An antiques dealer who bought an African mask for £130 and then sold it for £3.6million has won a legal battle with its previous owners after a judge ruled the elderly French couple failed to appreciate its true worth.
The couple, in their 80s, sold the wooden mask in September 2021 as part of a number of antiquities including African artifacts they had kept in their secondary home in southern France and wanted to be rid of.
The objects had belonged to an ancestor who was a governor in Africa, and the couple believed the African mask was of little value.
They then sold the mask go for 150 euros (£130), but in March 2022 it was resold to an unidentified buyer at an auction in the southern city of Montpellier, for 4.2 million euros (£3.6million).
The auctioneers described it as 'an extremely rare 19th-century mask, property of a secret society of the Fang people in Gabon', an ethnic Bantu group, with only around 10 such objects still in existence.
The couple promptly filed for an injunction to cancel the original sale, arguing there had been an 'authentication error'. They also said the mask's buyer 'was aware of the mask's real value' at the time of the purchase.
But the court rejected the request, saying the couple had failed to make any attempt to get the mask valued before selling.
Their claim was characterised by 'inexcusable negligence and frivolity', the court said, ruling that they were not owed any money.
It also ruled that the antiquities dealer, who himself was no expert on African art, did not cheat them.
The dealer actually offered to pay them 300,000 euros (around $330,000), the auction starting price, but the couple's children refused, preferring to take the matter to court.
The couple's lawyer, Frederic Mansat-Jaffre, said after the verdict that his clients were 'dumbstruck' by the decision and considering an appeal.
The court also threw out a separate motion by the government of Gabon to have the sale cancelled and the mask returned.
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