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1L A L I V E Avocats Good Faith, Due Diligence and Acquisition of Title to Works of Art The Swiss Law Approach Carolyn Olsburgh
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2 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law INTRODUCTION Subsequent purchaserOriginal owner Purchase of a work of art from a person without title Conflict of interests: Civil law v. Common law systems Good faith has an effect on title (e.g. possibility to acquire title on a stolen object)
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3 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats Issue: Good faith or bad faith of the purchaser? Consequences on: Original owner’s claim to recover the work of art Acquisition of title by the purchaser Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law INTRODUCTION
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4 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats Section I Was the purchaser in good or bad faith? Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law I. NOTION OF GOOD FAITH
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5 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats Knowledge about the lack of title at the time of the purchase? Yes bad faith No good faith unless he should have known bad faith Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law I. NOTION OF GOOD FAITH
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6 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats 1.Relevant moment: at the time of the purchase 2.Presumption of good faith (Art. 3(1) CC) Burden of proof that there was no good faith: former owner 3.No protection of the purchaser when: He was in bad faith; or His ignorance is due to the fact that he did not pay the required attention (Art. 3(2) CC) Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law I. NOTION OF GOOD FAITH
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7 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats 4.Degree of attention: Matter of appreciation Objective test: honest man in the shoes of the purchaser? 5.Duty to inform oneself about the title General rule: only if « concrete reasons capable of putting the title into doubt » Exception: businesses/trade involving goods of doubtful origin (e.g., second-hand goods, antiques, art) Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law I. NOTION OF GOOD FAITH
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8 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats On the art market: The purchaser must inform himself « when he should be suspicious given the circumstances » Higher standard of care Irrelevant factors: dealer/non-dealer; purpose of resale or not Relevant: knowledge of the market in question Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law I. NOTION OF GOOD FAITH
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9 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats Original Manuscript of the Marquis de Sade (Swiss Supreme Court, 28 May 1998, SJ 1999 I 1) Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law I. NOTION OF GOOD FAITH A (former owner) D (intermediary renowned specialist in manuscripts) C (seller) B (purchaser) Stolen manuscript Claim to recover manuscript Sale of manuscript France Switzerland
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10 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats Solution for the case -Renowned intermediary (D) -Personal relationship between former owner (A) and seller (C) -High purchase price (= value according to expert) -BUT: Manuscript not delivered in a case -HELD: Good faith of B A’s claim was dismissed. Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law I. NOTION OF GOOD FAITH
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11 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats Section II Consequences of the distinction between good faith and bad faith Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law II. CONSEQUENCES OF GOOD/BAD FAITH
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12 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats Issue 1 Was the purchaser in good or in bad faith at the time of the purchase? Bad faith: object may always be recovered (Art. 936(1) CC) no possibility to ever acquire title (Art. 728 CC) Good faith: second stage of the reasoning Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law II. CONSEQUENCES OF GOOD/BAD FAITH
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13 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats Issue 2 Was the possession lost willingly or unwillingly? Object ‘subject to a bailment’ (‘entrusted object’): object may never be recovered immediate acquisition of title Stolen/lost object: object may be recovered during 1 year / 30 years acquisition of title may occur after 30 years Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law II.2 CONSEQUENCES OF GOOD FAITH
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14 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats a) Object ‘subject to a bailment’ (‘entrusted object’) Art. 933 The good faith purchaser « must be protected in his acquisition, even if the transferor lacked capacity to pass title » (see also Art. 714(2) CC). No claim is possible Immediate acquisition of title Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law II.2 CONSEQUENCES OF GOOD FAITH
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15 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats b) Stolen or lost object – Claim (Art. 934 CC) within one year after the owner becomes aware of the place where the cultural asset is located and the identity of the possessor, but at the latest 30 years following its removal (new statute of limitations since 1st June 2005) Against reimbursement if the object was bought at a market, at a public auction or from a dealer of objects of the same nature Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law II.2 CONSEQUENCES OF GOOD FAITH
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16 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats b) Stolen or lost object – Acquisition of title (Art. 728 CC) Acquisition of title through operation of the limitation period Peaceful and uninterrupted possession During a period of 30 years (since 1st June 2005) Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law II.2 CONSEQUENCES OF GOOD FAITH
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17 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law CONCLUSION Good faith purchaser Entrusted objectStolen/lost object Bad faith purchaser Claim within 1 year / 30 years Claim at any time No claim Immediate passing of title Passing of title after 30 years No passing of title If market/ public auction/ dealer of objects of same nature: reimbursement of purchase price
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18 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats 1.Evolution in case-law Stricter standards of good faith more easily bad faith 1)No statute of limitations for claim to recover goods 2)No possible acquisition of title by purchaser Security of transactions? Security about title? Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law CONCLUSION
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19 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats 2.Recent amendment in the Swiss Civil Code Longer limitation periods (for good faith purchasers of stolen/lost cultural assets) 1)Extension of the absolute limitation period to 30 years 2)Extension of the period required to obtain title through operation of law: 30 years Problem: discrepancy between relative limitation period of 1 year and statute of limitations to acquire title Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law CONCLUSION
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20 Titre Sous-titre L A L I V E Avocats 3. Further steps in the future? Art. 4(1) of the 1995 Unidroit Convention: Good faith Relevant for compensation, but not for the issue of title Burden of proof lies on the current possessor Good Faith and Acquisition of Title – Swiss Law CONCLUSION
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