Ex-Yankee Jeter faces fraud trial in
dispute with underwear maker
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[July 20, 2016]
By Tom Hals
WILMINGTON, Del. (Reuters) - Former New
York Yankees baseball star Derek Jeter must face a trial over claims he
defrauded the Swedish company that makes $100 Frigo brand underwear out
of millions of dollars, a judge ruled on Tuesday.
The former All-Star shortstop has been locked in a legal dispute with
RevolutionWear, a maker of luxury underwear that brought Jeter on as a
director and investor with a 15 percent stake in 2011. The company
alleges that he reneged on a promise to promote the brand and publicize
his role as co-founder.
The judge, Vice Chancellor Sam Glasscock, found that Jeter must defend
allegations that he fraudulently induced RevolutionWear into an
agreement by concealing terms of an endorsement deal with Nike Inc.
Tuesday's ruling clears the way for a trial over allegations that Jeter
fraudulently induced RevolutionWear to bring him on its board, and that
Jeter breached his fiduciary duty as a director to act in the interests
of the company's investors.
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The judge on Delaware's Court of Chancery did dismiss some claims
against Jeter, who played 20 seasons for the Yankees before retiring in
2014, including allegations he tried to depress the value of the company
to acquire it on the cheap.
RevolutionWear claims the business has struggled and potential
investment has lagged, and that Jeter has cost the company at least $30
million.
Jeter, who resigned from the company's board last year, has countered
that he has fully complied with the original agreements, and wanted an
early dismissal of the lawsuit.
Jeter and RevolutionWear did not immediately respond to requests for
comment made through their public relation firms.
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Yankees former player Derek Jeter on the sideline prior to the game
between the Michigan Wolverines and the Brigham Young Cougars at
Michigan Stadium. Rick Osentoski-USA TODAY Sports
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RevolutionWear alleges that Jeter waited until two years after he
joined the board and had become an investor to tell the company that
his Nike deal barred him from publicly backing the Frigo brand.
Glasscock also said Jeter must defend claims that he acted in bad
faith as a director, breaching his duty to the company's investors
by telling them he would publicly announce his role as co-founder
and investor, which he never did.
(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; additional reporting
by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder and David
Gregorio)
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