A judge has reportedly sided with Olivia Wilde amid her custody battle with ex-fiance Jason Sudeikis over their two children.
On Wednesday, a judge dismissed the custody petition filed by Sudeikis and agreed that their case should be heard in Los Angeles and not in New York, which Sudeikis considered home for the family through the year, according to court documents obtained by People Magazine on Wednesday.
The petition had been at the center of headlines after the papers were served to Wilde publicly while she was onstage during a presentation of her upcoming film "Don't Worry Darling" at CinemaCon in Las Vegas.
Wilde and Sudeikis share two children: Otis, 8, and Daisy, 5. The former couple co-starred in "Drinking Buddies" and began dating in 2011 before getting engaged two years later. They split in November 2020.
MORE: Jason Sudeikis opens up about his split from Olivia WildeWilde is currently dating singer Harry Styles, who stars in "Don't Worry Darling."
A source told "Good Morning America" in April that Sudeikis was unaware of the manner and timeline of the delivery of the documents.
But now, Wilde is accusing Sudeikis of "embarrassing [her] professionally."
"Jason's actions were clearly intended to threaten me and catch me off guard," Wilde alleged in her recent filing, obtained by the Daily Mail. "He could have served me discreetly, but instead he chose to serve me in the most aggressive manner possible."
"The fact that Jason would embarrass me professionally and put our personal conflict on public display in this manner is extremely contrary to our children's best interests," she added.
In response, Sudeikis said that he "deeply regret[s] what happened" and reiterated he had no control over it.
MORE: Jason Sudeikis 'had no prior knowledge' Olivia Wilde would be served with custody papers on stage: Source"Olivia's talk was an important event for Olivia, both professionally and personally, and I am very, very sorry that the incident marred her special moment," Sudeikis apologized in new court documents.
While co-parenting between the two seemed amicable, things have gotten complicated as they figure out where their kids will grow up.
Attorney Sara Singer, who represents neither Wilde nor Sudeikis, says what's at stake in the now high-profile custody case is which laws apply to it.
"Different laws in different states are going to affect how a timesharing schedule is established, how child support is established," Singer said.