A bankruptcy judge signed off on a deal that will keep more than 15,000 of Eastman Kodak Co.'s (EKDKQ) photograph-printing kiosks in CVS Caremark Corp.'s (CVS) retail stores for the next four years.

Judge Allan L. Gropper of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan on Friday signed off on the settlement between the two companies, which Kodak announced last month.

Under the deal, Kodak's photo kiosks will remain in CVS pharmacy stores through 2016, ensuring the eventual buyer of Kodak's personalized imaging business doesn't lose the biggest customer for its kiosks. An existing agreement would have expired at the year's end.

"At this juncture, as the debtors are seeking to market their personalized imaging business, which includes the [kiosk] operations, for sale, maintaining a customer relationship with CVS is essential to maximizing value of the business," Kodak said in court papers.

Kodak said it has 105,000 photo-printing kiosks around the world, more than 15,000 of which are located throughout some 7,400 CVS stores in the U.S. Customers can upload, edit, share and print images at the kiosks, which Kodak began putting in retail stores in the early 1990s.

In addition to preserving CVS and Kodak's existing relationship, the deal also resolves competing claims between the two companies. Kodak agreed to reduce its $10.87 million claim by $4.5 million and will get $6.37 million from CVS. CVS will also get an $18.35 million unsecured claim against Kodak, payable under the latter's reorganization plan.

Once known for selling cameras and film to individual customers, Kodak is aiming through restructuring to focus on its commercial printing operations.

Kodak put its personalized imaging business and document-imaging up for sale in August once it became clear that the company's portfolio of digital-imaging patents wouldn't be the cash boon it had hoped. Together, the two business units contributed more than 40% of the company's 2011 revenues.

Kodak is still searching for a buyer for its patents, which number about 1,100. A sale, for at least $500 million, is a condition of a proposed $830 million financing package from a group of Kodak's second-lien bondholders.

Kodak has taken one step closer to meeting that condition: The Wall Street Journal reported last week that a group of unknown bidders has offered more than $500 million for the patents, though the company declined to comment.

Friday, the bankruptcy court will consider allowing Kodak to pay the proposed lenders fees and firm up the financing commitment.

The proposed lenders, including units of D.E. Shaw Group and Litespeed Management, beat out a rival financing offer of $793 million from a fellow bondholder group that included Centerbridge Partners and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM).

Kodak said it plans offer all of its second-lien bondholders the chance to participate in the new financing, a request that the court will review at a Dec. 19 hearing.

Kodak, of Rochester, N.Y., sought Chapter 11 protection in January.

(Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review covers news about distressed companies and those under bankruptcy protection. Go to http://dbr.dowjones.com)

Write to Jacqueline Palank at jacqueline.palank@dowjones.com.

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