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# Thursday, October 16, 2008
Macy's heir sues Leno -- but why?
Posted by Angelo

  •  


An unwarranted law suit? Perhaps. Here are the details:

According to the Associated Press, Wendy Lubin, daughter of John W. Straus, the grandson of the founder of the Macy's department store chain, has sued Jay Leno and others over the value of cars sold by Straus when he was ill. Among those cars sold was the F.R. Wood & Son-bodied town car sold to Leno and featured elsewhere on this site and a 1930 Rolls-Royce. The famous unrestored Bugatti Atalante coupe that has been making the concours rounds was also part of the Strauss collection and was sold around the same time, but it's unclear if that car was included in the law suit. The law suite contends the "Tonight Show'' host was illegally sold the scion's 1931 Duesenberg automobile. All of the cars were garaged in Manhattan for more than 50 years.

Court papers say Straus paid all that was owed to store the cars, but they were auctioned off in 2005. They say Leno bought the Duesenberg and someone else bought the Rolls-Royce.

The lawsuit says the two cars were worth $1.7 million. It says the auction was a sham designed to illegally take the cars while Straus was ill. Straus died May 18 at age 88.

A Leno spokeswoman did not immediately return a call for comment.


My opinion: Some sources state Leno bought the car for around $200,000, which was fair market value in 2005 for a Duesenberg with this extremely conservative body style in this condition (Number 4 to Number 5, according to the Old Cars Price Guide standards). The car had been poorly stored in a New York City parking garage, and although it was initially thought the car had 7,000 miles, upon tear-down, the car's mechanical parts made it clear the odometer had rolled over at least once. The upholstery in the rear was not original, and needed replacement due to the condition. At least one fender had rusted completely through due to the poor storage conditions.

This particular town car carried a rather stodgy and formal body style, an important element (and in this case, detriment) to Duesenberg pricing, and its lack of a supercharger made it a mechanically basic Model J. To reach the million-dollar mark in Duesenberg land, the car needs to be a completely open model, or an extremely rakish closed model, and this car was neither.

Unfortunately, when many people both in and out of the hobby hear the word "Duesenberg," they picture seven figures with lots of zeros. That's simply not the case. In this instance, even restored, the one-of-a-kind car probably wouldn't fetch $1 million, and if it did, you can credit Leno's ownership to the selling price. And you can bet Leno will have more than $1 million into the car after buying it and having it restored -- way more than it's worth.

It's important to note that, since the economic roller coaster began, Duesenberg prices have been going up as more people take their assets and put them into Classic cars, which tend to have more stable prices. As a result, prices have gone up in the past three years, and the car would likely sell for more than the $200,000 paid three years ago. This is also happening with fine art.

The law suit does not separate how much of the total $1.7 million is attributed to the value of the Duesenberg and how much goes to the Rolls-Royce. Regardless, Duesenbergs tend to be worth more than Rolls-Royces, so it's a fair guess to say that at least half of that money in the law suit is slated for the Duesenberg.

By the way, here are some prices:

2004: The restored Derham phaeton, an attractive open body and a car driven by Elvis in the movie "Spinout," sold for $540,000.

2004: A handsome, restored Murphy convertible sedan, another attractive open body, sold for $600,000.

2005: A very desirable and restored LaGrande phaeton, sold for $650,000.

2005: A handsome and very presentable Rollston town car sold for $550,000.

2008: An old restoration on a Murphy convertible coupe, one of the most desirable body styles on a Duesenberg chassis, sold for $680,000.

All of the cars above were in MUCH better condition, and were MUCH more attractive and desirable cars.

My judgment: For the defendant. A fair price for a fair car at the time it was sold, and to believe otherwise shows a clear misunderstanding for the collector car market. This case should be immediately thrown out of court with apologies to Mr. Leno.

Catch the original article here.






Thursday, October 16, 2008 11:33:17 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Friday, October 03, 2008
A classy birthday card
Posted by Angelo

Old Cars Weekly reader Bruce J. Annett, Jr. sent me this photograph, which also appeared in some advertisements around General Motor's 100 birthday on Sept. 16.

Definitely cooler than a singing telegram or cake!






Friday, October 03, 2008 3:33:44 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Friday, September 19, 2008
GM won't do it, but Jersey Cadillac club will
Posted by Angelo

Other than recent radio promotions to sell Chevys, GM appears to be keeping its 100th anniversary a low-key affair, car clubs are picking up the slack. I rec'd this note regarding an even in North Jerseythat will celebrate the automaker's centennial, which also gives me a chance to post a photo of a beautiful 1937 LaSalle coupe owned by Cadillac Club of North Jersey member Paul Cusano . Here's the deal:

Cadillac Club Celebrates 100th Anniversary of General Motors

    On Sunday, September 28 (rain date Sunday, October 5), the Cadillac Club of North Jersey will celebrate the 100th Anniversary of General Motors with an all-General Motors Show hosted by Brogan Cadillac Buick, 100 South Broad Street, Ridgewood. The show begins at 9 AM with trophies awarded at 2:30.
    The show is open to any Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, GMC, LaSalle, Oakland, Oldsmobile, Pontiac or any other car or truck manufactured by General Motors that is 1994 or older. Pre-registration is $10, while day of show registration is $15. Spectator admission is free.
    For more information call 973-942-5896 or 201-888-8727.





Friday, September 19, 2008 4:13:48 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Thursday, September 18, 2008
Compare and Contrast
Posted by Angelo

Teachers LOVE compare and contrast assignments, and I spent so much time in school, it's must have become ingrained in me. While at the Kruse Fall Auburn auction and the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Club Reunion, I found a couple opportunities to compare some interesting cars.

At the auction, I found a 1960 Ford and 1960 Edsel parked next to each other, so it was a great chance to see how similar these cars are to one another, as well as how they are different. To boot, the cars were both four-door hardtops, too, making the chance to "compare and contrast" even greater. I'll let the photos speak for themselves, but one detail I noticed on the Ford and Edsel was that, while both sport trim at the top edge of the fenders with different ornaments on the top, the trim is not interchangeable, even though it clearly could have been while retaining different ornaments. Also note the hoods and front bumpers are wildly different, but the rest of the sheet metal looks interchangeable.











At first glance, there appears to be little difference between Auburns and Auburn Salons. With these Auburn Twelve models spotted at the ACD Club Reunion, the difference is much clearer. Note the silver and blue Salon's shorter grille, covered radiator car, more sweeping fender line at the front and more shallow bumper when compared to the regular Auburn Twelve. Also note the different headlamps.







Thursday, September 18, 2008 10:48:13 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Friday, September 05, 2008
Flirting with fuel injection
Posted by Angelo

For vacation, I slipped out from behind my computer to attend the festivities in Auburn, Ind. Generally, I attend this event for the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Club Reunion and the swap meet at the Kruse Auction Park, but I usually walk through the car corral and cars to be auctioned and dream a little bit. This year, I nearly tripped over my dropped jaw and fell flat on my face while walking through the cars to be auctioned when I ran into this 1958 Chrysler 300D originally equipped with factory electronic fuel injection!




Can you believe a 1958 Chrysler 300-D with fuel injection appeared in the tin? I barely could! The only flaw in the design of the 1958 Chrysler is the tail lamps: they don't go to the tip of the fin as they do in 1957. I never figured out why that was.

Some people may already know that I am fascinated by fuel-injected 1950s cars, particularly those full-size offerings from American car producers, and have been collecting all the information I can find in order to research a future article. You know the cars I'm talking about: big 1957-'59 Chevrolets, 1957-'58 Pontiac Bonnevilles and 1958 Chrysler Corp. products (Did you know Oldsmobile is believed to have been flirting with fuel injection on a 1957 model?).

The 1957 Chevrolet Bel Airs and even the Bonnevilles from the same year aren't terribly uncommon at the giant events, but forget seeing any other year of full-size fuelie -- they just aren't out there. So seeing this 1958 300-D at Kruse was absolutely incredible.

As a kid, I remember reading about a 1958 Chrysler 300-D originally equipped with fuel injection and weathering under a tree in a Mopar magazine several years ago, but had never seen pics of it, let alone the actual car. I am not sure if this 300-D was the same car mentioned in that Mopar magazine, but the seller stated that it was one of 21 built and 9 survivors. As was common, the original Bendix Electrojector on the car at this year's Kruse auction had long since been replaced by dual Carter carburetor four-barrels, but those incredibly rare "300-D fuel injection" emblems remain on the Raven Black quarters.




There it is, the emblem that separates this 1958 300-D from nearly every other of the other, already rare 1958 Chrysler 300s: the fuel injection badge. Try finding these NOS!

Spotting this 300-D was the second 1958 fuelie I've seen this summer. (The other was a 1958 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe at the Appleton Old Car Show. It, too, had a carburetor with just "fuel injection" emblems in the proper place.) Hopefully, I'll score a triple and see Tom White's famous gold 1958 De Soto Adventurer fuelie, the only known 1950s Mopar with a working fuel injection unit, at Hershey this year!




The car was featured in a European car magazine called "Classic American," though I don't know the issue (love to find a copy, though!). I haven't heard what it sold for, if it met the reserve, but I am sure ithe price was hard on the wallet.


Friday, September 05, 2008 12:17:20 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [3]
# Wednesday, September 03, 2008
Early Chevs at the Salisbury Automobile Classic
Posted by Angelo

Here's some information I received on the Salisbury Automobile Classic on Sept. 7, a great concours-type show I attended several years ago. I highly recommend it to anyone in the Des Moines, Iowa, area. And even if you're not local, it's definitely worth the drive! Here are the particulars and a release from the folks at the concours:


4025 Tonawanda Drive
Des Moines, Iowa

www.salisburyhouse.org

Release:
William Crapo Durant’s legendary success with Chevrolet will highlight the 2008 Salisbury Automobile Classic (SAC) on Sunday, September 7.  Nine Chevrolets (1912-1920 models representing each year) from the time Durant founded Chevrolet in 1912 until his second departure from General Motors in 1920 will be on display.  
Durant’s achievements include starting Buick in 1904, General Motors in 1908 and Chevrolet in 1912. After loosing control of GM in 1911, Durant’s sensational success in just four years with his Chevrolet Motor Company allowed him to financially retake control of General Motors in 1915.  
In addition to the first public display of these nine Durant Chevrolets from the world class collection of Dennis Albaugh; noted automobile author and researcher Bill Jepsen will present a colorful collection of stories about the life of GM Founder William C. Durant.  Jepsen’s presentation will be held in the South Gardens of the Salisbury Castle www.salisburyhouse.org  overlooking a collection of cars including Durants, Locomobiles, Stars  and Chevrolets,  among the other cars built during Durant’s colorful career in the automobile industry.
On Saturday, car exhibitors at the SAC will have the opportunity to participate in the 1st SAC Heartland’s Driving Tour.  The tour includes noted agricultural attractions like Iowa’s world famous “fields of dreams” corn and soybean fields, the Living History Farms, the international headquarters and research facilities of Pioneer Hybrids, and the John Deere Des Moines Manufacturing facility.  The final attraction on the 34 mile tour will be lunch and a showing of the 100 Chevrolets (1912-1974) in the private collection of Dennis Albaugh.
Saturday Evening includes a fun and frolic 1920’s Style Great Gatsby Evening Party and car celebration on the grounds of the Salisbury Castle.



Wednesday, September 03, 2008 10:31:17 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
View my Monterey pics
Posted by Angelo

I nearly forgot to mention that I posted a bunch of my Monterey 2008 photos with comments in the community site. Just click HERE to view them. If the link doesn't work, copy and paste this link: http://community.oldcarsweekly.com/www.oldcarsweekly.com/blog/2008/08/26/check_out_my_2008_montereypebble_beach_concours_delegance_pix



Wednesday, September 03, 2008 9:47:33 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Monday, August 18, 2008
Little Bugatti, big bucks
Posted by Angelo

There’s already a lot of money in the Monterey Bay area, but more greenbacks flooded the Oceanside California city in the form of cool cars and hard cash. The cash showed up at the many auctions, including those held by Russo and Steele, RM Auctions, Bonhams and Gooding & Company.


Phil Skinner, ace auction reporter for Old Cars Weekly, reported that a 1937 Bugatti Type 57SC Atalante coupe sold at the Gooding & Company sale on Saturday night for $7.2 million dollars. Skinner said bidding was hot between a phone bidder and a bidder who was in the audience. The audience member nabbed the car for what very well might be a record price for a non-Royale Bugatti. Gooding reported the car sold for $7.92 million, a figure presumably determined after the buyer’s premium.


The car was one of 12 Bugattis offered from the Dr. Peter and Susan Williamson Collection. According to Gooding, a portion of the $15.5 million raised from the sale of the Bugattis will be donated on behalf of the late Dr. Peter Williamson to the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center and the Dartmouth Medical School.


Atalante coupes are a favorite of mine, and I find it noteworthy to mention a second Bugatti Atalante was sold in the sale for $850,000. This car was in better condition, but was not an SC. I’m writing this from a hotel room and far away from my library, but I believe an SC is a lower-slung (S) and supercharged (–C) model of Type 57, and a far more desirable model of Bugatti.


You can see complete results from the Monterey-area auctions on the pages of Old Cars Weekly.



Monday, August 18, 2008 6:06:30 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
Alfa Romeo wins 2008 Pebble Beach
Posted by Angelo

The judge’s votes have been tallied at the world’s most prestigious car show, the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance (as if I needed to state it), and this year’s Best of Show winner isn’t a French car or even a mighty Duesenberg, but an equally impressive 1938 Alfa Romeo 8C 2900B Touring Berlinetta, a dark blue beauty with rear fender skirts with sweet horizontal cut-outs to expose the rear wheels. The fastback coupe was shown by Jon and Mary Shirley of Medina, Wash.

 

The Shirleys’ Alfa was pitted against two other Best of Show nominees, a stunning 1934 Packard LeBaron sport phaeton brought by multiple-Pebble Beach Best of Show winners Jack and Helen Nethercutt and similarly successful Sam and Emily Mann’s 1935 Hispano Suiza K6 Brandone cabriolet.

 

I speculated that the sheer beauty of the Manns’ Hisso and the size, beauty and uniqueness of General William Lyon’s 1939 Mercedes-Benz 770K Cabriolet B would put either of these Classics on the podium and flushed with ribbons, but I was wrong!

 



Monday, August 18, 2008 3:49:13 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Saturday, August 16, 2008
Waiting for the sting
Posted by Angelo

Anticipation is building for several cars about to cross the many auction blocks across the Monterey area, and one of those at Russo and Steele is a 1966 Corvair.

 

Before you burst into a hearty laugh that would make Ralph Nader smirk, this isn’t just any Corvair, but a Yenko Stinger, one of 100 built by Don Yenko for racing in SCCA competition. The car that will be offered at the Russo and Steele auction is a 220-hp Stage III car, one of five believed to have been built.

 

The vendor purchased the car 95-percent restored and left with a few things to wrap up, including rebuilding the special carburetors, which had to be taken to a special shop to complete.

 

The source of the anticipation is largely because no one knows what it’s worth, not even the owner. According this Yenko Corvair’s owner, only one other Yenko Stinger has appeared in a public sale, and it was still a serious race car, not one restored to its as-delivered configuration in which even the glovebox lamp still works, as on this one. As a pricing nerd, learning the value of such a rare car is fascinating to me. I’ll keep you posted what this rare bird sells for, but in the meantime, here are some interesting Yenko Stinger facts, learned from the owner, to peruse before the car crosses this block this Saturday evening.

 

Yenko Stinger equipment:

3.89 axle ration

Factory roll bar

Widened wheels (not all Yenko Stingers have these special wheels)

Three body tags, including a fleet-order tag

Special Yenko oil pan, headers and air cleaners



Saturday, August 16, 2008 8:33:08 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
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