, whose work includes the stainless steel sculpture known as The Bean in Chicago’s Millennium Park. Photo via chicago.gov
By Jonathan Stempel (Reuters) – Sotheby’s was sued on Friday by New York’s attorney general, who accused the auction house of defrauding the state by helping a shipping executive avoid millions of dollars of sales taxes on art he purchased.
Attorney General Letitia James said Sotheby’s helped the client, (Issac Moises Sultan Cohen of Atlantic Feeder Services USA), obtain false tax exemption certificates known as resale certificates by letting him portray himself as an art dealer rather than as a collector.
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James said this enabled the client, who runs a Caribbean feeder service and lives mainly outside the US, to avoid sales taxes on more than $27 million of art he bought for personal use between 2010 and 2015, including for his Manhattan apartment.
The complaint said Sotheby’s accepted four resale certificates despite “overwhelming” evidence the purchases were for personal use, including when senior Sotheby’s personnel visited the apartment “to admire his artwork on the walls.”
In a statement, Sotheby’s said it “vigorously refutes the unfounded allegations made by the Attorney General, which are unsupported by both fact and law.”
The lawsuit was filed in a New York state court in Manhattan and seeks damages plus civil penalties for violations of the state’s False Claims Act.
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It was filed two years after one of the client’s companies, Porsal Equities, reached a $10.75 million settlement to resolve related state allegations over the use of resale certificates.
“Millionaires and billionaires cannot be allowed to evade taxes,” James said in a statement. “Sotheby’s violated the law and fleeced New York taxpayers out of millions.”
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Bill Berkrot and Rosalba O’Brien, Reuterts)
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