The auction house, which estimated the letter could sell for as much as $35,000, determined it had been stolen and contacted the FBI.
The estate of the person who possessed the letter claimed it had been purchased legally, but the appeals court disagreed.
“As an original paper belonging to the Commonwealth and dated in 1780, the letter is owned by the Commonwealth,” the decision said. “It could not lawfully have been alienated to a third party … either before or after the letter left the custody of the Commonwealth.”
Despite the appeals court’s decision, the legal saga may not be over, according to an attorney for the party that had tried to sell letter.
“We are disappointed with the 1st Circuit’s decision, especially its creation of a seemingly new category of public record, a ‘historic public record,’” and the fact it ignored that the letter was not one of the documents the state claimed was stolen, Ernest Badway said in an email.
They may either file a motion for a rehearing with the appeals court, or appeal directly to the U.S. Supreme Court, he said.