Lawyers for the rapper and entrepreneur asked a
New York state judge to dismiss Jay-Z's Nov. 28 lawsuit in
Manhattan to halt the arbitration related to his 2007 sale of
the Rocawear clothing brand to Iconix for about $204 million.
Jay-Z, whose legal name is Shawn Carter, had complained that
arbitration would be unfair because only two of the more than
200 arbitrators proposed by the American Arbitration Association
(AAA) identified as African-American and had no conflicts of
interest.
He said that lack of candidates left him with "no choice at
all," constituted racial discrimination under New York law, and
voided his earlier agreement to arbitrate with Iconix.
But Jay-Z's lawyer, Alex Spiro, told Justice Barry Ostrager of
Manhattan Supreme Court on Wednesday that the AAA has allowed
the dispute to be heard by a three-arbitrator panel instead of a
single arbitrator, and offered five African-American candidates.
Spiro also said the AAA agreed to consider Jay-Z's list of 11
African-American candidates to handle big arbitrations.
On those bases, Jay-Z is "content to proceed with the
arbitration," and wants Ostrager to end the lawsuit even though
Iconix is still defending against it, Spiro said.
Lawyers for Iconix did not immediately respond to requests for
comment.
The New York-based company has dozens of brands including
Danskin, Joe Boxer, London Fog, Mossimo, Pony and Starter.
Iconix has written off almost the entire value of the Rocawear
brand, and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has been
probing its writedowns.
Last May, a federal judge ordered Jay-Z to testify in the probe.
The SEC wanted to ask him about his personal involvement with
the Rocawear brand.
Jay-Z, 49, is famous for songs including "Hard Knock Life," "99
Problems" and "Big Pimpin," and is married to the pop star
Beyonce.
The case is Carter et al v Iconix Brand Group Inc et al, New
York State Supreme Court, New York County, No. 655894/2018.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Bill
Berkrot)
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