St Emilion chateaux take Classification to court March 1, 2007
Jane Anson in Bordeaux, and Adam Lechmere
Three St Emilion chateaux are taking their cue from the Cru Bourgeois debacle and going to court to have their classifications overturned.
Following a Bordeaux court's decision Tuesday to annul the 2003 Cru Bourgeois classification, decanter.com has learnt that three chateaux declassified in last year's Saint Emilion Classification have also filed suits.
Demotion in the ten-yearly St Emilion classification can knock at least a third off the price of the wine. It can also mean loss of distribution networks and devaluation of land. Speculators aggressively try to buy up stock of demoted properties at ludicrously low prices, one insider told decanter.com.
Chateau Villemaurine, Chateau Cadet Bon and Chateau Guadet-Saint-Julien, three of the 11 declassified properties, all claim the judgments were unsound.
The reasons are similar to those against the cru bourgeois classification namely that some members of the jury were partisan.
Among the 10 jury members were two courtiers who naturally had dealings with Saint Emilion chateaux and a Bordeaux lawyer who was an advisor to one of the top-ranked chateaux in the appellation.
The three chateaux have also criticised the fact that they were given no reasons as to why they were declassified, and were not given the opportunity to contest the decision.
Guy Pétrus Lignac of Chateau Guadet-Saint-Julien told decanter.com, 'The question is, was everything done within the rules? There are clearly many things that could be improved with the way the decision-making process was carried out.
'This property has always been classified and has a wonderful terroir so I was just enormously surprised. I had the impression of being in an airplane, full of fuel, in full flight, and someone cut the gas without any warning.'
At the same time, St Emilion observers say that in many cases they were not surprised by some of the listings. Chateau Villemaurine, for example, 'has long been ripe for demotion,' one well-placed insider said.
Similarly, the presence of courtiers and other potential vested interests on the jury is not unusual. Jurors must have detailed knowledge of St Emilion and its wines so it is inevitable that they will have interests in certain chateaux.
Another perhaps more legitimate gripe is that a property must submit the ten most recent vintages to the commission.
But in the case of a recent change of ownership, since any improvement in quality will only be evident in the most recent vintages, the owner could be penalised for mediocre wines for which he was not responsible.
This may be the case with Cadet-Bon, demoted from Grand Cru Classé even though new owner Guy Richard, who has spent a fortune renovating the property, has only been in charge since 2001.
Have your say... To post your comment on this story, email us at news@decanter.com, making sure the relevant headline is in the subject field
Either you need to be congratulated on being hip on the use of English or someone needs to be advised that decanter.com hasn't "learnt" whatever it said to have learned in the second paragraph.
Richard Smith
Only in France! At the end of the day, if the wine's still good, people who want St-Emilion will pay the price. If not, they'll eventually sink anyway. The change of ownership issue does need to be addressed: in this case, they should submit just the vintages they made (although the authorities would probably argue it's the terroir that counts!).
Richard James
Register on decanter.com absolutely free for news alerts delivered direct to your email inbox, and our fortnightly newsletter with advance notice of whats coming up in Decanter magazine, offers, competitions and more.
PLUS registration is a one-stop shop for the Decanter magazine Archive and Decanter Fine Wine Tracker.