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Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Knitting Factory CEO wins battle for control of Pappy & Harriet’s

After a years-long dispute in court, the chief executive of concert promoter Knitting Factory has prevailed to take control of the beloved Pioneertown music venue Pappy & Harriet’s.

The ruling in Los Angeles Superior Court resolves a contentious fight over one of SoCal’s most iconic music venues, a rustic roadhouse on a former movie set that has hosted countless acts from Paul McCartney and Robert Plant to Lana Del Rey and Jamie xx.

Since 2021, Knitting Factory’s chief executive, Morgan Margolis, and partners Stephen Hendel and John Chapman were locked in a bitter dispute with the venue’s co-partners, Joseph Moresco and Lisa Elin.

In 2021, after Moresco and Elin changed the locks on the venue and blocked Margolis from the venue’s operations, Margolis and his partners sued the couple, alleging breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty and other charges, and asked that Moresco and Elin be removed as general partners.

The jury found that Margolis and partners “had the authority to remove Moresco Holdings as the general partner of the partnership. Despite that removal, Defendants proceeded to utilize partnership assets.”

“The decision confirmed that the Margolis Group was always supposed to control the partnership, the venue operations, and the talent booking and was wrongfully ousted without basis,” Knitting Factory Entertainment said in a statement.

People seated at the bar at Pappy & Harriet's in Pioneertown.

The bar at Pappy & Harriet’s in Pioneertown.

(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

Margolis added, “We pride ourselves on decades of successful and meaningful partnerships and industry relationships built on trust and integrity. We are pleased that the judge and jury confirmed what we have always known to be true: we were victimized by people who tried to take more than they bargained for.

“We are excited to move forward with what we set out to do three years ago when we bought this iconic venue that is so special to so many people,” he continued. “We look forward to engaging with the community at large as we fully embed ourselves within the high desert community to honor Pappy + Harriet’s rich history.”

Representatives for Moresco and Elin did not immediately respond to requests for comment. In 2021, Moresco and Elin’s attorney Bryan Freedman described the suit as “nothing but a hostile takeover attempt by New York billionaire Stephen Hendel. Hendel is completely rewriting the case in his latest plot to steal Pappy & Harriet’s from the community.”

The fate of the venue underlined deep worries about pandemic-era gentrification of the high desert, as big-money real estate and entertainment firms jockeyed for control of desirable properties and development opportunities.

Pappy and Harriet’s namesake owners, Claude “Pappy” Allen and wife Harriet, bought the club in 1982. Pappy died in 1994; in 2003, Harriet sold the bar to Robyn Celia and Linda Krantz. In April 2021, the various investors including Margolis closed a $2.5-million transaction to lease and operate the venue.

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