Wednesday, August 02, 2023

Nicki Minaj Sued Over Borrowed Clothing


Last year rapper Nicki Minaj was sued by a jewelry company for borrowing several pieces and returning them late and damaged [click here if you missed that]. 

Now a clothing company that lends items to celebrities is suing Nicki for not returning the items at all...

The legal documents obtained by RadarOnline.com reveal that 11eleven eleven11, LLC, is suing Minaj and several others for breach of contract after alleging that the singer and her team rented six items from the "high-end fashion design company" without paying the tab — and only brought one damaged item back that cost over $3k to repair.
The California-based company said it agreed to let Minaj borrow a silver jacket, silver boots, a black catsuit with silver crystals and chains, a nude catsuit with beige and gold crystals, a pink leotard with pink and clear crystals, and a black leotard with black feathers without paying "to accommodate" the rapper because it was the second time they rented to her and had no issue the first time around.
According to the lawsuit filed on Tuesday in Los Angeles, Minaj's people contacted 11eleven eleven11 to rent the above costumes on October 21, 2022, and said they "would only need the items for 24 hours." The company informed the defendants that Minaj could keep the items for 2-3 days and she'd only be charged a single-day rental fee of $6,750.
The company admitted it "agreed to allow defendants, each of them, to pay when the items were returned" — but alleged Minaj and her team "failed and refused to pay the agreed-upon rental rate" and "failed to return the items rented."
The company admitted it "agreed to allow defendants, each of them, to pay when the items were returned" — but alleged Minaj and her team "failed and refused to pay the agreed-upon rental rate" and "failed to return the items rented."
11eleven eleven11 also alleged that Minaj and her team never returned the five remaining items. The company is suing the Barbie World rapper for breach of oral contract, breach of implied covenant good faith and fair dealing, and conversion, claiming to have suffered monetary damages of "$5,475 per week from October 23, 2022, which continues to accrue on a weekly basis."

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