UpdatedĀ as of 7/20/23, 4:41pm ET
The Root received the following statement from a Diageo spokesperson in response to our 7/19 story:
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This is a business dispute and should not be recast as anything other than that. We have exercised our contractual rights to terminate the marketing services agreement in place for CĆ®roc and begin the wind down of the DeLeón joint venture. Our actions are consistent with our desire to protect the significant investment we have made in both brands and their future growth. Mr. Combsā longstanding bad faith actions, false accusations, and breaches of contract overwhelmingly support Diageoās justified decision to sever ties.ā
Diddy told yāall that he wonāt stop ā especially when it comes to his businesses. Weāve been covering the ongoing beef between the artist/entrepreneur and Diageo, the company he has partnered with on CĆ®roc Vodka and DeLeón Tequila…and itās showing no signs of stopping.
In May 2023, the āIāll Be Missing Youā rapper went to court to call out the billion-dollar beverage company for what he described as neglect, racism, and unequal treatment in the distribution, production, and sales of his co-owned DeLeón Tequila brand. Combsā legal action resulted in Diageoās decision to take steps to end their partnership.
But you had to know that wouldnāt be the end of it. And now, in a July 19 filing with the New York County Clerk, Combs is accusing Diageo of āillegal and outrageous retaliationā in response to his taking their fight to court.
āThe message is clear ā if you dare to shed light on Diageoās conduct, you will be punished,ā the filing, shared with The Root states.
Combs continues to stand by his actions, citing Diageoās neglect as the reason DeLeónās market share is a fraction of their other tequila brands, Casamigos and Don Julio.
āDiageo did not live up to its promises of and obligations to provide equal treatment. Despite Diageo routinely exerting significant market power over large distributors, Diageo continues to improperly position DeLeón as a niche product for the āurbanā community. As a result, DeLeónās distribution remains in the single digits, while Casamigos and Don Julio are in over one-third of retail outlets,ā the filing, shared with The Root, states.
Combsā allegations of retaliation include Diageoās blocking Combs from delivering a planned speech at a distributor event; banning Combs and Combs Wines, which co-owns DeLeón Tequila, from speaking with distributors and retailers about the brand; and attempts to end their partnership with Combs on both DeLeón Tequila and CĆ®roc Vodka.
Hereās more from the filing:
āMr. Combs repeatedly raised Diageoās unequal treatment of his brands but received only false assurances and no curative actions. Facing a multi-billion-dollar company who refused to comply with its contractual obligations, Combs Wines had no choice but to file this case as a last resort to bring Diageo into compliance with the āEqual Treatmentā provision. As permitted by the partiesā contract, Combs Wines seeks forward-looking equitable relief in this suit.ā
Diageoās relationship with Combs started in 2007, when the company approached him about tapping into his marketing and product development expertise to boost sales of their then-struggling vodka brand, CĆ®roc. After turning things around in less than two years, the pair decided to leverage their successful collab and entered a 50/50 partner on DeLeón in 2013. But things turned sour this year, when Combs took steps to get the company to put equal resources behind his brand.
Rather than ending his business relationship with Diageo, Combs is asking the court to enforce the āequal treatmentā clause in their contract and keep their successful partnership in tact.
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