Walt's diversion of funds. It was during this period (about 1963 into 1964) that Walt and Roy stopped speaking to one another. You might want to read about the peace pipe: https://www.dizavenue.com/2017/02/the-time-walt-disney-passed-peace-pipe.html
The entire WED setup was chock full of conflicts of interest and Walt was involved in self-dealing. WED was the contractor that built Disneyland! Walt personally owned various attractions in the park including the train, monorail and the Tiki Room. He hired his own employees for those attractions. They were not part of the regular Disneyland CM's.
In early 1965 the studio bought WED along with the name. What was left of Walt's private holdings needed a new name: RETLAW. The assets of RETLAW went to Walt's family (such as the monorail, the steam train and the use of Walt's name and likeness) Disneyland bought the monorail in 1982 and other of Walt's privately owned assets.
But make no mistake. Walt didn't want to sell WED or the other property. He was forced to do so by Roy to avoid a very costly and embarrassing shareholder lawsuit. This was Roy's way of heading a lawsuit off at the pass to make sure that Walt's diversion of shareholder funds was settled internally without destruction of the company.