Hoelzer v. City of Stamford, Conn.

722 F. Supp. 1106, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12204, 1989 WL 125898
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 16, 1989
Docket89 Civ. 0641
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 722 F. Supp. 1106 (Hoelzer v. City of Stamford, Conn.) 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
Hoelzer v. City of Stamford, Conn., 722 F. Supp. 1106, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12204, 1989 WL 125898 (S.D.N.Y. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

STANTON, District Judge.

Hiram Hoelzer, a professional art restorer, seeks a declaratory judgment to quiet title to a mural originally affixed to the walls of Stamford High School. At a pretrial conference on May 12, 1989 plaintiff and defendant City of Stamford (the “City”) agreed to a trial on stipulated facts on the issue of title to the mural.

*1107 Mr. Hoelzer contends that the City abandoned the mural, and that its claim of ownership is time-barred. The City contends that its claim is not barred by the statute of limitations because it did not know that Mr. Hoelzer claimed ownership of the mural until 1986.

FACTS

As part of the Works Progress Administration (“W.P.A.”) of the United States, James Daugherty painted a large mural 1 on the walls of Stamford High School (the “School”) in 1934. The mural, about eight feet high and over 100 feet long, depicts a “variety of scenes representing life.... Scenes vary from an area depicting drama to the political crash of Wall Street with a cliche politician, cigar in mouth and money in hand. Others seem to be of urbanization and industrialization and social unrest or change.” 2

In the late 1960’s the City decided to renovate the School. The architects planning the renovations wrote to Dr. Joseph Porter, the City’s Superintendent of Schools, advising him that

[T]he mural will be subject to damage from several causes....
It would be better, in our opinion, to have the mural removed from the building permanently. If it is desired to preserve the mural, possibly the local historical society or some similar agency would provide a suitable repository. If it is to be thus preserved, the mural should be removed prior to the start of actual Phase I construction work. 3

Dr. Porter responded:

At the regular meeting of the Board of Education held on March 29, 1967, it was decided that the mural in question should not be damaged in any way, and, therefore, you are requested to remove it from the wall and roll it for proper storage. 4

No other communications took place between School or City officials and the architects regarding the mural.

However, in 1968 Roger C. Preu, head of the School’s art department, asked an architect on the renovation not to do anything with the mural before contacting him, told the City’s Clerk of the Works to save the mural, and also

told several people, including the School’s principal, that if the murals were going to be thrown out they should be saved, that there were many famous local people who were in the murals and that, if worse came to worst, sections could be cut out and auctioned off for an art scholarship for children ... rather than just getting rid of them. 5

During the School’s 1970 summer vacation workmen took the mural down, and either they or others put the mural “outside on top of a heap of construction trash which was either next to a dumpster outside of the School building or overflowing from the dumpster.” 6

When Mr. Preu returned from his 1970 summer vacation and noticed the mural was gone, he asked the workmen, a School custodian, and the School’s principal where it was but none knew. Over the next five or six years, he discussed the mural’s disappearance with School teachers and administrators. 7

Frank Bowne, a 1970 graduate of the School, found the mural cut into 30 pieces and “rolled up together in a pile of trash next to the school. Not knowing what [he] was going to do with it but appreciating its *1108 age and era [Mr. Bowne] managed to get it into [his] car and drove home.” 8

On August 25, 1971 Mr. Bowne wrote to Mr. Karel Yasko explaining his finding of the mural and “invitpng] you to come see it to consider restoration and relocation.” 9 Mr. Yasko, until his death in 1985, worked for the General Services Administration (“G.S.A.”) maintaining its Fine Arts Inventory Project and supervising restoration of W.P.A. artwork.

Mr. Yasko replied on September 27,1971: For your singular gesture of rescuing the James Daugherty mural from the trash pile you are to be commended....
We are most certainly interested in restoring, preserving and relocating the mural, preferably in the community and in a location where it would receive maximum exposure. The high school would be a logical place but they already indicated their opinion when it was consigned to the trash pile. 10

Mr. Yasko suggested that Stewart G. Rosenblum, his former summer intern, inspect the mural at Mr. Bowne’s home.

With Mr. Bowne’s permission 11 , Mr. Rosenblum took the mural in October 1971 and, at Mr. Yasko's direction, delivered it to Mr. Hoelzer’s home in Armonk, New York. Mr. Rosenblum recalls:

The murals were given to me as a donation by the young man to the United States Government and I delivered them in the loosely rolled up or folded condition (I don’t remember which) in which I had received them to Mr. Hoelzer on behalf of the United States Government. It was my understanding that Mr. Hoel-zer was to store the murals on behalf of the United States Government, stabilize them and restore them when money could be found, returning them to the United States Government when so instructed. It is my recollection that Mr. Yasko followed this procedure in other instances. 12

Mr. Hoelzer then brought the mural to his studio and workshop in Manhattan.

In an April 25, 1972 letter to Mr. Yasko, Mr. Hoelzer explained the deteriorated condition of the mural in detail and what its restoration would entail:

Restoration: — Remove glue, flatten canvases, clean paintings, retouch, prevent further flaking, and roll them (and identify), ready for storage or rehanging There [sic] are about 900 square feet of canvas so it is quite a job. Cost: —$ 6,400. — 13

During the 1970’s neither the City nor the School took any steps to locate the mural or ascertain whether it was properly in storage.

Charles Daugherty, the artist’s son, received a letter in January 1972 from Mr. Yasko, and learned from him that Mr. Hoelzer had the mural. 14 In the late 1970’s Mr. Daugherty indignantly told Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
722 F. Supp. 1106, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12204, 1989 WL 125898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoelzer-v-city-of-stamford-conn-nysd-1989.