Tattersall Distilling blames hacked payment system for alleged $120K in missing rent

In a hearing Wednesday, a Hennepin County judge agreed to give Tattersall more time to investigate before the eviction case potentially goes to trial, as long as it pays its January rent.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
January 24, 2024 at 10:52PM
A bartender mixed beverages for guests at the bar at Tattersall Distillery in 2019 in northeast Minneapolis. (Mark Vancleave)

In an eviction hearing Wednesday about alleged unpaid rent, Tattersall Distilling claimed it actually had paid its northeast Minneapolis landlord the past five months of expenses and blamed the payment system for the missing money, totaling more than $100,000.

“It appears that our landlord’s IT system was hacked and caused issues for the landlord in receiving our payment,” Tattersall co-founder Jon Kreidler said in an email Wednesday. “We are working with authorities to attempt straightening things out and getting the dispute resolved.”

Mark Thieroff, an attorney for landlord JGS Management, argued the popular distillery still owed the sum.

“I’m not convinced we have a relevant factual issue,” he told Hennepin County District Judge Christian Sande on Wednesday afternoon.

JGS Management filed the eviction case on Jan. 9 against Tattersall Cos. alleging that as of Jan. 5, the distillery hadn’t paid $121,717.64 in rent, real estate taxes, late fees and other monthly expenses since August.

JGS and Tattersall initially entered a lease agreement for the 8,824-square-foot space at 1620 Central Av. NE. on Dec. 31, 2014. They signed another lease on June 23, 2016, for 5,494 more square feet, the complaint said. The garage-like warehouse encompasses the back of the building and houses the distillery and a craft cocktail room with some outdoor seating.

JGS Management asked in the complaint for Tattersall to remove its property from the site and to restrain from “committing any waste” on the premises. The landlord, which also has an office at the same location, wants Tattersall to cover the costs and legal fees as well as any relief the court deems warranted.

Tattersall Distilling in northeast Minneapolis. (Bre McGee)

Christopher Renz, Tattersall’s attorney, told the judge Wednesday the company had been reluctant to pay January’s rent given the disappearance of the other payments. Renz told the judge that he had a check for January rent and other expenses that he could give the landlord’s attorneys this week.

Sande granted Renz’ request for more time to research the matter as long as Tattersall pays its January rent and meets other lease terms. The eviction case could go to a court trial in March.

Tattersall debuted at the Northeast location in 2015 and then opened a new Wisconsin facility in 2021, complete with a restaurant. The northeast Minneapolis-based company then shifted most production to the new “destination distillery” in River Falls that year. The restaurant, which St. Paul-based Morrissey Hospitality operates, was a first for Tattersall.

The distillery’s founders said the maze of liquor laws in Minnesota led them to look to Wisconsin for expansion because of more relaxed restrictions on liquor production.

Tattersall has also opened the Cocktail Room at 18th and Central at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.

Co-founder Dan Oskey became a well-known Twin Cities bartender after stints at Strip Club Meat & Fish and Hola Arepa before launching Tattersall with childhood friend Kreidler, who holds an MBA from the University of Chicago, according to the company’s website.

about the writer

Gita Sitaramiah

Consumer reporter

Gita Sitaramiah was the Star Tribune consumer reporter.

See More

More from Business

Dr. Shruti K. Gohil, associate medical director for epidemiology and infection prevention at UCI Medical Center, holds a dose of MMR, the vaccine against measles, mumps and rubella. (Ana Venegas/Orange County Register/TNS) ORG XMIT: 1163174 ORG XMIT: MIN1501282305177647 ORG XMIT: MIN1502031200399233

Health officials say the recent outbreak of the highly contagious virus looked bad this summer, but optimism is growing they may have contained it.

Light and dark arrows pointing in opposite directions over a file photo of white and black school children in the 1950s.
card image