Lil Wayne has settled two long-running lawsuits, The Blast reports and Pitchfork can confirm. The first was Wayne and Young Money’s breach of contract suit against Cash Money, Birdman and his brother Ronald “Slim” Williams, UMG Recordings, Inc., and Universal Music Group, Inc. The first documents in the suit were filed back in May 2015, and a notice for dismissal was filed on May 23, 2018 and obtained by Pitchfork. According to The Blast, Universal paid “well over $10 million” to settle the suit. In addition, Universal will reportedly release Wayne’s long-delayed Tha Carter V. His deal with Cash Money is allegedly “done” too, The Blast reports.

Lil Wayne’s second settlement was in a suit against Universal Music Group, Inc. and SoundExchange, Inc., originally filed in March 2016. Wayne had sought at least $40 million in damages, claiming that Universal has withheld profits he’s earned from the Young Money artists—such as Drake, Nicki Minaj, and Tyga—whom he’s discovered. (Young Money is an imprint of the Cash Money label, which Universal distributes.) The notice of dismissal, filed on May 25 and obtained by Pitchfork, does not indicate a monetary settlement amount beyond each side agreeing to “bear its own costs and attorneys’ fees.”

“Per our settlement agreement, the matter has been amicably resolved to the satisfaction of all parties,” Wayne’s attorney Ron Sweeney said in a statement to Billboard. “In terms of the particulars, we’re prohibited legally from saying anything further. I can say that my client is happy. He is his own man, a man that owns his assets, his music and himself. At some point, Wayne will let his fans know what’s going to happen next.”

Along with the legal battles, Lil Wayne and Birdman have publicly feuded often since December 2014 when Wayne claimed he was a “prisoner,” being forced to stay on Cash Money. The saga has involved a shooting, diss tracks, temporary truces, and suggestions of retirement from Wayne. In January 2017, Birdman also insisted that Tha Carter V is “definitely coming out.” Months later, somehow, disgraced ex-pharma CEO Martin Shkreli got involved, with the federal government asking him to relinquish a copy of Tha Carter V that he claimed to own.

Read “Lil Wayne’s Long Road to Tha Carter V” on the Pitch.