The 96-year-old patriarch of a clan that long owned prominent Minnesota printer Japs-Olson claims the company cut off his health insurance and broke other aspects of a truce that settled a family dispute 20 years ago.
On one side of the squabble is William Beddor, former leader of the St. Louis Park printing and direct mail company, and four of his children. On the other side are five more of Beddor’s children, including former Japs-Olson CEO Michael Beddor.
Two decades ago, the family squared off in court over control of Japs-Olson, which is now owned by a private equity firm. Last month, William Beddor and his camp claimed the rival family faction broke a 2004 settlement agreement by changing three life insurance policies and the elder Beddor’s health care arrangement.
“Mike Beddor treated his father as an outcast stranger who had no rights and caused (Japs-Olson) to breach its obligations of good faith and fair dealing in numerous respects,” William Beddor claimed in the recently filedbreach-of-contract suit in Hennepin County District Court.
William Beddor and his co-plaintiff children have asked the court to compel arbitration to settle the issue privately.
Japs-Olson did not respond to requests for comment. The 117-year-old company employs 600 people at a 700,000-square-foot facility on Excelsior Boulevard, according to its website. The company has about $200 million in annual revenue.
William Beddor began working at Japs-Olson in his twenties and in 1957 became the company’s CEO, a job he held until 1977. He remained chairman of Japs-Olson until 1995. Beddor owned 70% of the company’s stock, which he transferred to his children in the 1990s. Within a few years, the family was in turmoil.
William Beddor and four of his children — the same ones who are co-plaintiffs in the current dispute — sought to oust Japs-Olson’s management, including Michael Beddor. They claimed they’d been effectively squeezed out of the company, and that William Beddor had been “unlawfully removed” as a director.