Cnet Founder Sues Sotheby's in Dispute Over Art Sales (Update1)
Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Halsey Minor, an American art
collector and entrepreneur, filed a complaint against Sotheby's
a month after the world's largest publicly traded auction house
sued him to recover $16.8 million.
The founder of Cnet Inc., which provides news and reviews
about technology products, accused Sotheby's of ``a custom of
deception'' in the complaint filed this morning in federal court
in San Francisco. Minor said in the complaint that Sotheby's has
a duty to disclose when it's owed money by the consignor of a
work that it's selling.
``By concealing information concerning its economic
interests, Sotheby's may favor one item of auctioned property
(in which Sotheby's holds an economic interest) over another (in
which it does not), without providing a bidder with the
information necessary to make his or her own judgment in the
matter,'' Minor said in the complaint.
Auction houses, which are licensed by the New York City
Department of Consumer Affairs, disclose when they have a direct
financial interest in lots for sale. That includes when they
have guaranteed a price to a seller.
On May 22, Minor paid $9.7 million for Edward Hicks's
biblically inspired ``The Peaceable Kingdom'' at Sotheby's in
New York. It was a record price for American folk art and for
Hicks, a Quaker minister.
Loan Collateral
With the purchase, Minor waded into the saga of wholesale
jeweler Ralph O. Esmerian, who bought the painting in 1976. In
2000, Esmerian promised to donate it to the American Folk Art
Museum but later pledged it to Sotheby's as collateral for a
loan.
Sotheby's said in its lawsuit against Minor that he didn't
pay for the Hicks painting and two other works he bought in May.
The auction house said the works are worth more than
$13 million. Sotheby's said in the complaint that it also was
owed legal fees, interest and late fees.
Sotheby's said it offered Minor ``generous payment terms''
that would have allowed him until August to pay. He failed to
agree to the terms, according to court filings.
In his complaint today, Minor said Dara Mitchell, the head
of American paintings at Sotheby's, served as his ``art
consultant and purchasing agent'' and never disclosed that
Esmerian owed the auction house money. Minor seeks class-action,
or group, status on behalf of other Sotheby's customers.
Mitchell and Sotheby's spokeswoman Diana Phillips didn't
immediately return calls seeking comment. Minor wasn't
immediately available, said his lawyer, Eric George of Dreier
Stein Kahan Browne Woods George in Los Angeles.
Ownership Interest
Debra Force, the head of Christie's American paintings from
1989 to 1993, said she doesn't believe someone has a claim when
an auction house doesn't disclose a loan because it's not akin
to an ownership interest.
``If the piece doesn't get sold, the owner has to pay the
auction house back,'' said Force, who is now a private dealer in
New York.
The suit is Minor v. Sotheby's, 08-4568, U.S. District
Court, Northern District of California (San Francisco).
To contact the writer on the story:
Philip Boroff in New York at
pboroff@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: October 1, 2008 20:37 EDT