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#101
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Posted By: Jim Crandell
Peter, |
#102
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I for one think there is a huge difference in shopping around a baseball card which everyone can at least agree the card is a card of the person pictured, and shopping around a jersey which belonged to a specific person when one company says they don't believe the jersey belonged to that specific person. It's like sending a Heinie Wagner card to PSA and having them certify it as a Honus Wagner card. You must also consider that a prominent forum of experts have already provided evidence that the jersey was not what it was claimed to be, and then be prepared to believe that nobody at Mastro reads that forum. Of course after the debacle with the football helmet in April maybe Mastro doesn't read that forum? |
#103
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Posted By: PS
Jim, I am curious, before you buy or bid on a card do you ask? |
#104
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Posted By: Dave
If Mastro acted "as best as they could" in this situation....that's just plain pathetic. why can't people just call a spade a spade anymore ? Mastro auctions has been exposed again....this is so transparent. |
#105
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Posted By: PS
Dan I understand your distinction but I am not sure if it holds up. Why isn't an opinion that a card is trimmed (which, if true, would render most cards relatively worthless or certainly worth only a fraction of their value if they were not trimmed) just as relevant as an opinion that there isn't enough evidence to authenticate a Babe Ruth autograph or Michael Jordan jersey? |
#106
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Posted By: Jim Crandell
Peter, |
#107
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Posted By: PS
So long as a seller honestly answers inquiries from people like Jim to whom grading history matters, and I cannot think of a context where there is not opportunity for such communication, I am not sure there is an affirmative obligation to disclose it. I guess one possible response might be that all buyers are not as sophisticated as Jim and would not know of the issue and therefore would not know to ask. I would think most people buying expensive cards DO know, but I am just speculating. |
#108
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Posted By: peter chao
I know you guys demand high standards. However, I will tell you what the California Evidence Code requires and you can say whatever you want. The California Evidence Code does not require disclosure. For instance if you were trying to prove your case and you got 3 medical reports, two medical reports were favorable and the third wasn't. You are not required to produce the third report. However, if you are asked a direct question, you are required to answer that you obtained a third opinion. |
#109
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Posted By: PS
Peter I am confused what relevance that has to whether a fact is "material" for purposes of a fraud claim? |
#110
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Posted By: peter chao
All I'm saying is that in California, it would not be material because you are not legally required to produce evidence of a contrary opinion. |
#111
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Posted By: PS
I am not sure I follow, the contexts seem unrelated to me, but if you have the Code provision handy maybe the fog would lift. |
#112
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Posted By: peter chao
Since this auction wasn't conducted in California, it really doesn't matter. I'm suggesting that perhaps we are asking for too much from our auctioneers. |
#113
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Posted By: Dave
Peter or other lawyers on the board....I'm just curious as to how courts of law view baseball cards. I've always been under the impression that no matter what you pay for a card or piece of memorabilia that it really has only an intrinsic value. |
#114
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Posted By: JK
Peter, |
#115
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Posted By: JK
Dave, |
#116
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Posted By: Corey R.Shanus
Interesting perspective that perhaps (at least at the expensive level) buyers know the games that are being played and really don't care about grading history as long as the card ends up in a graded slab. I would think if that is indeed the case then auction houses would be bending over backwards to disclose grading history. After all, what would be the harm, not to mention it would forestall any claim by a disgruntled buyer that all material facts were not disclosed. Or, to put it another way, if your perspective is true either we are dealing with auction houses that have not been legally advised or by their actions of nondisclosure feel that buyers would in fact care about grading history. |
#117
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Posted By: barrysloate
And I am curious to see how the grading services respond when they discover that cards they graded years ago, and are worth five-figures today, have been deemed altered. How will the unlucky owner of the altered card be compensated? This hasn't happened yet to my knowledge but it will become an issue in the future. |
#118
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Posted By: Cobby33
Peter C- |
#119
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Posted By: Pas
Your argument seems to proceed from the premise that avoiding legal liability is what drives auction houses. To summarize: 1) It is in their interest to disclose as much as possible that people don't care about; because that will minimize their chances of being sued. 2) Ergo, if they aren't disclosing grading history, it can only be because people DO care about it. |
#120
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Posted By: Todd Evans
I am not a Mastro apologist nor am I a Mastro hater, but I can tell you the situation with the Jordan shooting shirt is not right. I have had been a customer and consignor with Mastros for 8 or 9 years now and I have also had an experience with them knowingly selling a bad item. |
#121
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Posted By: Jeff D.
I'm not sure what "it" refers to in your statement "...the fact that auction houses are not disclosing it," but there ARE auction houses that do in fact disclose cards as possibly trimmed and recolored. I've seen REA do it. Here are just two such examples: |
#122
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
What drives any rationale profit-maximizing auction house is the desire to maximize future net income stream. That net income stream is impacted both by money going in (consignment fees and buyers premiums) and money going out (a component of which are future liabilities). So of course avoiding future legal liability should be part of current considerations. If there is to be no reduction to the inflowing income stream by disclosing a card's grading history, then in my view it would be irrational not to make the disclosure. There is no downside. The fact that they don't do it I believe means more than their perception that their customers don't care. Maybe they don't care now, but they sure as heck might when down the road they take some huge economic hit on some altered cards, and a company acting rationally would take this future change of heart by their customers into consideration. I believe that the reason companies don't make the disclosure is because they feel both (1) they can get away with not doing it because nobody else does and (2) disclosure can be the economic kiss of death for a card. Both factors are at play here and a company could rationally feel that the future legal liability resulting from their current no-disclosure policy is more than outweighed by the big boost to current inflowing income allowed to take place by the no-disclosure policy. |
#123
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Posted By: Peter S.
Jeff D. -- what I have never seen is an auction house saying "this card previously was rejected by PSA/SGC," or "this card previously was graded ---". |
#124
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Posted By: Jeffrey Lichtman
Todd, are you sure your name isn't O'Keefe? Only Michael O'Keefe would state such awful things about Mastro and the FBI. |
#125
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Posted By: Todd Evans
I think we are talking apples to oranges when talking about cards to game used material. It would be almost impossible to know if a card was earlier graded or rejected by someone like PSA or SGC and then have the auction house print those findings. You have cards that have been submitted multiple times to try to achieve higher grades by the same company as well as different ones so there could be no possible way for an auction house let alone a consignor to know unless they were to one that submitted it to be graded. Sure it probably could be done with some of the more rare cards but to do it on a 1956 Topps Mickey Mantle would be virtually impossible. |
#126
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Posted By: Todd Evans
No affilitation but thanks for asking. I'm just someone that has a story to share for the believers that this could have just been an oversight with Mastros. |
#127
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Posted By: JK
Who is Mastros? |
#128
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Posted By: Pas
Good points certainly, but (and this reminds me of our prior discussion on a related point) I do think a tribunal trying to decide whether there was a "material" omission might pay at least some attention to prevailing standards in trying to decide whether certain information met the litmus test. It would be a pretty cynical view (although not out of the question I suppose) that every single auction house, card show dealer, and ebay/internet seller regularly commits fraud by omitting known information about grading history (including bumps and rejections). And it seems to me at least in the present environment, you either have to draw that conclusion or you have to conclude that at least the majority of buyers do not consider this sort of information to be material to their purchasing decisions, and THAT (not a widespread pattern and practice of fraud) explains why the industry practice is one of non-disclosure. I don't see a middle ground on how else to explain it. Also, I repeat my view that this is a highly competitive market and if customers were demanding that information, sellers would get that message and start providing it. I believe in the free market, and if this information really mattered to the majority of people, sellers could not continue not to disclose (conceal?) it. |
#129
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Posted By: Jeffrey Lichtman
Todd's story makes clear, again, that one would have to be out of his mind to buy a game used or autographed item from any auction these days. |
#130
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Posted By: Pas
Jeff, how about a PSA 8 prewar card? |
#131
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Posted By: E, Daniel
What seems different to me between hawking baseball cards between grading companies and this jersey between the two named authenticators, are the players involved. |
#132
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Posted By: Jeff D.
It seems appropriate to mention that wrt keeping track of items that fail authentication, MEARS does keep such a record. This record is available to members on their website in their bat/jersey trade index area. |
#133
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Posted By: Todd Evans
Cost is another difference between MEARS and Lou Lampson. Sure a company like MEARS is going to charge more for actually taking the time to inspect and do research on an item compared to Lampson who is more cost effective but also passes almost every item that is put before him. Another difference is that MEARS is readily available to dicuss the facts of their findings to where it is impossible to even track Lou Lampson down. Why any auction house would want to put themselves in this position is beyond me. The money made off those items can never replace the respectability and confidence that is lost in the collecting community. |
#134
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
This again might be a point on which we agree to disagree. |
#135
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Posted By: peter chao
Unfortunately many of our states go through the same analysis in deciding whether to make our highways safer. A particular turn may kill a dozen people a year but in order to make that turn safe it would cost $500,000. |
#136
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Posted By: Peter S.
I am familiar with the Ford Pinto. That type of cost/benefit analysis goes on all the time, in many contexts, to be sure. However, how do you respond to my point that if the market were truly demanding this information, sellers facing robust competition would have no choice but to provide it? EDITED TO ADD Also, Corey, I doubt the auction companies go through the sophisticated calculations to which you allude. These are not huge public companies. I would guess the thought process is more along the lines of well no one else does it and no one is pressuring us to do it, and it might affect some sales, so why do it? |
#137
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Auction houses factor in the needs of both buyers and consignors. Inasmuch as nobody seems to disclose this info at present, an auction house will not lose a buying customer to their competition over the issue. However, they will lose consigning customers. In addition, even if an auction house wanted to make the disclosure, how would it be able to if the consignor pulled the item (which almost certainly it would) and gave it to another auction house that did not disclose? |
#138
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Posted By: Peter Spaeth
If you are correct, and buyers were so keenly interested, they can (and would, in my opinion) just ask. Maybe they do. Or they can (and would) demand better disclosure. They haven't, as far as I know, at least not in compelling numbers. |
#139
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
This sort of takes us back to where we started. Of course they can ask, and perhaps some/many do, at least for the high-priced cards. But the fact that someone didn't and down the road is stuck with a card that will not cross over, a card that he would not have purchased had disclosure been made originally, should not preclude him from bringing an action for fraud. |
#140
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Posted By: Peter Spaeth
It might add to the discussion if other folks related their experiences. As a buyer, have you asked for a grading history (and did you get it)? As a seller, have you been asked to provide a grading history (and did you give it)? |
#141
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Posted By: Peter Spaeth
In the action you describe, Corey, what are the damages? You aren't out the value of the card, presumably it has the same worth as an ABC 8 (or more, in a rising market) as when you bought it. Perhaps you wanted to cross it over and couldn't, but how have you been harmed economically? |
#142
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
I can no longer stand to look at the card because every time I do I conjure up images of a scissor. So I decide to sell the card. Being the ethical person I am I insist that the auction house disclose the grading history and the fact that the card will not cross over. The card then sells for 10% of what I bought it for. |
#143
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
Do you REALLY think if I had (just by way of example) a PSA 8 Goudey Ruth, and I disclosed that SGC had rejected it, it would sell at a 90 percent discount? I don't for a minute. Indeed, and this goes back to where we started probably, I think most buyers of PSA 8 Goudey Ruths today recognize there is a possibility that precisely that has happened (or that the card used to be a 7) and don't care. EDITED TO ADD In my opinion people are buying the opinion of the grading service whose name is on the flip, period. Not some implicit assurance that the other grading service would see things the same way. |
#144
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Posted By: Kenny Cole
Peter, |
#145
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Posted By: Peter S.
Kenny that is interesting, but would that apply in an auction where the seller isn't dealing one on one with buyers and indeed doesn't know until it is over who won? It sounds to me like that provision applies or certainly was intended for the special circumstances of direct dealing where the seller knows particular characteristics of the buyer. |
#146
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
First, to clarify, I'm talking here about an instance where the card doesn't cross over because of concerns the card is altered, not because the 8 should be a 7. My view is that in such an instance (i.e., a split decision among the grading companies) it could sell for much less than it would had the cross-over rejection not been disclosed. We can argue as to how much less, but I firmly believe it will be a material reduction, especially if the card received its original numerical grade from PSA, say, ten years ago and was only recently rejected by SGC. |
#147
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Posted By: Peter S.
Corey your example is interesting. Typically I would think of the sequence as card gets rejected, THEN slabbed. SGC refusing to cross-over a card ALREADY in a holder, without cracking it out, means very little to me. SGC would be crazy to cross over a card worth that much just looking at it in the holder, without being able to examine the edges. Indeed I think they have a policy that they typically won't do it over a certain value. |
#148
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Posted By: davidcycleback
In the end, the arbiter is whether or not the item matches the sales description. If a Near Mint card is being sold as Near Mint, it doesn't matter if someone else incorrectly said it was trimmed-- the sales description is accurate. If this someone else correctly said it was trimmed, then there would be an issue with the sales. |
#149
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Posted By: Peter S.
Corey, I think we are back where we started, or at least I am. The very first thing I said was that at first blush grading history at least in certain circumstances would seem to easily meet the definition of materiality, but I questioned whether it really was material in light of what seems to be happening in the marketplace, namely that sellers don't tell, people generally don't seem to ask, and cards keep selling for more and more. I understand your points and certainly one could make out a strong plaintiff's case for the reasons you and Kenny state. But I keep coming back in my mind to the notion that very few people seem to care, and I am trying to assess what impact that has on the legal analysis. |
#150
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
We can play around with different sequences. I chose that one, but the issue remains the same -- disclosing what the other grading service thought of the card. |
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