Cassirer v. Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection Foundation

862 F.3d 951, 2017 WL 2925000
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 2017
Docket15-55550; 15-55977; 15-55951
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 862 F.3d 951 (Cassirer v. Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection Foundation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cassirer v. Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection Foundation, 862 F.3d 951, 2017 WL 2925000 (9th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

BEA, Circuit Judge,

with whom Judge CALLAHAN concurs. Judge IKUTA concurs except as to Sections Ill.C.l.iii.b and III.C.Liv:

In 1939 Germany, as part of the “Aryan-ization” of the property of German Jews, Lilly Neubauer (“Lilly”) 1 was forced to “sell” a painting by Camille Pissarro (the “Painting”), a French Impressionist, to Jackob Scheidwimmer (“Scheidwimmer”), a Berlin art dealer. We use quotation marks around “sell” to distinguish the act from a true sale because Scheidwimmer had been appointed to appraise the Painting by the Nazi government, had refused to allow Lilly to take the Painting with her out of Germany, and had demanded that she sell it to him for all of $360 in Reichs-marks, which were to be deposited in a blocked account. Lilly justifiably feared that unless she sold the Painting to Sche-idwimmer she would not be allowed to leave Germany. The district court found, and the parties agree, that the Painting was forcibly taken from Lilly.

The history of how the Cassirer family came to own the Painting, as well as the application of the Foreign Sovereign Immunity Act (“FSIA”) which resulted in recognition of our jurisdiction to deal with the claims to the Painting, are detailed in our earlier en banc opinion. 2 What primarily concerns us now is the sale of the Painting by the Baron Hans Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza (the “Baron”) to the Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection (“TBC”) in 1993, its display at TBC’s museum in Madrid ever since, and what effect, if any, that possession has had on the claims of title by the parties to this action.

In short, in this third appeal to this Court, we are called upon to decide whether the district court correctly granted summary judgment to TBC based on TBC’s claim that it acquired good title to the Painting through the operation of Spain’s law of prescriptive acquisition (or “usucaption”) as a result of TBC’s public, peaceful, and uninterrupted possession in the capacity as owner of the Painting from 1993 until the Cassirers filed a petition requesting the return of the Painting in 2001. Second, although not ruled upon by the district court, we consider whether the Baron’s purchase of the Painting, and his possession of it for years, vested him with good title under Swiss law — title he could validly pass to TBC in the 1993 sale. Third, we consider TBC’s arguments that the Cassirers’ claims are barred by laches or *956 by Lilly’s acceptance of a post-war settlement agreement with the German government. Finally, we consider the Cassirers’ arguments that Spain’s Historical Heritage Law and the European Convention on Human Rights prevent TBC from acquiring prescriptive title. Ultimately, we reverse the order which granted summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY 3

A. The 1958 Settlement Agreement

After the Nazis forced Lilly to sell the Painting to Scheidwimmer in 1939, Scheid-wimmer then forced another Jewish collector, Julius Sulzbacher (“Sulzbacher”), to exchange three German paintings for the Painting. Sulzbacher was also seeking to escape Nazi Germany. After the Sulzbacher family fled Germany, the Gestapo confiscated the Painting.

After the war, the Allies established a process for restoring property to the victims of Nazi looting. Military Law No. 59 (“MGL No. 59”) authorized victims to seek restitution of looted property. In 1948, Lilly filed a timely claim against Scheidwim-mer under MGL No. 59 for restitution of, or compensation for, the Painting. Sulz-bacher also filed claims under MGL No. 59 seeking restitution of, or compensation for, the Painting and the three German paintings. In 1954, the United States Court of Restitution Appeals (“CORA”) published a decision confirming that Lilly owned the Painting.

Although they knew Lilly was the owner of the Painting, Lilly, Sulzbacher, and Scheidwimmer believed the Painting was lost or destroyed during the war. In 1957, after the German Federal Republic regained its sovereignty, Germany established a law governing claims relating to Nazi-looted property known as the Briig. Lilly then dropped her restitution claim against Scheidwimmer and initiated a claim against Germany for compensation for the wrongful taking of the Painting. Grete Kahn, Sulzbacher’s heir, was also a party in this action.

The parties to the action against Germany were unaware of the location of the Painting and only two of the German paintings originally owned by Sulzbacher were still available for return. In 1958, the parties reached a settlement agreement (the “1958 Settlement Agreement”). This agreement provided that: (1) Germany would pay Lilly 120,000 Deutschmarks (the Painting’s agreed value as of April 1, 1956); (2) Grete Kahn would receive 14,000 Deutschmarks from the payment to Lilly; and (3) Scheidwimmer would receive two of Sulzbacher’s three German paintings.

B. The Painting’s Post-War History

After the Nazis confiscated the Painting from Sulzbacher, it allegedly was sold at a Nazi government auction in Dusseldorf. In 1943, the Painting was sold by an unknown consignor at the Lange Auction in Berlin to an unknown purchaser for 95,000 Reichsmarks. In 1951, the Frank Peris Gallery of Beverly Hills arranged to move the Painting out of Germany and into California to sell the Painting to collector Sidney Brody for $14,850. In 1952, Sydney Schoenberg, a St. Louis art collector, purchased the Painting for $16,500. In 1976, the Baron purchased the Painting through the Stephen Hahn Gallery in New York for $275,000. The Baron kept the Painting in Switzerland as part of his collection until *957 1992, except when it was on public display in exhibitions outside Switzerland.

C. TBC’s Purchase of the Painting

In 1988, Favorita Trustees Limited, an entity of the Baron, and Spain reached an agreement that the Baron would loan his art collection (the “Collection”), including the Painting, to Spain. Pursuant to this agreement, Spain created TBC 4 to maintain, conserve, publicly exhibit, and promote the Collection’s artwork. TBC’s initial board of directors had five members acting on behalf of the Spanish government and five members acting on behalf of the Baron and his family. Spain agreed to display the Collection at the Villahermosa Palace in Madrid, Spain, and to restore and redesign the palace as a museum (the “Museum”). After the Villahermosa Palace had been restored and redesigned as the Museum, in 1992, pursuant to the loan agreement, the Museum received a number of paintings from Favorita Trustees Limited, including the Painting, and the Museum opened to the public. In 1998, the Spanish government passed Real Decreto-Ley 11/1993, which authorized and funded the purchase of the Collection. Spain bought the Collection by entering into an acquisition agreement with Favorita Trustees Limited. The Real Decreto-Ley 11/1993 classified the Collection as part of the Spanish Historical Heritage, which made the property subject to the provisions of the Spanish Historical Heritage Law. TBC paid the Baron $350 million for the Collection.

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Bluebook (online)
862 F.3d 951, 2017 WL 2925000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassirer-v-thyssen-bornemisza-collection-foundation-ca9-2017.