Jacob “Jacqui” Safra, a Swiss financier, collector, and scion of the illustrious Syrian Jewish banking family, has launched a legal salvo against Christie’s, accusing the auction house of bad faith and fiduciary breaches in handling his multimillion dollar art collection.
The lawsuit, filed in New York State Supreme Court on January 17, alleges that the house declared Safra in default on a consignment agreement without due cause, leading to suboptimal sales, devalued assets, and significant financial and cultural losses. Central to the dispute is a collection valued in the complaint at over $100 million, encompassing Old Master paintings, antiques, and letters by Albert Einstein—an ensemble Safra claims was systematically mishandled.
The deal struck between Christie’s and Safra was for an advance of $63 million against the future sales of works from his collection, Artnet News reported last week. At the crux of the complaint is Safra’s assertion that Christie’s failed to market Safra’s collection effectively, particularly a set of Einstein’s love letters that the auction house described as “the most important source for Einstein’s early life and intellectual development.” Sold in December 2024 for £350,000 (about $436,000), the letters fetched far less than their £1 million ($1.25 million) low estimate, let alone the $442,500 Safra paid for them in 1996. The complaint lambasts Christie’s for neglecting standard promotional efforts, such as scholar-written catalogues, web pages, videos, and exhibitions, actions Safra believes to be pivotal to achieving higher prices.
Safra also accuses the house of misattributions that drastically slashed the value of key works. For instance, Christie’s allegedly downgraded Mars Disrobing and Venus Surrounded by Nymphs and Putti from a Giuseppe Cades original to an “imitation,” a move Safra claims lacked scholarly justification and slashed its value by 90 percent. Similarly, he claims that the picture Officer in a Red Beret, attributed to Willem Drost, could be a Rembrandt—a valuation he says Christie’s chose to disregard. High-profile works by J.M.W. Turner and Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot were sold for fractions of their estimates, further undermining confidence in the auctioneer’s handling of Safra’s collection, despite most of the lots selling for around their low estimates.
The lawsuit also highlights financial disputes, including supposed delays in applying auction proceeds to Safra’s account. He alleges that these delays, sometimes extending up to 99 days, allowed Christie’s to accrue undue interest while avoiding repayment thresholds. A separate claim from MGG California over the ownership of certain artworks is also contested; Safra maintains the claim, dismissed in court, should never have justified the house declaring him in default.
Christie’s, for its part, insists it fulfilled its contractual obligations. A spokesperson for the auction house told ARTnews, “The property was sold in accordance with the agreement with Mr. Safra. As this has now moved to litigation, we do not intend to comment further.”
Safra is asking the court to compel Christie’s to pay back what he claims to have overpaid to the auction house under the advance agreement and damages equal to the difference between the fair market value and the hammer price of the works, plus interest. Safra’s attorney did not immediately return a request for comment.
As the legal battle unfolds, 25 more lots from the collection are scheduled to hit the block in early February sales.