Boule v. Hutton

138 F. Supp. 2d 491, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3654, 2001 WL 314633
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 30, 2001
Docket97 Civ. 144(MGC)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 138 F. Supp. 2d 491 (Boule v. Hutton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boule v. Hutton, 138 F. Supp. 2d 491, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3654, 2001 WL 314633 (S.D.N.Y. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

CEDARBAUM, District Judge.

This action arises from a dispute over the authenticity of certain works of art attributed to Lazar Khidekel, who was born in Vitebsk in 1904 and has been associated with the Suprematist movement in Russian art. In 1918, Khidekel entered the Vitebsk School of Art. Kazimir Male-vich was the theorist and leader of the Suprematist movement, and is the movement’s most widely recognized and celebrated artist. When Malevich arrived in Vitebsk in November 1919, Khidekel became one of Malevich’s pupils. Additionally, Khidekel was a member of UNOVIS (“Affirmers of the New Art”), a group that Malevich founded at Vitebsk in 1920. Other members of UNOVIS included Ilya Chashnik and Nikolai Suetin. In 1922, Malevich moved to Petrograd, along with some members of UNOVIS, including Khi-dekel. In that same year, Khidekel became a student of architecture at the Pe-trograd Institute of Civil Engineering. Although he continued to create works of art during the 1920’s, from 1930 to 1985, Khidekel taught architecture at the Leningrad Institute of Civil Engineering. In 1986, Lazar Khidekel died in the former Soviet Union at the age of 82.

Claude and René Boulé, Parisian art collectors who own 161 works attributed to Khidekel, filed this action against Mark and Regina Khidekel, a son and daughter-in-law of the artist, as well as Ingrid Hutton and the Leonard Hutton Galleries, the art dealer and art gallery that exhibited and offered for sale the collection of Khi-dekel works that Mark and Regina inherited from the artist. The Boulés sue under the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), claiming that certain statements attributed to the defendants falsely disparaged the authenticity of the Boulés’ collection in order to promote the sale of the Khidekel paintings at the Hutton Galleries. The only Lanham Act claim that survived partial summary judgment is a claim against the Hutton defendants for statements in their exhibition catalog in early 1995. See Boulé v. Hutton et al, 70 F.Supp.2d 378 (S.D.N.Y.1999). The Boulés also assert various pendent state law claims which arise from the same nucleus of operative fact, including violations of the New York General Business Law, product disparagement, defamation, tortious interference with business relationships, common law unfair competition, unjust enrichment, breach of contract, common law fraud, pri-ma facie tort and the tort of “false light.” The majority of these claims required the Boulés to prove the falsity of defendants’ statements that impugn the authenticity of the Khidekels owned by the Boulés.

A bench trial was held from September 27, 2000 through October 6, 2000. In addition to the testimony of Claude and René Boulé, plaintiffs presented the testimony of Patricia Railing, an art historian who lives in England, Jean-Claude Mareadé, a French art historian and researcher at the Centre National de Recherche Scientifique in Paris, Samuel Palenik, an analytical forensic microscopist, Andrew Sulner, a forensic document examiner, and Serge Ess-aian, a Russian artist who lives in Paris. Plaintiffs also submitted deposition testimony of Yvette Moch, a former employee of the Chauvlin gallery in Paris and organizer of a Russian avant-garde exhibition at the Centre d’Art Contemporain in Tan-lay, France, Helene Larroche, owner of Itinéraires, a Paris bookstore and art gallery, and Edith Flak, owner of the Flak *497 Gallery in Paris. In addition to the testimony of Ingrid Hutton and Mark and Regina Khidekel, defendants presented the testimony of Alexandra Shatskikh, a Russian art historian employed by the Research Institute of Art History in Moscow, and Eugena Ordonez, an art conservator and technical analyst.

FINDINGS OF FACT

After examining all the evidence, observing the demeanor of the witnesses and considering the plausibility and credibility of the testimony, I make the following findings of fact.

1. Claude and René Boulé currently own 161 works on paper and one oil painting attributed to Lazar Khidekel, as well as works of Larionov, Kogan, Sofranova, Yu-dine, and Cahvovra.

2. The Boulés purchased 176 works on paper attributed to Khidekel over a period of four years, beginning in 1984, from a private dealer named Vladmir Tsarénkov whom Claude Boulé met outside of the Hotel Druout. Tsarenkov requested that the Boulés conceal his identity.

S.The Boulés paid a total of 1.5 million French Francs (“FF”) in cash to Tsaren-kov for the works. 1

4. Tsarenkov did not provide the provenance of any of the works that he sold to the Boulés.

5. In 1991, the Boulés also purchased for £2,800 an oil painting attributed to Khidek-el, “Suprematist Composition,” from a Sotheby’s auction in England. 2

6. In the summer of 1988, Jean-Claude Marcadé brought Mark Khidekel to the Boulés’ home in Paris. At that meeting, Claude showed Mark 20 to 25 Khidekel works. Mark appeared moved that his father had admirers in Paris, and did not express any skepticism about the authenticity of the Boulés’ works at that time. Claude is fluent in French and is able to understand and speak some English and Russian. Mark is fluent in Russian and is able to understand and speak some English. Marcadé, who is fluent in both Russian and French, acted as an interpreter at this meeting and at all subsequent meetings at which he was present.

7. In 1989, Helene Larroche, owner of the Itinéraires book store and art gallery, proposed a joint exhibition of the Khidekel collections of the Boulés and of Mark. On July 25, 1989, the Boulés and Mark signed an agreement for this joint exhibition.

8. The Itinéraires exhibition was canceled because Mark failed to furnish his father’s works by the date specified in the agreement.

9. When Mark visited the Boulés in July 1989, he gave Claude a photograph of his father as a gift, and he noted that his father had personally framed the photograph.

10. In March 1990, Larroche arranged for Regina to meet the Boulés. At this meeting, Regina apologized for Mark’s failure to comply with the agreement for the joint exhibition and attributed this failure to the political upheaval surrounding the dissolution of the former Soviet Union in the fall of 1989.

11. Claude informed Regina that the Boulés were planning to lend their Khidek-el works to an exhibition at the Joliette Museum of Art in Montreal, Canada. Regina did not express any objection to the Boulés’ display of their works at the Jol-iette exhibition.

*498 12. On June 6, 1991, Mark, accompanied by Serge Essaian’s daughter and Jean-Claude Marcadé, visited the Boulés at their home. Mark gave the Boulés a ceramic vase as a gift and inscribed the photograph of his father which he had given to the Boulés in 1989. At this visit, Mark asked whether he could display his Khidekel collection with the Boulés’ collection at the Joliette exhibition. Claude told Mark that since limited funds had been allotted for the exhibition, it would not be possible to include Mark’s works, but Mark could request an invitation to lecture at the exhibition.

13.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 F. Supp. 2d 491, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3654, 2001 WL 314633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boule-v-hutton-nysd-2001.