Thomas Jefferson is known to have been a wine aficionado, and having served as an envoy to France in the late 18th century. So, when four bottles of red wine said to be from 1787 were discovered in Paris with the initials “Th.J.” it was believed the bottles belonged to Thomas Jefferson. Koch purchased the four bottles of red wine in 1987 and 1988 from wine dealer Hardy Rodenstock through intermediaries.
However, by 2000, the appeals court found, reports had begun to surface doubting the origin of the bottles that “would suggest to a reasonably intelligent person that the wine was not authentic.” But Koch, began questioning the authenticity of the bottles only in 2005. The court held Koch’s claim “is therefore time-barred.”
In the lawsuit Koch filed in 2010, he alleged that Rodenstock and Michael Broadbent – then head of Christie’s wine department, at the time of purchase – acted as associates in committing fraud. Koch alleged that Christie’s had made a deal with Rodenstock to promote him and sell his wines. Koch also alleged that Christie’s had lobbied Jefferson’s Virginia home, Monticello to support the claims for the wine.
The case was first dismissed by U.S. district Judge Barbara Jones, and was received on appeal. Now, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals also holds that Koch’s claims are time-barred. Brad Goldstein, a representative for Koch, said referring to Christie’s, “They got away with it … They escaped on a technicality and their behavior warrants closer scrutiny.”
On another front, Koch is pursuing a lawsuit against Rodenstock, where in May a magistrate judge fined Rodenstock for over $600,000 in damages. The order is subject now to the approval of Judge Jones who is overseeing the matter.