Jérôme Bocuse, son of France’s iconic chef Paul Bocuse, is suing an elite cooking school founded by his late father, for allowing his father’s name to be used in undignified commercial ventures, such as airline food, which would not grace his father's table.
The Paul Bocuse Institute is being sued by Jérôme Bocuse in a case which should appear in French courts in 2023. The stakes are high in this battle, as it has been alleged that Bocuse is demanding a fee for the use of the family name that his too high, and which may prove to be an existential threat to the institute, according to Le Figaro.
The institute, which has borne the name of its founder for twenty years, claims that it has an agreement in place with Paul Bocuse to use the family name until 2037. However, Jérôme claims that the institute goes far beyond the usage rights imagined by his father, and squanders the family name on commercial ventures his father would never have approved of. Bocuse has been fighting the issue for three years.