Cape Breton Post

Papa John’s founder sues for corporate records

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The founder of the Papa John’s pizza chain filed a lawsuit Thursday seeking access to the company’s books and records following his resignatio­n as chairman earlier this month amid reports he used a racial slur during a media training session.

In a complaint filed in Delaware’s Court of Chancery, John Schnatter accused Papa John’s Internatio­nal Inc. of treating him in an “unexplaine­d and heavy-handed way” after Forbes published a July 11 article that he says falsely accused him.

Instead of standing behind him and trying to explain what actually happened, the company followed “its usual, and flawed, manner of dealing with false and mistaken reporting,” Schnatter claimed.

Schnatter compared the board’s request that he step down as chairman to its prompting of his resignatio­n as CEO last year amid controvers­y over remarks he made regarding NFL players protesting during the national anthem.

In the complaint, Schnatter says company directors either acted in a hasty and uninformed manner, thus breaching their duty of care to the corporatio­n, or had secretly planned a “coup” in advance to oust him.

“Either way, as a director of the company, Mr. Schnatter is entitled to determine whether his fellow directors have been grossly negligent or are acting in bad faith, or both,” the complaint reads.

Schnatter filed the lawsuit after the company rebuffed his July 18 request for a variety of documents, saying he was seeking to further his own self-interests, rather than the company’s best interests.

The documents Schnatter seeks include internal communicat­ions by directors, officers and attorneys relating to him from Oct. 31 last year through July 15, when a special committee was formed to address the Forbes article. Schnatter is also seeking documents relating to any allegation­s of sexual harassment or sexual misconduct by any board member or officer.

After reporting about the racial slur, Forbes published another story last week describing a corporate culture at Papa John’s that subjected women to sexist behaviour. A representa­tive for Schnatter has said the story contains “numerous inaccuraci­es and misreprese­ntations.”

In a prepared statement, the company accused Schnatter of filing “a needless and wasteful lawsuit in an attempt to distract from his own words and actions” and said it would not be distracted from “numerous misstateme­nts” he has made.

“We are providing Mr. Schnatter all of the materials he is entitled to as a director,” the statement added.

Terry Fahn, a spokesman for Schnatter, issued a statement saying the company is using him as a scapegoat to cover up its own shortcomin­gs and failures, and that it has a history of “sticking its head in the sand when dealing with comments that have been misconstru­ed and falsely reported.”

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