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Also, I believe just because they were stolen/missing, they are still "property " of the auction house. If they found them the day the auction closed or are recovered now, the auction house still has ownership. |
[QUOTE=Peter_Spaeth;2434504]Who knew about it before the closing and where did you read that?[/QU
A couple dealers who were set up at the Strongsville show knew of the theft and advised me so...they were told several larger consignments where stolen from the show in their current auction. They did not advise which cards specifically were stolen... they knew stuff was stolen but they were not told which exact cards so it leads one to wonder. |
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Hi Scott! I'm just playing devils advocate, obviously it totally sucks for both consignor and buyer. Some of the cards are basically irreplaceable, but at least there is some sort of hare brained value placed on them. As Ryan mentioned, overall was about what he expected. Imagine if insurance looked up last sales....yikes! I'd have to check my Memory Lane consignment agreement for actual terms, but I'm assume ML DOES own rights ( to sell, possibly mentiined as dispose, at a minimum) to be able to sell the card, at their discretion, as long as the consignor is paid. Otherwise, if the sales were weak, the consignor could just "demand their property back". So I am finding flaw in your logic that the auction houses never have "ownership" of their consignments. If the cards appear, can the consignor demand them back, or is ML legally bound to sell to the highest bidder? They would be returned to the "owner" or posessor? Strange situation Possession is 9/10ths of the law 🙄 |
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It's probably unnecessary but we have language in our contract that says the consignor agrees that to pull an item we must be in agreement, so people can't just flake out and change their mind late in the auction if they're unhappy. 7. This contract is to remain in full force and cannot be canceled without the agreement of both parties |
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It’s been just over 30 days from the theft. Anyone heard any update from the parties?
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There was a funny post on Blowout.
https://www.blowoutforums.com/showpo...8&postcount=98 |
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Scott / Aquarian...
I don't see how that clause 7 of your contract can be stretched to say that unless buyer and seller agree to pull a lot from the auction, then it cannot be done and you must continue with a lot's auction when you no longer have the item; and that as a seller you are authorized to defraud bidders and an eventual winner by accepting bids when you well know that you don't have the item. Regardless of clause 7, you know that's not right. |
I agree with Frank that the result is not mandated by the contract. That said, under the unique circumstances of this case, I don't see how anyone was "defrauded" by continuing the auction. No good choices here.
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Thank you counselor. Now, for the prosecution. What are your said damages for bidders who won lots which are not recovered? ..... ..... |
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This was obviously an effort to mitigate a no win situation. One could argue it was not the best solution and I get that, but to call it fraud is in my view unjustified. |
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Never argue with an idiot, they will make you stoop to their level, then beat you with experience. This whole thread offers a multitude of opinions great, everyone is is entitled to theirs, and it's okay. However, when people start throwing out legal terms, that are not fact, it's plain wrong. Nothing was fraudulent and there are no damages for any plaintiffs. IF Mile High let it run on advice from legal/insurance. Can you fault them for that? It might not feel right, but surely the loss of millions probably weighs mpre heavily over your feelings. |
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Their opinions surrounding facts still don't matter, when they are clearly pedestrian, not to mention wrong. Sorry if your parents told you we are all equal, it doesn't mean your opinions should be weighted the same regardless of class, creed, religion or FCF. |
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How much money must one have to express an opinion in a place you are? Is that in raw cash on hand or net work? What religious view must I have to have an opinion worthy of expression? What creed(s) must I follow for your approval? Enquiring minds want to know :rolleyes: |
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Again, I have made no comment on 2 nor does this have anything to do with the definition. The bidders did not pay and thus do not have provable damages. This may have something to do with why I am not arguing whether or not they should be taken to civil court for fraud. |
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There must be a way to defend this without denying easily ascertainable provable facts and insisting on fake insurance policies that do not exist :rolleyes: Oops, I forgot to check if my religion and net worth matches the Republican guy's before posting again. Darn it. |
Intent to deceive, as I think of it, means intending to induce the other party to take an action that is to their detriment. Literally, yes, you could say in a vacuum that ML wanted bidders to keep bidding, but then you're divorcing the exercise from the whole point of fraud law.
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I don't want any result here, and you can keep saying it until you're blue in the face but it ain't so. I am simply stating my opinion on whether there was fraud, which happens to be informed by decades of experience which I am sure you will disregard as some sort of "appeal to authority" which it is not.
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If the defense of Memory Lane relies on 1) Rejecting the dictionary or 2) Following Republican Clown's religious values and/or having a flex off with him over who has more money :rolleyes: or 3) an unseen insurance policy/choice/decision with no precedent in all of human history and that is obviously fiction One might start to conclude that the difficulty in finding a reasonable argument is an indicator that something doesn't make sense here. Can anyone put forth an argument for Memory Lane that, while it will surely differ with other posters over the values placed on honesty, disclosure and forthrightness in that the argument will have to reject them implicitly, is at least a serious argument that does not rely on absurdities that absolutely nobody here would accept if it didn't benefit what they want to benefit? None of the defenses would be accepted if it was me doing the fake auction and I made them, and we surely all know that on some level. Surely a better case can be made. |
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I have no doubt you and many others would and do take what they like over objectivity and appeal to themselves. Appealing to oneself only really works to oneself though. |
Don't we need to know what the exact reasoning was behind ML's decision to move forward with the auction without pulling the 54 lots as to whether it was fraud or not? Was that decision they made on their own or was it required or requested of them?
I am not sure they could use as a defense or explanation that they had to let the auction run to establish values on those 54 lots. My reasoning is that prior to the sale their number 1 consignor and a valued representative of ML established values on each item he consigned. If I am not mistaken most, if not all, of the cards stolen belonged to that consignor. Anyway, below is Ryan's post below from the morning after the auction and clearly before he knew the cards had been stolen because of the "tongue in cheek comment that someone stole a card in referencing the CJ Jax. Quote:
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Surely there is an actual argument here instead of pretending the dictionary is wrong and lying is not deceitful and your experience is paramount to the language. If I made an argument hinging on how my experience overcomes the dictionary, you’d know I was being a fool and wrong. Can we just have a point made that is not palpably absurd? As I’ve said before the ‘maybe the cops told them too’ is a much better defense, because the vast majority of the actual arguments made in this thread cannot be defended without blatant falsehoods and rejections of the dictionary of the last two pages. It is not that hard to make logically consistent arguments in favor of unethical things. |
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