A California judge has dismissed a lawsuit brought against Will Smith by his former touring violinist, closing at least one chapter of a legal dispute that drew significant attention when it was first filed late last year. The ruling, issued on May 4 by Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael Shultz, determined that the claims lacked sufficient legal grounding to proceed.
The lawsuit was filed in December by Brian King Joseph, who performed with Smith during the actor and rapper’s Based on a True Story 2025 concert tour. Joseph alleged that he was let go from the tour in retaliation for reporting a deeply unsettling incident that occurred at his Las Vegas hotel room during the first leg of the run. He claimed he returned to find a handwritten note addressed to him along with belongings that did not belong to him, an experience that left him shaken and fearful.
What the judge decided
After reporting the matter to hotel security and tour management, Joseph said he was removed from the tour before its next leg and replaced by another violinist. He argued that the timing of his dismissal was no coincidence and that it amounted to unlawful retaliation by Smith and his company, Treyball Studios Management.
Judge Shultz did not see it that way. In his ruling, the judge found that Joseph did not adequately describe conduct severe enough to establish a hostile or abusive working environment, nor did the alleged incident reflect a pattern of harassment that would meet the legal standard required. With those findings in place, none of Joseph’s claims were allowed to survive the challenge brought by Smith’s legal team.
Joseph’s attorneys have been given 30 days to amend the lawsuit before the case is formally terminated, leaving open the possibility that the legal fight is not entirely over.
Who is Brian King Joseph
For those unfamiliar with the violinist at the center of the case, Joseph has a compelling story that long predates his time on Smith’s tour. A self-taught musician who began playing at the age of 4, he built a dedicated following through years of passionate performance before earning national recognition on a major stage.
In 2018, Joseph appeared on Season 13 of America’s Got Talent, delivering a high-energy violin performance that stopped the show. His cover of the dance track Lean On earned him a standing response from the panel and a remarkably warm reaction from judge Heidi Klum. The performance propelled him deep into the competition, where he ultimately finished in third place behind acrobatic group Zurcaroh and magician Shin Lim.
That visibility helped establish Joseph as one of the more distinctive performers in his field, which made his eventual role on Smith’s tour a natural fit and his sudden departure from it all the more striking to those who had followed his career.
What comes next
With the dismissal now on record, the immediate legal pressure on Smith and Treyball Studios Management has eased. Whether Joseph’s legal team chooses to refile with amended claims remains to be seen, but the clock is now running on that decision.
For Smith, the ruling arrives as he continues to rebuild his public profile following a turbulent few years. The outcome offers at least a measure of relief on the legal front, even as questions surrounding the original incident and the circumstances of Joseph’s departure are unlikely to fade entirely from public conversation.

