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Old 07-05-2009, 12:21 PM
sportscardtheory sportscardtheory is offline
John Startleman
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Join Date: Apr 2009
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Exhibitman View Post
An auctioneer can do what it wants with stuff it owns. It cannot do the same with stuff it does not own. Mastro did not own those lots; the consignors did. They furnished them to Mastro under certain contractual terms, none of which included the right to send the items to bidders without payment. One of the actual contract terms stated that unpaid items could be reclaimed 60 days after auction (go check your small print in your consignment contract). If Mastro agreed in its contract that the consignors of unpaid items could ask for their return, then Mastro undertook the duty to hold those items, not send them out in the hope of future payment.

What is being described here is looking more and more like a Ponzi scheme where current sellers' proceeds were used to pay earlier sellers and/or where current sellers' items were used to fund large customers' businesses as no-cash-down inventory.
And how would anyone know if Mastro/Legendary isn't in on the whole thing? "Hey, buy this from us for $500,000, don't pay us. Then sell it somewhere else and we will split the money." Sound crazy? Sounds like easy money to me.
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