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Duemila Ruote – Two Thousand Wheels or… Happy Days are Here Again!

This started the way a lot of magnificent obsessions do: “There was this car.”

That sentiment motivated Fritz and Hans Schlumpf, the French textile manufacturers who collected a few dozen Bugattis and then a few hundred other cars as well in the 1950s and 1960s. With financing and tax breaks from the French government to help them compete against Asian textile mills, they took advantage of a little “bridge financing” to acquire cars. The Schlumpfs stopped paying their employees. When the brothers stopped paying their taxes, that was another matter altogether. When the government learned of the deception in the late 1970s, it seized the collection and ultimately during the 1980s, it opened as one of the world’s largest and most interesting auto museums.

It seems history does repeat itself because in Treviso, Italy, brothers Umberto and Luigi Compiano, founders of a conglomerate of service companies called NES – North East Services – took some of their bank financing and began gathering automobiles. About 430. And bicycles, 117 of those. And 60 speedboats and racing hydrofoils. And 150 motorcycles. Oh yeah, and 469 model cars, 243 model trains, and a collection reported to number 2,187 DVDs and videotapes of pornography. Turns out the Compianos mostly continued paying their employees (some 700 of them) but that tax thing… Apparently that bill ultimately reached €14 million.

NES and its collection of companies now are in receivership and Italy, unlike France in the late 1970s, has neither the resources nor the interest to open a Museu Compiano (truly few of the cars or other objects are museum quality) and so an auction took place on the last weekend of November to sell off the assets. The popular saying applies here: Everything must go. RM Sotheby’s won the contract to handle the auction (though even this was not without drama that delayed the sale date for months) and, in accordance with the demands of the government and the banks, all lots are offered without reserve. Conservative estimates suggested the three-day sale will bring in excess of €30,000,000. The actual results were far better. And quite startling. The treasury got its due first and the creditors split what remains. While many of the objects on offer are, let’s say, incomplete, there are enough vehicles to tantalize a buyer, should he or she happen to have been in Milan that weekend for the annual Milano AutoClassica.

There were countless Ferraris – many without engines or running gear but some complete. The same applied to Maseratis, Lamborghinis, Alfa Romeos, Lancias, Jaguar E-types and earlier XKs, Aston Martins, Mercedes-Benzes, Bentleys, and Rolls-Royces, as well as the odd Corvette, Ford Thunderbird, and Mustang. There were innumerable racing and rally cars (though whether real or replica is unknown). In some cases, the suggestion “Bring a trailer” was prudent. In other cases, a wheelbarrow might have been more appropriate. The familiar term Caveat Emptor is Latin. In Italian, “buyer beware” is Compratore stai attento! Still, that seemed not to matter. The auction hall was swarmed with the largest crowd of registered bidders anyone ever had counted. It was as though everyone wanted some souvenir of this escapade. Or the government had waived the Value Added Tax for the day. The former explanation is more likely.

We have listed the Porsches and a few other highlights below. The sale results are below or can be seen at www.RMSothebys.com. To suggest RM, the Italian provincial government, and the creditors were pleased with the result may be understatement. Total sales reached €51.26 million. (The exchange rate on the day of sale was $1.06 to €1.00.)

RM Sotheby’s

Duemila Ruote (Two Thousand Wheels sale)

FIERA MILANO (in a dedicated hall inside Milano AutoClassica
SS.33 del Sempione 28, 20017 Rho (MI), Italy

Friday through Sunday, 25-27 November 2016

Friday, 25 November lots

Saturday, 26 November lots

Sunday, 27 November lots

Other interesting automobile

Note: The final object for auction