The Mercury

Heirs to Nazi-looted painting win appeal

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THE US Supreme Court recently ruled in favour of a Jewish family that is trying to reclaim a Camille Pissarro painting seized by the Nazis in 1939 and now owned by a leading Spanish museum, court documents show.

In the latest twist in a two-decade legal saga, Supreme Court justices ruled unanimousl­y that the dispute between the Cassirer family and Madrid’s Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection Foundation should be decided according to the law of the state of California, not US federal law. The appeal, brought by the heirs of Lilly Cassirer, overturned the 2019 verdict of a California court that under federal law the Madrid museum was the rightful owner of the 1897 Paris street scene.

“The family believes this is a success and they are hopeful that justice will be served,” Bernardo Cremades, lawyer of the Jewish Community of Madrid and the Federation of Jewish Communitie­s of Spain, which are helping the Cassirers, told Reuters.

The case will now return to the lower courts.

“Under California’s law a person cannot consolidat­e the property of any asset that’s been stolen. In this case there is no doubt, and the Thyssen Foundation does not deny it, that the painting was plundered by the Nazis during World War II,” Cremades said.

The Thyssen Museum said it was confident that the appeals court in California would rule in its favour.

Lilly Cassirer inherited the artwork in 1926. She was forced to surrender the Impression­ist painting to the Nazis in 1939 in order to obtain exit visas from Germany.

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