Brooks Brothers’ Billionaire Former Owners are Sued
Over Its Bankruptcy
By Jonathan
Stempel and Claudia Cristoferi | May 18, 2021
https://www.claimsjournal.com/news/national/2021/05/18/303811.htm
The
billionaire Italian family that until recently owned Brooks Brothers has been
accused in a lawsuit of driving the iconic apparel retailer into bankruptcy
instead of selling it, to avoid paying millions of dollars to an investor.
In a
complaint on Monday, Hong Kong clothing maker Tal Apparel said Claudio Del
Vecchio and his son Matteo pressured it to invest $100 million in Brooks
Brothers in 2016, and promised it would be “made whole” if they later sold the
retailer for less than $652 million.
The
complaint said the Del Vecchios lined up “several” bids for Brooks Brothers in
2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic, but did not pursue them because they would
owe Tal money, and even asked if Tal would take a “haircut” on any payment.
Instead,
the family put Brooks Brothers into Chapter 11 last July, making Tal’s original
investment “nearly worthless,” according to the complaint in Manhattan federal
court.
The
defendants include the Del Vecchios and Delfin SARL, a holding company for family
investments including eye wear giant EssilorLuxottica and Mediobanca. Claudio
Del Vecchio bought Brooks Brothers in 2001.
A person
close to the Del Vecchios said: “The allegations in the complaint are false and
we expect the court will dismiss the case.” Delfin, which owns a small Brooks
Brothers stake, declined to comment.
Tal is
seeking $100 million of damages, less sums received from Brooks Brothers’
bankruptcy estate.
The
70-year-old family-run firm said it makes one in six dress shirts sold in the
United States, and Brooks Brothers had been its largest customer.
Forbes
magazine said on Tuesday the Del Vecchio family is worth $27.9 billion.
Founded in
1818, Brooks Brothers is the oldest continually operating U.S. apparel brand,
known for its suits, preppy clothing, and dressing 40 U.S. presidents including
Abraham Lincoln, John F. Kennedy and Barack Obama.
A venture
backed by licensing company Authentic Brands Group and mall owner Simon
Property Group acquired Brooks Brothers in bankruptcy for $325 million.
The case is
Castle Apparel Ltd et al v Del Vecchio et al, U.S. District Court, Southern
District of New York, No. 21-04406.
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