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Western Prelacy Scores Early Victory against the Getty Museum

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  • Western Prelacy Scores Early Victory against the Getty Museum

    Yeghiayan Law Firm, PC
    535 N. Brand Blvd. Ste. 270
    Glendale, CA 91203
    Telephone: 818.242.7400
    www.yeghiayanlaw.com

    Schwarcz, Rimberg, Boyd & Rader LLP
    6310 San Vicente Blvd., Suite 360
    Los Angeles, CA 90048
    Telephone: 323.302.9488
    www.srbr-law.com


    The Western Prelacy Scores Early Victory against the Getty Museum in
    Lawsuit involving Armenian Genocide-Era Looted Art

    On November 3, 2011, the Superior Court in Los Angeles handed
    Plaintiff, the Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of
    America, as the U.S. representative and assignee of the Catholicosate
    of the Great House of Cilicia, an early and well-fought victory in an
    action seeking the return of the culturally significant and symbolic
    Canon Tables of the Zeyt'un Gospels, which were commissioned by
    Catholicos Constantine I and created by the finest Armenian medieval
    illuminator T'oros Roslin in 1256. Nearly a year and a half after
    the complaint was filed, the court denied in its entirety the Getty
    Museum defendants' demurrer, which sought to dismiss the action.

    The lawsuit, originally filed by the Western Prelacy in June 2010,
    BC 438824, named as defendants the J. Paul Getty Museum and the J.
    Paul Getty Trust. The complaint accuses defendants of purchasing art
    which was stolen from the rightful owner, the Catholicosate of
    Cilicia, during the gravest days of the Armenian Genocide, 1915-1923.
    The Canon Tables were purchased by the Getty in 1994.

    The Zeyt'un Gospels is said to have supernatural powers of
    protection. On the eve of the Genocide, it was paraded through the
    streets of Zeyt'un in an attempt to create a spiritual firewall
    around the city to protect its citizens from harm. Unbeknownst to the
    Catholicosate of Cilicia, during the tragedy of the Genocide, the most
    beautiful pages from the Gospels were surgically cut away from the
    manuscript and ended up in the United States. The Zeyt'un Gospels
    minus the Canon Tables are currently located at the Matenadaran, the
    Museum of Ancient Manuscripts in Yerevan, Armenia. The Western
    Prelacy wants the Canon Tables returned and reunited with the rest of
    the manuscript.

    In addition to asserting that the Western Prelacy's claims were
    time-barred under California law, the Getty defendants also asked the
    court to strike down as unconstitutional a recent amendment to the
    California Code of Civil Procedure, Section 338(c)(3), which provides
    that a claim against a museum, gallery, auctioneer or dealer for the
    recovery of looted art must be brought within six years of the
    plaintiff's actual discovery of: (1) the identity of the work of
    fine art; (2) the whereabouts of the art; and (3) information showing
    claimant has a claim for a possessory interest in the art. All actions
    under Section 338(c)(3) must be brought before December 31, 2017. The
    judge, Honorable Abraham Khan, rejected defendants' assertions that
    early dismissal was appropriate based upon statutes of limitations and
    declined to entertain defendants' constitutional arguments based
    upon due process and violations of the first amendment.

    This is what is hoped to be the first of many victories for the
    Western Prelacy and for Armenians in a long overdue movement to
    repatriate Genocide-era looted property to its rightful owners.

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