Greenberg Gallery, Inc. v. Bauman

817 F. Supp. 167, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4067, 1993 WL 99263
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedApril 2, 1993
DocketCiv. A. 91-0439-LFO
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 817 F. Supp. 167 (Greenberg Gallery, Inc. v. Bauman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenberg Gallery, Inc. v. Bauman, 817 F. Supp. 167, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4067, 1993 WL 99263 (D.D.C. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

OBERDORFER, District Judge.

In this diversity contract dispute, plaintiffs are art dealers who claim that a mobile for which they paid $500,000 is not the Alexander Calder work entitled Rio Nero they thought they were acquiring. They sue the dealer who sold them the mobile, L & R Entwistle and Co. Ltd. (“Entwistle Gallery”), and Patricia Bauman, the private collector living in Washington, D.C. who sold the mobile through Entwistle Gallery. Plaintiffs invoke theories of fraud, breach of express warranty, and mutual mistake of fact.

The parties waived a jury trial and tried the case to the bench. At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ ease, I found they had failed to prove their fraud claim by clear and convincing evidence and dismissed it. Having received defendants’ testimony and exhibits, *168 and heard arguments by counsel for each party, I now find plaintiffs have failed to prove or persuade by a preponderance of the evidence that the mobile is not the Calder Rio Nero. I therefore conclude plaintiffs are not entitled to judgment on either of their remaining theories.

I. FACTS

The testimony and exhibits establish by a preponderance of the evidence that in 1959, Alexander Calder created and signed with the initials “AC” a 31" by 65" black hanging mobile entitled “Rio Nero.” The mobile was constructed of sheet metal and steel wire and composed of 27 hanging blades or elements. In 1962, Klaus Peris and Peris Galleries of New York City sold the Rio Nero to one Anspaeh. Before selling the piece, Peris, as was his custom, took an archival photograph of the mobile for the Galleries, after first lightly tethering its parts to prevent movement. In 1967, Peris reacquired the mobile from Anspaeh and sold it to Patricia Bau-man’s father, Lionel Bauman. Except for its exhibition in 1984 by the Herbert Palmer Gallery of Los Angeles, the mobile hung in Lionel Bauman’s Palm Springs, California home until his death in 1987; Patricia Bau-man remembered seeing it hanging there. Lionel’s will bequeathed the mobile to Patricia. After Lionel’s death, Herbert Palmer, the owner of Palmer Gallery, appraised it for the estate as an untitled Calder. Lionel’s executor delivered it to Bauman’s home in Washington in July 1989, where it hung until November 1989.

In November 1989, Palmer Gallery sought and obtained possession of the mobile on consignment until January 31, 1990. Palmer Gallery exhibited it for sale at the Los Ange-les Art Fair beginning in December 1989. In January 1990, Ronald Greenberg, owner of plaintiff Greenberg Gallery, Inc., saw the mobile at the Los Angeles Art Fair and was interested in it, but did not pursue the purchase because Palmer’s asking price of $750,-000 was too high.

At the time Palmer was showing the mobile, he was not aware of any name for it and exhibited it as an untitled Calder. In response to Palmer’s request for more information, Bauman contacted Peris Galleries seeking documentation of the 1967 sale to her father. In addition, Bauman asked Palmer to photograph the piece and send the resulting transparency to Peris Galleries for identification. With the transparency before it, Peris Galleries confirmed the 1967 sale to Lionel Bauman and furnished Patricia a copy of the invoice evidencing that sale. The Peris invoice identified the piece as a black sheet metal and steel wire hanging mobile, 31" by 65", entitled “Rio Nero,” and signed “AC.” 1

Bauman passed the Peris invoice information on to Palmer, who added the name “Rio Nero” to the display at the Los Angeles Fair. Palmer sought to extend his consignment beyond January 31, 1990, but Bauman refused the request.

In January 1990, while the mobile was on exhibit in Los Angeles, Roberta Entwistle, a co-owner of Entwistle Gallery with her former husband, Lance Entwistle, visited Patricia Bauman and her husband, John Bryant, at their Washington home. Roberta made the visit at the suggestion of the National Gallery of Art to advise the Baumans about their private collection. In the course of the visit, in response to an inquiry about what Bauman might wish to sell from the collection, Bauman told Roberta about the Calder mobile she had inherited.

Roberta and Lance Entwistle then began seeking purchasers for the mobile. Their first prospect was Donald Morris, owner of plaintiff Donald Morris Gallery, Inc., of Birmingham, Michigan. Without identifying Bauman, the Entwistles informed Morris that the piece was the Rio Ñero by Calder and was owned by a respectable private collector who had inherited it from her father, who, in turn, had purchased it from Peris Galleries. Morris made two offers that were *169 too low and which Bauman instructed the Entwistles to reject.

In March 1990, the Entwistles approached a second prospect, Greenberg, who had seen the piece when exhibited by Palmer in Los Angeles. In the ensuing negotiation, the Entwistles told Greenberg about the Peris invoice and furnished him the transparency made by Palmer. After arranging for equal participation in the purchase by the other three plaintiffs, Greenberg offered $500,000 for the mobile, with the understanding that Entwistle Gallery would deliver it to him promptly and that he could inspect it before making payment. Greenberg received delivery on March 23, 1990, had the mobile assembled and hung, compared it with the transparency, and satisfied himself that it was the piece in the transparency and that he had seen in Los Angeles. Whatever Greenberg may have observed at that time, he advised his co-venturers that the piece was “fabulous” and “beautiful.” They assembled the funds and paid $500,000 to the Ent-wistle Gallery. The Entwistles, in turn, delivered $485,000 to Bauman’s decorator, a Swiss Corporation, retaining $15,000 for their trouble and risk. 2 Two weeks later, the Ent-wistle Gallery furnished to Greenberg the 1967 Peris invoice, from which Lionel Bau-man’s name was redacted at Patricia’s request.

Between March and November 1990, plaintiffs exhibited the mobile around the country and offered it for sale as a Calder for $750,-000. Greenberg published a photograph of the mobile in his catalogue, describing it as Calder’s Rio Nero. In May 1990, Greenberg shipped it to Chicago for display and sale at the Chicago Art Fair, together with 14 other Calders from his gallery. At the Fair, the other co-owners (Morris; Barbara Mathes, owner of plaintiff Mathes Gallery, Inc. of New York City; and John Stoller, owner of plaintiff John C. Stoller & Co. gallery of Minneapolis, Minnesota) all saw the mobile for the first time. A1 noticed problems with its movement and balance and that some of the pieces bumped each other. Greenberg and Stoller attempted to rearrange the mobile so it would hang more aesthetically. They took off armatures, disconnected the mobile’s blades, and moved them around. Despite the problems, Greenberg, Mathes, Stoller, and Morris concluded the mobile matched the transparency and the description in the Peris invoice.

In late May 1990, following the Chicago Art Fair, the mobile was shipped to the Mathes Gallery in New York and offered for sale there. On two separate occasions, Morris’ son spent one hour and an hour and a half, respectively, trying to reconfigure the mobile to conform to the transparency.

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Bluebook (online)
817 F. Supp. 167, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4067, 1993 WL 99263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenberg-gallery-inc-v-bauman-dcd-1993.