Movie star Brad Pitt has managed to win the latest round in the long and complicated conflict with ex-wife Angelina Jolie, which involved their joint property, the French vineyard Chateau Miraval, estimated at 500 million dollars (461 million euros).
The 60-year-old actor has filed claims in California and Luxembourg courts to protect his stake in the famous vineyard after Jolie sold her stake in the company to Yuri Shefler, owner of Russian vodka company Stoli. Pitt argues that he should retain control over a majority stake in the property, based on his contribution and previous financial commitments.
Meanwhile, Jolie shed light on another aspect of the conflict, revealing that in 2016, Brad Pitt was violent, a fact that, according to her, prompted her to start the divorce process. In the new filing, Jolie’s lawyers make this claim: “While Jolie’s history of physical abuse by Pitt began long before the family’s September 2016 plane trip from France to Los Angeles, that flight marked the first time he molested the children, forcing Jolie to start divorce proceedings”.
According to Jolie’s legal team, if Pitt had agreed to buy her shares when she offered them, the current legal dispute would have been avoided. But it is claimed that Pitt has been against the deal for fear that sealed documents from their long private custody battle could be made public.
Pitt, who was never charged following the investigation into allegations of abuse during the flight on Thursday, September 14, 2016, has kept a lower profile regarding the allegations. He and Jolie, who separated in 2016 and officially divorced in 2019, are the parents of six children.
The couple had bought the Chateau Miraval vineyard property before their marriage, with Pitt initially owning 60% of the shares and Jolie 40%. They married in 2014 at the property, and as part of the celebrations, Pitt gifted Jolie an additional 10%, bringing the ratio to 50-50. After the split, Jolie sold her share, but now Pitt rejects the validity of this transaction and remains determined to maintain control over his 60% ownership of Chateau Miraval. /telegraph/
Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s fight over the French winery they once owned together is coming to a head and reigniting older conflicts, as new legal documents allege a “history of physical abuse of Jolie” on the part of Pitt prior to their fateful plane ride in 2016.
On Thursday, Jolie filed a motion with the Los Angeles Superior Court, a copy of which CNN has obtained, wherein she claims that she attempted to sell Pitt her stake in the Miraval winery and that their negotiations ultimately broke down after Pitt conditioned the sale on Jolie signing an NDA that “prohibited Jolie from speaking (other than in court) about Pitt’s abuse of Jolie and their children by attempting to tie Pitt’s personal reputation to Miraval’s business.”
This week’s new filing stems from Pitt’s 2022 lawsuit, in which he claimed that he and Jolie had an agreement that neither would sell their stake in the winery without the other’s consent. In a June 2023 filing, he alleged that Jolie’s sale of her stake in the winery was “vindictive” after an “adverse custody ruling.”
Jolie also claims in Thursda
y’s filing that Pitt’s “history of physical abuse of Jolie started well before the family’s September 2016 plane trip from France to Los Angeles,” but does not go into further detail about the alleged prior abuse.
“At trial, Jolie will prove through testimony, emails, photographs, and other evidence why Pitt was so concerned about his own misconduct that he blew up his own deal to purchase Jolie’s interest in Miraval because she refused to agree to his new, expansive NDA,” the filing reads.
Jolie claims in the filing on Thursday that she agreed to sign an NDA that was “limited to not disparaging Miraval’s wine business” as part of her initial deal to sell Pitt her stake in the winery, which they were close to finalizing at the time.
Pitt had previously claimed in his June 2023 amended complaint that after Jolie would not agree to sign his NDA, she proposed an even broader NDA that “would have provided that “[o]ther than in court pleadings or testimony, neither party shall directly or through a party’s representatives make in a public forum any derogatory remark about the other party.”
CNN has reached out to a representative for Pitt seeking comment on the new allegations outlined in Thursday’s filing.
“Mr. Pitt refused to purchase Ms. Jolie’s interest when she would not be silenced by his NDA. By refusing to buy her interest but then suing her, Mr. Pitt put directly at issue why that NDA was so important to him and what he hoped it would bury: his abuse of Ms. Jolie and their family,” Paul Murphy, Jolie’s attorney, told CNN in a statement on Thursday. “After eight months of delays, this motion asks the Court to force Mr. Pitt to finally produce that evidence.”
Jolie never ended up pressing charges against Pitt in relation to the 2016 altercation, according to the filing, because she believed “the best course was for Pitt to accept responsibility and help the family recover from the post-traumatic stress he caused.”
CNN previously reported that Pitt was not arrested or charged in connection with the 2016 incident after the FBI completed its investigation, and a representative for Pitt disputed Jolie’s account of that incident included in an October 2022 filing. Pitt’s representative said in a statement to CNN at the time that “Brad has accepted responsibility for what he did but will not for things he didn’t do.”
In October 2021, Jolie sold her half of the winery to Tenute del Mondo, a subsidiary of Stoli Group, controlled by Russian oligarch Yuri Shefler.
The ongoing legal proceedings and “Pitt’s unyielding attempts to control and punish Jolie continue to take a huge emotional and financial toll on her and their family,” the filing reads. “Jolie longs for their family to be able to heal and their children to be spared further pain and trauma, and truly wishes Pitt would want the same too.”
Jolie filed for divorce from Pitt in 2016. They were declared legally single in 2019, and a joint custody arrangement was established in 2021.
Legal proceedings as they pertain to the Miraval dispute also remain ongoing. The former couple purchased the country estate and winery in the south of France in 2008.