I believe the Quads drop to 3.5 ohms or so in the bass and rise quite high in the treble.Actually, as with most electrostatics it is the opposite of that. The impedance of a capacitor decreases as frequency increases, and from an electrical standpoint an electrostatic panel is essentially a giant capacitor.
Here are impedance curves and other measurements for the ESL-63 and for one of the versions of the Snell Type A:
http://www.stereophile.com/content/quad-esl-63-loudspeaker-measurements
http://www.stereophile.com/content/snell-acoustics-type-reference-loudspeaker-measurements
It appears that the Montrachet only provides a single output tap, and I wasn't able to find a spec on what nominal load impedance it is designed for. But if the answer is 16 ohms, as you mentioned, the fact that both speakers have impedances that are well under 4 ohms at certain frequencies in the treble region does not bode well with respect to sonics. Nor does the relatively low 86 db/2.83 volts/1 meter measured sensitivity of that version of the Snell Type A.
With the Snell, though, I don't see these measurements as being suggestive of any danger to the amp. The one possible danger to the amp that I can see in any of these measurements relates to the 2 ohm impedance of the Quad at 30 kHz. Even though that frequency is well above audibility and above any substantial frequency content the music may have, a low and highly capacitive impedance at high frequencies can cause some amplifiers to oscillate. Perhaps that was the possibility the dealer had in mind. Although in general I would expect that to be more likely to be an issue with a solid state amp than with a tube amp.
Good luck. Regards,
-- Al