06.05.2012 14:17
Comments: 0
Categories: Human Interest
Tags: pepsi pepsico lawsuit heirs richard riche
(Reuters)The heirs of Richard Ritchie, the man who developed the formula for Pepsi-Cola in 1931, sued Pepsico Inc
on Friday, saying they wanted to erase any doubt that his documents
were theirs to share with historians, collectors and film producers.
A lawsuit filed in Manhattan federal court by Ritchie's daughter, Joan Ritchie Silleck, and his son, Robert Ritchie,
said they wanted to "tell their father's extraordinary life story
without interference or the threat of litigation" from Pepsi.
A spokesman for the Purchase, New York-based company could not immediately be reached to comment.
The lawsuit asks the court for undisclosed damages for what it called Pepsi's "improper interference with their rights in the Ritchie invention and the Ritchie documents."
It said the documents had been
"physically and legally" controlled by a member of the Ritchie family
for more than 50 years. The estate of Ritchie's late son, Richard, was
also identified as a plaintiff.
Richard Ritchie was a chemist with the Loft Candy Company when he developed the Pepsi-Cola
formula for Loft in 1931. He stayed with Pepsi-Cola after it became
independent, but joined Cantrell & Cochrane Company in 1962. Ritchie
retired in 1982 and died in January 1985.
According to the lawsuit "the
heirs are the rightful owners of the Ritchie invention because, inter
alia, Pepsi failed to require that Mr. Ritchie transfer ownership to
the Ritchie invention to Pepsi despite knowing that he had developed
the Pepsi-Cola formula while working as an employee of another
company."
The case is Joan Ritchie Silleck, the estate of Richard James Ritchie and Robert Ritchie v Pepsico Inc, in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, No. 12-3556
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