Avoid These Auctioneers

Leigh Youdale

Well-known
Local time
10:34 AM
Joined
Apr 27, 2007
Messages
1,621
Location
Sydney, Australia
Most people here are more concerned with the 'Bay and equipment auctions, but there are bigger auction houses that are noteworthy for the wrong reasons.
Read about one man's experiences with Guernseys Auctions in NYC on Mike Johnston's "The Online Photographer" today. He doesn't quite call them crooks, but then he's a polite man.
 
I will never have anything they would be interested in handling. But if I did, certainly I wouldn't want to deal with them.
 
I read TOP almost daily.

I have to question this article by Ctein, however. Granted, my thinking may be off here, but it strikes me as not quite right.

He is talking about a personal incident that would genuinely be of concern to very few people on a very public platform. And it is only his side of the story (though I'm at a loss to see another). It was only one incident, though an ugly one, and there is no evidence put forward to indicate that this is how Guernseys Auctions typically handles art work or problems arising from its handling of art work.

I can help but feel that this is an abuse of his platform.
 
He is talking about a personal incident that would genuinely be of concern to very few people on a very public platform.

This is of interest to anyone who sells their work. I've had a similarly negative experience with Guernsey's and think letting people know about this kind of thing is very important. If you have significant work, you want to know who you can trust it with and who is going to ruin it and then rip you off.

Marty
 
What stands out for me in the story, is the attitude of the Auction house, given that they were responsible for the damage. Yes, I do know that it is a business, and that Insurance claims have to follow a certain procedure. But is it necessary for them to be adversarial ? Perhaps it is old fashioned to expect better 'handling' of the client in this day and age.
 
This is of interest to anyone who sells their work.

Actually, as written, it is only of interest to anyone who sells his work and deals with (or was thinking of dealing) with Guernsey's. That makes for a very small percentage of the people who read Ctein's weekly column.

I've had a similarly negative experience with Guernsey's and think letting people know about this kind of thing is very important. If you have significant work, you want to know who you can trust it with and who is going to ruin it and then rip you off.

Marty

I think there are other ways to do this.

My problem with his column is that there is no real lesson to be gleaned from it for the average TOP reader. Is it that all auction houses are bad? No. Is it that Guernsey's is bad. No, because he doesn't have more than his one incident to report. And again, it is only one side of the story. His.

So it is hard for me to see it as anything but a personal vendetta. And that, I feel, is an abuse of his platform.
 
A person feels wronged by another party. He tries to deal with this in a normal polite manner, by contacting them and discussing a resolution. However, he does not feel he gets a resolution he's happy with.

He then writes a post detailing the affair from his point of view.

How is that wrong, or how is that "abusing his platform"?

The auction house is free to publish their side of the story.

Personally I found the post interesting, both as a view into the mechanics of fine art auctions and insurance coverage. Granted I'm not in the US nor have I anything worth offering for auction, but I still feel I've been informed about an area I knew very little of before.
 
Actually, as written, it is only of interest to anyone who sells his work and deals with (or was thinking of dealing) with Guernsey's. That makes for a very small percentage of the people who read Ctein's weekly column.

I see it as of interest to anyone who sells photos or art and deals with the art in a way that it needs to be insured, shipped and handled by someone else outside the owner's supervision.

There are different ways to do anything you do.

My problem with his column is that there is no real lesson to be gleaned from it for the average TOP reader. Is it that all auction houses are bad? No. Is it that Guernsey's is bad. No, because he doesn't have more than his one incident to report. And again, it is only one side of the story. His.

I think there are a number of procedural and legal lessons for anyone who ships their art, but I don't mind if you don't see it that way.

it's also a blog; there is no 'platform' except that which people assign to it. by its very nature it an individual or group of individuals saying what they think. If Mike Johnston, who runs the blog, says it's okay, and if Ctein wants to write it, there it goes.

I won't labour this any further.

Marty


So it is hard for me to see it as anything but a personal vendetta. And that, I feel, is an abuse of his platform.[/QUOTE]
 
Interesting story, and an interesting glance on the US legal system (from the POV of a German reader). You know what might happen if a German vendor would write something like this about a German auction house?

Her could be sued for libel. Seriously.
 
What stands out for me in the story, is the attitude of the Auction house, given that they were responsible for the damage. Yes, I do know that it is a business, and that Insurance claims have to follow a certain procedure. But is it necessary for them to be adversarial ? Perhaps it is old fashioned to expect better 'handling' of the client in this day and age.

In an age where a reputation can be broken in 24 hours, it's even more important. They are going to lose a lot more than $5k in business from this. And so they should.
 
Actually, no. Truth is an acceptable defence against libel.
Sorry - wrong argument. I recall, that there was a dedicated website in Germany that specialized on disclosing customer complaints. They had to close down exactly because of this.

The reason to do so was that these reports could cause so much damage in the value of the reported companies that the site had to close since they were unable to find an insurance that was willing to cover them.

The truth doesn't always count - unfortunately.
 
Sorry - wrong argument. I recall, that there was a dedicated website in Germany that specialized on disclosing customer complaints. They had to close down exactly because of this.

The reason to do so was that these reports could cause so much damage in the value of the reported companies that the site had to close since they were unable to find an insurance that was willing to cover them.

The truth doesn't always count - unfortunately.

so the German definition of libel is: publishing a lie, or the truth ... how odd
 
so the German definition of libel is: publishing a lie, or the truth ... how odd
Well, that's one possible interpretation.

I prefer to look at this in another way:

If you're being sued for libel regardless of whether it is justified or not, you'll have to go to court. So you need a lawyer and you have to foward fees for the proceedings. That's why you need an insurance - you'll have to shell out money before the matter has actually been tried.

It's a simple business deecision: You have to ask yourself if it's really worth the hassle to publish your experience with such a business opponent.
 
I have two of his dye transfer prints framed on my wall, and they make me grin every time I walk past them. Dude has chops.
 
Sorry - wrong argument. I recall, that there was a dedicated website in Germany that specialized on disclosing customer complaints. They had to close down exactly because of this.

The reason to do so was that these reports could cause so much damage in the value of the reported companies that the site had to close since they were unable to find an insurance that was willing to cover them.

The truth doesn't always count - unfortunately.

In that case German law differs from the rest of the world, in that you're guilty until proven innocent?

In most laws, sueing for libel means you have to prove the other party is WRONG in what they're saying about you.
 
In that case German law differs from the rest of the world, in that you're guilty until proven innocent?

I don't know the precise circumstances actual case Arjay is talking about, but this does not seem like a question of guilty until proven innocent at all. From what I understand from Arjay's description, the website in question did not go down because they were ordered to close, but because they couldn't afford their ongoing legal costs and couldn't get insurance - presumably because they were being sued all the time and not all of those lawsuits were wrongful.

If you run a disclosure website you can be sure that not all of the "disclosures" posted on your website are truthful. So you can be sure that some of those libel suits will actually hold water.

I don't think that phenomenon is entirely unheard of in whatever jurisdiction you live.
 
Back
Top Bottom