Kirby v. Wildenstein

784 F. Supp. 1112, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2292, 1992 WL 36486
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 24, 1992
Docket89 Civ. 1418 (LBS)
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 784 F. Supp. 1112 (Kirby v. Wildenstein) 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
Kirby v. Wildenstein, 784 F. Supp. 1112, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2292, 1992 WL 36486 (S.D.N.Y. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

SAND, District Judge.

Plaintiff Roger Kirby has brought this diversity action against Daniel Wildenstein and the Fondation Wildenstein (together “Wildenstein”) alleging the tort of product disparagement. Presently before us is Wil-denstein’s motion for summary judgment. For the reasons discussed below, Wilden-stein’s motion is granted.

Background

A. Factual History.

Plaintiff is the owner of a painting entitled “La Rue de la Paix” (hereinafter the “Painting”) painted by the nineteenth century French artist Jean Beraud. Defendant Daniel Wildenstein is a world-renowned art expert and Director of defendant Fondation Wildenstein, 1 a not-for-profit corporation organized under French law that engages in art historical research and publishes catalogues of the works of French artists. The .gravamen of plaintiff’s complaint is that Wildenstein made false and disparaging statements about the Painting that prevented its sale at a scheduled auction and left it “burned” and otherwise devalued thereafter.

The facts relevant to Wildenstein’s motion for summary judgment are as follows. In 1988, plaintiff looked into the possibility of selling the Painting and approached several auction houses and art dealers toward that end. One of the auction houses was Christie, Manson & Woods International, Inc. (hereinafter “Christie’s”), and on March 3, 1988, plaintiff entered into a consignment agreement with Christie’s. Christie’s set a reserve price, or minimum price at which the Painting would be sold, of $160,000, and the Painting was scheduled to be offered at Christie’s May 25, 1988 auction.

At the same time, Patrick Offenstadt, the recognized expert on Jean Beraud, was preparing a “catalogue raisonne” of the artist’s works. A catalogue raisonne is regarded as a definitive catalogue of the works of a particular artist; inclusion of a painting in a catalogue raisonne serves to authenticate the work, while non-inclusion suggests that the work is not genuine. Offenstadt was preparing the Beraud cat-alogue under the auspices of Fondation Wildenstein.

One of the terms of the consignment agreement between plaintiff and Christie’s provided that Christie’s would communicate with Offenstadt to verify that the Painting would be included in the forthcoming Beraud catalogue raisonne. See Affidavit of Karen M. Crupi in Support of Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, January 7, 1991, Exh. H (hereinafter “Crupi Aff.”). Polly Sartori, the vice-president of Christie’s 19th Century European Paintings Department and the Christie’s representative with whom plaintiff dealt, *1114 told plaintiff that she intended to include the Offenstadt reference in Christie’s sales catalogue for the May 25, 1988 auction and that the Painting could not be sold without the reference. Plaintiff had no objection to Sartori’s communicating with Offenstadt.

On March 16, 1988, Sartori wrote to Of-fenstadt at Fondation Wildenstein, seeking confirmation that the Painting would appear in the catalogue raisonne. Christie’s included a color transparency of the Painting and suggested that Offenstadt arrange a viewing. Instead of traveling to New York to examine the Painting himself, Of-fenstadt asked Wildenstein to look at it. Wildenstein is a renowned expert on nineteenth century art, including the works of Beraud, and had seen approximately 200 paintings by Beraud other than the Painting owned by plaintiff. Wildenstein agreed to view the Painting during an April 1988 trip to New York, and asked Sartori to send the Painting to Wildenstein & Company, his gallery in New York. Sartori obliged, and Wildenstein examined the Painting.

During his examination, Wildenstein scrutinized the Painting for some twenty minutes, looking at both the front and the back and observing the Painting from various distances. According to his deposition testimony, Wildenstein observed that the canvas had been relined and that the figures in the Painting were more blurred than those of other Berauds he had seen. As a result, he concluded that the Painting was either “skinned,” meaning that it had suffered the removal of paint through over-cleaning, or a copy. See Crupi Aff., Exh. B, Deposition of Daniel Wildenstein, Oct. 9, 1990, at 41, 59-60 (hereinafter “Wildenstein Dep.”).

On May 5, 1988, Offenstadt informed Sartori by telex that the Painting would not be included in the forthcoming cat-alogue raisonne. An employee of Wilden-stein & Company, Joseph Baillio, also told Sartori that Wildenstein did not like the Painting and did not believe it was genuine. See Crupi Aff., Exh. E, Deposition of Polly J. Sartori, Oct. 26, 1989, at 60 (hereinafter “Sartori Dep.”). Sartori decided to withdraw the Painting from the May 25, 1988 auction.

Although Sartori had removed the Painting from the May auction, she believed that it was genuine. Sartori wrote to the Paris-based art dealer Bernheim-Jeune et Cie, whose label was affixed to the back of the Painting, seeking confirmation of its authenticity. Bernheim-Jeune provided documents showing that he had purchased the Painting directly from Beraud in 1907. Sartori forwarded the documents to Fondation Wildenstein along with a letter dated June 10, 1988, and asked that Wildenstein reevaluate his opinion with respect to the Painting’s authenticity.

By letter dated June 20, 1988, Fondation Wildenstein informed Sartori that Wilden-stein had received the Bernheim-Jeune documents and revised his opinion as to the genuineness of the Painting. The letter stated that the Painting would be listed in the forthcoming catalogue raisonne as an authentic Beraud, but would bear a notation that the Painting had been damaged by “an abusive restoration and cleaning.” The letter further stated that the notation as to condition should be included in Christie’s sales catalogue. - After receiving the June 20, 1988 letter, Sartori sent the Painting to the Julius Lowy Frame Restoring Company (hereinafter “Lowy”), an expert in art restoration, for an opinion as to its condition. Lowy examined the Painting under natural and ultraviolet light, and issued the following report:

Original canvas has been relined and attached to another canvas with an animal glue wheatpaste adhesive. This lining is in stable condition. There is some abrasion along the bottom edge of the painting and in the darker more thinly painted areas such as around the central figure and on some of the building moldings. Some of the abrasion has been covered with a glaze by a previous restorer. There is a layer of discolored varnish and dirt trapped underneath.

Crupi Aff., Exh. R. Sartori enclosed a copy of the Lowy report in a letter to Fondation Wildenstein dated July 6, 1988, *1115 and stated that while Christie’s would not include a reference to the Painting’s condition in its sales catalogue, it would make the Lowy report available to any prospective purchasers.

Christie’s included the Painting in its auction scheduled for October 26, 1988. The Christie’s sales catalogue for that auction stated that the Painting would be listed in the forthcoming Beraud catalogue raisonne, but did not make any reference to its condition.

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Bluebook (online)
784 F. Supp. 1112, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2292, 1992 WL 36486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirby-v-wildenstein-nysd-1992.