Brad Pitt Source Says Angelina Jolie's Winery Sale Intended to 'Punish' Him amid Divorce: 'Collateral Damage' (Exclusive)

A source close to Brad Pitt tells PEOPLE that Angelina Jolie "chose to deliberately disregard their agreement" in selling her share of their winery

Daniele Venturelli/Getty, Elisabetta A. Villa/Getty  Angelina Jolie in Turin, Italy, on Nov. 24, 2024; Brad Pitt in Venice, Italy, on Sept. 1, 2024

Daniele Venturelli/Getty, Elisabetta A. Villa/Getty

Angelina Jolie in Turin, Italy, on Nov. 24, 2024; Brad Pitt in Venice, Italy, on Sept. 1, 2024

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt have finalized their protracted divorce, but legal hurdles remain.

Jolie's actions around their ongoing battle over Château Miraval have caused "tremendous collateral damage to those in and around the family," says a source close to Pitt.

On Monday, Dec. 30, following the news that the former couple reached a settlement, a source close to the actress told PEOPLE that Jolie, 49, hopes Pitt can now "move on," citing the winery lawsuit: "Sadly, until [Pitt] drops his lawsuit, this family will not have the peace and healing they so very much desire and deserve."

But a source close to Pitt, 61, is calling the Maria star’s move in 2021 to sell her share of the French winery they co-owned a way to “punish” her ex.

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“Brad built an extraordinary, increasingly valuable business and she chose to deliberately disregard their agreement,” the latter insider tells PEOPLE.

Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic, MICHEL GANGNE/AFP via Getty Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt in Hollywood, California, on Nov. 5, 2015; Château Miraval

Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic, MICHEL GANGNE/AFP via Getty

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt in Hollywood, California, on Nov. 5, 2015; Château Miraval

Related: Angelina Jolie's 8-Year Divorce Battle with Brad Pitt Has Been 'Horrendous' (Exclusive Source)

In February 2022, Pitt alleged in a lawsuit that Jolie made the sale despite a prior agreement that neither would do so unless the other person approved.

“Instead of completing negotiations for him to buy her out and keeping Miraval fully in the family and ending the battles,” says the Pitt source, Jolie “instead chose to sell to a total stranger not aligned with the company’s vision so she could take the money for herself and punish him.”

After her $67 million sale of 50 percent of the Château Miraval estate to Tenute del Mondo, the wine division the Stoli Group, Jolie responded to Pitt’s filing with a countersuit in September 2022 in which she stated the Wolfs star was "waging a vindictive war against" her, later calling his legal actions “part of a problematic pattern." She has maintained that the couple did not have "a secret, unwritten, unspoken contract" requiring them to ask for consent before selling shares of the winery.

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In November, Pitt notched a win in the winery battle when Jolie's motions to dismiss the lawsuit were rejected and the case inched closer to trial with potential proof that there was a written agreement between the former couple about selling, which a Pitt source said "demonstrates the legitimacy of his claims."

MICHEL GANGNE/AFP via Getty Château Miraval
MICHEL GANGNE/AFP via Getty Château Miraval

Pitt and Jolie, who share six childrenMaddox, 23, Pax, 21, Zahara, 19, Shiloh, 18, and twins Vivienne and Knox, 16 — separated in 2016 after 12 years together and two years of marriage.

Jolie’s filing came days after a private jet flight in which Pitt allegedly was "verbally abusive" and "physical." The actor was not charged by authorities after investigations at the time and Jolie declined to press charges.

Jolie's legal team has said that Pitt refused to buy her out of the Miraval business because she didn't want to sign a non-disclosure agreement "designed to force her silence about his abuse and cover-up," according to court documents.

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Pitt’s lawyers have since won a motion compelling Jolie to produce eight years' worth of non-disclosure agreements in an attempt to illustrate that Jolie herself used the kind of NDAs that she objected to sign in 2021.

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Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty, Eric Charbonneau/Apple TV+ via Getty  Angelina Jolie in Venice, Italy, on Aug. 29, 2024; Brad Pitt in Venice, Italy, on Sept. 27, 2024

Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty, Eric Charbonneau/Apple TV+ via Getty

Angelina Jolie in Venice, Italy, on Aug. 29, 2024; Brad Pitt in Venice, Italy, on Sept. 27, 2024

Related: Why Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt's Divorce Took 8 Years: Legal Experts Explain the 'Perfect Storm' (Exclusive)

On Monday, a Jolie source told PEOPLE that she “will continue to stand up to” Pitt, and that she hopes Pitt will "stop attacking her."

A Pitt source rejects that characterization, pointing to the Miraval proceedings.

"Sadly, the other side has consistently engaged in similar one sided attacks for the past eight years, including a never-ending distortion of facts and projecting their own behavior onto others, causing tremendous collateral damage to those in and around the family," the Pitt source told PEOPLE on Tuesday, Dec. 31.

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Jolie's divorce attorney James Simon of Hersh Mannis said on Monday that the actress has been "focused on finding peace and healing for their family, adding, "Frankly, Angelina is exhausted, but she is relieved this one part is over."

Read the original article on People