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This is an archive article published on July 25, 2008

Ruling turns a village of winemakers on itself

For Francois Despagne, it was the challenge of his lifetime. His family owned the same vineyard in this southwestern part of France for seven generations.

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For Francois Despagne, it was the challenge of his lifetime. His family owned the same vineyard in this southwestern part of France for seven generations. But in 1996, in the reclassification of St-Emilion wines that occurs roughly every 10 years, Chateau Grand Corbin-Despagne was downgraded from grand cru classe, one of the highest ratings.

The family disagreed, but did not challenge the ruling in court. “When you’re declassified, you’re the ugly little duckling,” Despagne said. “People lose faith in you.” The blow is also financial.

One Bordeaux broker called him then and said: “You’re in trouble, you’re declassified. I’ll buy your stock for half price,” Despagne recalled, still disgusted.

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Despagne went to work. He persuaded his family and the banks to invest some $2 million to modernise the business. More important, he dug 150 holes to analyse the soil on his 66 acres and identified 53 parcels. Where the soil was richest, he grew grass between the rows of vines to force the roots to dig deeper. He put in 27 new vats to make smaller batches, and reduced yield by 25 percent to get a more concentrated wine.

In September 2006, his labour and his family’s faith were rewarded. Although the new classification downgraded 11 other chateaus, it restored Grand Corbin-Despagne to grand cru classe, and Despagne printed new labels, brochures, corks, capsules and wooden cases. The family celebrated, the workers had a huge party.

But then the bomb went off this year. On July 1, an administrative court, hearing an extended appeal from seven of the newly declassified chateaus, threw out the entire 2006 classification — and threw Despagne and others who had been promoted into fury and confusion.

The ruling has set families against one another in this beautiful medieval village of 2,500 people who know one another, marry one another and go to mass together. Declared a protected site by UNESCO in 1999, St-Emilion, where the Romans cultivated wine grapes, is dominated by a church and a prison tower built in the 13th century.

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Now this little area, which contains 770 winegrowers on 13,800 acres classified as St-Emilion and St-Emilion grand cru, produces some 32.1 million bottles a year of some of Bordeaux’s finest and most expensive wines. It represents collective busines that combines science, farming, public relations, taste and tough tactics.

And now, judicial and commercial confusion. The court agreed with the plaintiffs that, because the already classified wines were tasted at a different time than the candidate wines, and because some domains were visited and some not, the classification was “arbitrary” — even though the same procedure had been followed in 1996.

Faced with no classification for the 2006 vintage, which was just being bottled, the French Legislature restored the 1996 classification for three years, or until all court appeals finish or a new classification is made. That is fine for most, but it means agony for Despagne and the others promoted in 2006 who had their reward ripped away.

The ruling punished two other chateaus, Pavie Macquin and Troplong Mondot. They were elevated in 2006 to the rarefied air of premier grand cru classe B, which brings even more rarefied prices. Xavier Pariente, who owns Troplong Mondot with his spouse, is beside himself. “We are the laughing stock of everyone; everyone feels this injustice that we are living,” Pariente said.

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