In re the Application to Quash Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum

177 Misc. 2d 985, 677 N.Y.S.2d 872, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 387
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 177 Misc. 2d 985 (In re the Application to Quash Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum) 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
In re the Application to Quash Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum, 177 Misc. 2d 985, 677 N.Y.S.2d 872, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 387 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Laura E. Drager, J.

The Museum of Modern Art (the Museum) moves to quash a Grand Jury subpoena issued by the New York County District Attorney (the People) for two paintings by the Austrian artist Egon Schiele, “Portrait of Wally” and “Dead City III” (the Paintings).1

The court must decide if the Paintings are exempt from Grand Jury process under section 12.03 of the New York Arts and Cultural Affairs Law. Even if the New York law applies, the court must then decide if the Federal statute, the Immunity From Seizure Act, 22 USC § 2459 (the IFSA), preempts the State law with respect to works of art on loan from foreign countries.

The Paintings were among 150 works of art displayed at the Museum in an exhibition entitled “Egon Schiele: The Leopold Collection, Vienna.” The collection was on loan from the Leopold Museum of Austria. The exhibition had been on a [987]*987world-wide tour for three years. The Museum exhibited the collection for three months.2

On December 31, 1997, the Museum received letters from persons who claimed the Paintings were stolen or otherwise misappropriated from their rightful owners during the Nazi annexation of Austria (1938-1945).

Henry Bondi wrote that his aunt, Lea Bondi, owned “Portrait of Wally”. She died in 1969. Rita and Kathleen Reif, writing on behalf of the heirs of Fritz Grunbaum, stated that the painting “Dead City III” was stolen from his collection. He subsequently died in the Dachau concentration camp. The claimants contended that neither original owner nor the respective heirs consented to any sale or transfer of their painting and requested that the Museum not return the Paintings to the lender until the matter of true ownership was resolved.3

According to a press report, the Paintings were acquired by Dr. Rudolf Leopold, an avid art collector, who amassed a large number of Schiele paintings. He purchased the Paintings sometime in the 1950’s and 1960’s. The press report suggests that at some point Lea Bondi sought Dr. Leopold’s help to recover “Portrait of Wally”. Instead, he purchased it for himself. In any event, Dr. Leopold apparently purchased both Paintings after several intervening buyers following the war. (Dabrowski and Leopold, Egon Schiele, The Leopold Collection, Vienna, Catalogue, at 144, 195 [1997].) In 1994, Dr. Leopold sold his art collection, including his Schiele collection of 250 works, to the Leopold Foundation of Vienna, Austria, for $175 million.4

The Museum states that it had no knowledge of the existence of any claims with respect to the Paintings. Over the course of the last few decades, the two Paintings have been exhibited and published around the world. One of the Paintings, “Dead City III”, had previously been exhibited in New York at the Guggenheim Museum. Apparently, at no time had Lea Bondi or her heirs or the heirs of Fritz Grunbaum ever filed a claim in any court for the return of either painting.

On January 3, 1998, the Museum advised the claimants by letter that it was not in a position to pass on their claims. On [988]*988January 7, 1998, the People served the subpoena on the Musuem as part of a criminal investigation into stolen property.

The Museum contends that the success of New York’s museums in presenting first class exhibitions on a consistent basis is dependent, in part, on their ability to provide assurances to art lenders that their works will be safely returned. To satisfy this concern, for the past 30 years New York cultural institutions have relied on a State law which exempts from seizure any art lent to a cultural institution by a nonresident exhibitor. (Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 12.03.) The Museum believed this law to be absolute and all encompassing. In contrast, the People believe that the protection of this law is limited to seizures in civil actions and does not extend to criminal investigations.

A Federal law (IFSA, 22 USC § 2459) provides similar protection, but with significant differences. The Federal law extends only to works on loan from abroad. The vast majority of art borrowed by United States museums comes from lenders within the country. If the New York statute does not provide protection from criminal as well as civil proceedings, the Museum fears that the ability of New York cultural institutions to borrow art from within the country as well as from abroad will be seriously compromised. The People counter that no other State has a law comparable to Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 12.03 and yet other States are not hampered in exhibiting borrowed art. Moreover, lenders will continue to want their art exhibited at internationally renowned institutions such as the Museum since such recognition enhances the value of the art.

Equally significant, the Federal statute requires an application with the United States Information Agency, which must determine that the art is of cultural significance and that the exhibition is in the national interest. Only after this determination is made, and the decision is published in the Federal Register, is the art safe from both civil and criminal process. According to the Museum, New York cultural institutions often eliminate this time-consuming process, relying instead on what they believed to be the automatic protection from any kind of seizure afforded by the New York law. The Museum rarely applies for protection under the Federal act, having done so in only 4 of its 89 exhibitions in the past three years. In those four instances, the Museum sought protection under the Federal law at the request of the lenders. In each case, protec[989]*989tion under the Federal law was granted. The Museum did not seek protection under the Federal law for the Schiele exhibition.

I

The Museum argues that the Paintings are exempt from Grand Jury process pursuant to the New York Exemption from Seizure Law, Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 12.03.

That statute, which has never been the subject of court scrutiny, provides: “No process of attachment, execution, sequestration, replevin, distress or any kind of seizure shall be served or levied upon any work of fine art while the same is enroute to or from, or while on exhibition or deposited by a nonresident exhibitor at any exhibition held under the auspices or supervision of any museum, college, university or other nonprofit art gallery, institution or organization within any city or county of this state for any cultural, educational, charitable or other purpose not conducted for profit to the exhibitor, nor shall such work of fine art be subject to attachment, seizure, levy or sale, for any cause whatever in the hands of the authorities of such exhibition or otherwise.” (Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 12.03.)

The Museum contends that the purpose of the statute is to encourage the free flow of art from around the world and within the United States for exhibition in New York, thereby enhancing the State’s position as an international cultural center. The statute provides unqualified protection from court process to art on loan from outside the State to New York cultural institutions. The statute’s prohibition against “any kind of seizure” encompasses Grand Jury subpoenas.

The People counter that the Grand Jury has been given broad powers to investigate crime.

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Bluebook (online)
177 Misc. 2d 985, 677 N.Y.S.2d 872, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-application-to-quash-grand-jury-subpoena-duces-tecum-nysupct-1998.