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Metro

Kreme filing in court fight

Krispy Kreme sure didn’t get its dollars out of these doughnuts.

The famed doughnut company is suing the operators of its last remaining New York City store, alleging trademark violation after moving to cancel the franchise agreement over $310,000-plus in unpaid fees and debts.

The fat-fried snack firm — which at one time had nine Big Apple outlets — also charges that Alexander McCourt and Errington “Chris” Walters supplied doughnuts to an “unauthorized” Krispy Kreme store in Asbury Park, NJ, and cooked up their own recipe when they ran out of “key proprietary Krispy Kreme ingredients.”

“Only a very limited number of Krispy Kreme employees have access to the recipe,” which is kept in a safe at the company’s headquarters in Winston-Salem, NC, the Manhattan federal suit says.

In court papers, the partners denied providing doughnuts to the alleged “rogue” operation in New Jersey, but McCourt admitted sending workers to buy flour and other ingredients when Krispy Kreme temporarily cut off their supplies last month.

At a court hearing, the partners’ lawyer argued that they “bought this territory for $1 when it was in the red to the tune of $2 million” and “spent hundreds of thousands of dollars of their own money” building up the business.

Lawyer Justin Klein also said Krispy Kreme’s demand for damages was “severely overstated and inflated.”

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