Porterville Recorder

Pabst says Millercoor­s is trying to put it out of business

- By IVAN MORENO

MILWAUKEE — Pabst Brewing Company and Millercoor­s are going to trial, with hipster favorite Pabst contending that Millercoor­s wants to put it out of business by ending a longstandi­ng partnershi­p through which it brews Pabst's beers.

The case has high stakes for Pabst, whose lawyers argue that the company's very existence relies on the partnershi­p with Chicago-based Millercoor­s, which produces, packages and ships nearly all its products, which include Pabst Blue Ribbon, Old Milwaukee, Natty Boh and Lone Star. Millercoor­s, meanwhile, says it's not obligated to continue brewing for Pabst and that Pabst doesn't want to pay enough to justify doing so.

The trial in Milwaukee County Circuit Court begins Monday and is scheduled through Nov. 30.

Pabst's attorneys have said in court documents and hearings that Millercoor­s LLC is lying about its brewing capacity to break away from Pabst and capture its share of the cheap beer market by disrupting Pabst's ability to compete. At a March hearing in which Millercoor­s tried to have the lawsuit dismissed, Pabst attorney Adam Paris said "stunning documents" obtained from Millercoor­s show that it went as far as hiring a consultant to "figure out ways to get rid of us." Millercoor­s has called that a mischaract­erization of the consultant's work.

The 1999 agreement between Millercoor­s and Pabst, which was founded in Milwaukee in 1844 but is now headquarte­red in Los Angeles, expires in 2020 but provides for two possible five-year extensions. The companies dispute how the extensions should be negotiated: Millercoor­s argues that it has sole discretion to determine whether it can continue brewing for Pabst, whereas Pabst says the companies must work "in good faith" to find a solution if Pabst wants to extend the agreement but Millercoor­s lacks the capacity.

Pabst needs 4 million to 4.5 million barrels brewed annually and claims Millercoor­s is its only option. It is seeking more than $400 million in damages and for Millercoor­s to be ordered to honor its contract.

During 2015 negotiatio­ns about extending the contract, Millercoor­s announced it would close its brewing facility in Eden, North Carolina, and that it eventually might have to shutter another facility in Irwindale, California. Pabst contends that Millercoor­s refused to provide any informatio­n to substantia­te its claim that it would no longer have the capacity to continue brewing Pabst's beers, and that it wouldn't consider leasing the Eden facility and would only sell it for an "astronomic­al" price.

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