The longstanding family drama surrounding the legacy of the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. is sharing the spotlight with the rapturous reviews for the new film, “Selma,” which depicts the life of the late civil rights icon.
Less than a week before Martin Luther King Jr. Day, a ruling ended in no decision Tuesday as to who rightfully owns King’s personal “traveling” Bible and 1964 Nobel Peace Prize medal, a local NBC News affiliate reported. Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney neglected to issue a decision in the battle between King’s surviving sons and daughter about whether or not to sell the two prized-possessions.
The prolonged battle began last year when King’s sons, Martin Luther King III and Dexter Scott King — who control the MLK estate — sued their sister, Rev. Bernice King, to reclaim the Bible and medal. Bernice refused, and the items since have been held in a court-ordered safety deposit box.
The brothers hope to retrieve the belongings from their sister for a potential sale to a private buyer to raise money for the estate.
“The reality is that the items belong to the corporation. All of us, as original heirs of Martin Luther King Jr., assigned all of our rights and our inheritance to this corporation. And one individual decided to sequester those items,” Dexter told local reporters after his court appearance on Tuesday.
Unless a judge makes a decision in the coming weeks, a trial between the siblings could begin as soon as Feb. 16. Neither attorneys for both sides of the debate immediately responded to msnbc’s request for comment.
The ownership dispute is at least the fifth lawsuit between the siblings since their mother, Coretta Scott King, died in 2006. The King couple’s eldest daughter, Yolanda, died in 2007.
In an emotional speech last February, Bernice blasted her brothers over the lawsuit they filed against her that asked a judge to force her to relinquish two of their father’s most-prized possessions. The complaint states that Bernice “secreted and sequestered” her brothers in violation of a 1995 agreement that gave the estate ownership of their father’s entire property.
“I will always love my brothers, but we are of different minds and most importantly, different relationships with God,” she said in a press conference last February. “These items should never be sold to any person, as I say it, or any institution, because they’re sacred. I take this strong position for my father because Daddy is not here to say himself, ‘My Bible and medals are never to be sold.’” King’s Bible was one of two used to swear-in President Barack Obama during his second inauguration in 2013.
Two separate appraisers told The Associated Press they expect the medal could sell for about $5 million to $10 million, based on other purchases of Nobel medals and King’s place in history.
The family’s legal feuds and squabbles, which have been ongoing for years, have occasionally overshadowed the public conversation about the civil rights icon. King’s children have been in and out of court for years for various disputes about their father’s estate. On Aug. 28, 2013, the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington and of King’s “I Have a Dream” speech, the brothers filed suit against their sister and the King Center, a nonprofit. They alleged the center, where Bernice is CEO, had been negligent in its handling of King memorabilia. The case is pending.









