Hahn v. Duveen

133 Misc. 871, 234 N.Y.S. 185, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 756
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 133 Misc. 871 (Hahn v. Duveen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hahn v. Duveen, 133 Misc. 871, 234 N.Y.S. 185, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 756 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

Black, J.

After the plaintiff’s opening and also at the end of the plaintiff’s case defendant moved to dismiss. I denied both motions and defendant duly excepted. At the end of defendant’s case defendant again moved to dismiss, and upon that motion I reserved decision. I told counsel that this course would be followed to enable the court, in case the jury disagreed, to then pass upon the motion, because there was authority for the proposition that such a motion to dismiss survived a disagreement and permitted the court to decide the motion in the same way that a motion to set aside the verdict for lack of sufficient evidence could be passed upon after a jury had found for a plaintiff or defendant. This logical course of reserving decision upon a motion to dismiss, until after a verdict or failure to find a verdict, has been followed, but in a late case that very practice has been approved by the learned Appellate Division of this department. In the case of Stock v. Yellow Taxi Company Mr. Justice Phoenix Ingbaham reserved [872]*872decision on a motion to dismiss until after the case had gone to the jury. The jury disagreed and he afterwards granted the motion to dismiss. The case went to the Appellate Division and his decision was unanimously affirmed (222 App. Div. 804). I stated to counsel in this case that I would follow the same course of reserving decision, until after the case had been given to the jury, because it would be very unfortunate if a failure of the jury to agree should deprive the court of the same opportunity to pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence that it would have had to pass upon the same point where the jury had agreed. Neither of the counsel wished to try the case a second time and both readily agreed that the suggested course should be followed. After fourteen hours’ consideration, and after every effort on the part of the court to induce the jury to agree, they finally, at five-thirteen a. m., announced that it would be impossible for them to come to the unanimous decision that the law requires before there could be a verdict. The jury was discharged and it then became my duty to pass upon the defendant’s motion to dismiss, decision upon which had been reserved until after the jury should have agreed or failed to agree. The argument of the motion was most ably presented by both counsel. If there had been a verdict for either the plaintiff or defendant in this case I should not have disturbed it, because under my charge the questions were entirely questions of fact. I shall not discuss at length the law I charged at the trial applying to slander of title, because both sides agreed that in order for a plaintiff to recover she must prove that her property is what she claims it to be, because until she establishes the genuineness- of her own property she cannot prove that defendant’s statement regarding its spuriousness was false. While I realized . that this rule might frequently cast a very heavy burden upon a plaintiff whose property was attacked, I strictly followed it in my charge and even went the full length of charging the jury that even though there had been a reckless attack upon the plaintiff’s property, which may have been false, malicious and without probable cause to believe the attack was true, nevertheless plaintiff could not recover any general damage she might have sustained, but only such special damage’ as arose directly out of the alleged slander itself. Plaintiff Hahn claimed that her picture was an original by Leonardo da Vinci. Defendant said it was not painted by Leonardo, which was tantamount to saying that it was not an original by Leonardo and not a replica painted from the same model nor a duplicate painted from the original picture by Leonardo. There were two general contentions. Plaintiff claimed that her sacred rights of property had been invaded in that defendant [873]*873falsely and maliciously stated to a reporter of the New York World that the Hahn picture was not a genuine Leonardo da Vinci; that any expert who pronounced it genuine was not an expert, and that the genuine La Belle Ferroniere by Leonardo da Vinci was in the Louvre (No. 1600). Plaintiff said these statements by a man of defendant’s position in the world of art, who had not seen the picture, had caused her special damage by causing the Kansas City Art Museum to call off negotiations then in progress regarding the purchase of the Hahn picture. Defendant, on the other hand, contended that the sacred right of free speech would be destroyed if such statements of opinion as he gave to the New York World could not be made in good faith regarding a picture that was before the public for sale and which had been the subject of newspaper articles in America and France. Thus there went to the jury the sharp issue between the rights of property and the rights of free speech. At the trial I charged the jury: “ If you believe defendant’s statements about plaintiff’s picture were false, there (was) is nothing in the occasion alone upon which defendant’s statement was made, to rebut or negative (such) inference of malice, b.ut it is for you to say whether or not the statement was made by defendant in good faith.' In so deciding you will consider the actual language of the statement itself, as well as all the rest of the evidence before you.” Quoting Odgers on Libel and Slander (p. 80) I further charged the jury that whenever a man unnecessarily intermeddles with the affairs of others, with which he is wholly unconcerned, such officious interference will be deemed malicious and he will be liable if special damage follow.” I, of course, coupled with this the qualification that the “ special damage must always be such as naturally or reasonably arises from the uttering of the slanderous words of the defendant.” One of the first things the jury had to decide was whether or not Sir Joseph Duveen’s statement that the Hahn picture was not by Leonardo da Vinci was made in good faith. Defendant, who had been put upon the stand by plaintiff as her first witness, sought to justify what he had said about the Hahn picture by stating that it could not be by Leonardo, because he knew that the genuine La Belle Ferroniere by Leonardo was in the Louvre (No. 1600). He further stated that he had always had my (his) own opinion about it. I told you that I have never changed my mind personally about the painter of the picture, about the authorship of the picture.” (Stenographer’s minutes, p. 536.) “ The Court: Did you know whether Leonardo painted the picture or not? The Witness (defendant): Of course, it was my opinion that he painted it. Yes, certainly, I know that he painted the picture. The Court: Did you know it? You knew it? [874]*874The Witness (defendant): Yes.” (Stenographer’s minutes, p. 538.) Later in the case plaintiff put in evidence the following letter, which was produced by defendant: “ Messrs. Duveen Brothers, Inc., 720 Fifth Avenue, New York — Gentlemen: I have received your letter of the 20th of July, with regard to Mr. John J. Harding. I have in no way changed my opinion about the (Hahn) picture ascribed to da Vinci, of which you sent us a photograph. I am convinced that it is an old copy of the picture in the Louvre. I do not think it is contemporary, but is a little later than the Louvre picture. As for the authorship of the picture you write about, I do not know who painted it, but the Louvre picture is not passed by the most eminent connoisseurs as having been painted by Leonardo da Vinci, and I may say that I am entirely in accord with their opinion. It is suggested that the Louvre picture is very close to Leonardo da Vinci, but is not by his hand; probably it was painted by Boltraffio. I quite appreciate Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 Misc. 871, 234 N.Y.S. 185, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hahn-v-duveen-nysupct-1929.