Metro

Possible truce in Drake-Chris Brown club brawl suit

There may finally be a truce in the five lawsuits stemming from the 2012 fight-heard-round-the-world between Chris Brown and Drake over Rihanna at the SoHo hotspot W.i.P.

W.I.P nightclub at 34 Vandam St. in NYC

Over a dozen attorneys crowded into Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Anil Singh’s chambers Wednesday for a hastily called settlement conference.

The judge closed the doors to the press, saying the talks must be done in private to assure a resolution.

The parties were originally scheduled to hear arguments from club owners on why the judge should toss the cases.

Instead lawyers for club goers injured in the melee, including NBA star Tony Parker and French male model Romain Julien, met in a jury room with their adversaries to strike a deal for over an hour Wednesday morning before meeting with the judge.

But even with a settlement not all of the club’s legal woes will be over — another Manhattan judge ruled against the 150 Varick St. hot-spot’s request that it be allowed to stay open even though the Dept. of Building’s yanked its certificate of operation in  July.

The inside of W.I.P nightclub after the brawl between Chris Brown and Drake June, 2012

In a follow up inspection by the Mayor’s Office for Special Enforcement in September the club was slapped with more violations for operating without the proper permit. The Fire Department then ordered the club to remove drapes that were blocking exit doors.

Club operators filed suit against the city on Sept. 17 so they could stay in business while applying for a new operating permit.

Reps for the club did not immediately return calls.