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  #1  
Old 01-13-2025, 01:58 PM
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Peter Spaeth
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gregndodgers View Post
I think the key issue what is “good faith” mean in the sports card industry / hobby?

If a card has been trimmed or recolored (e.g., touched up), I think most agree that the standard is disclosure.

If wax or dirt has been rubbed off a card, I think the standard is that non-disclosure is okay. But that’s only my opinion.

Card soaking? Not sure if there is a standard. Now if more and more cards are graded and found to have been “soaked,” then the standard would be more clear.

What if a card has been “restored.” Take the Hans Wagner card in this thread as an example. I think most would agree that disclosure is required. However, should that affect the value? I think it does reduce value to a certain degree. Sports card enthusiasts value originality and condition, so the value will be negatively affected to some degree.
You've moved on to a very different question, which is what alterations are considered material such that a seller needs to disclose them, and yes, on some there is clear consensus, on others less so. And the less there is a consensus, the harder a fraud claim gets because the seller's claim of good faith is more plausible.
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Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 01-13-2025 at 02:01 PM.
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  #2  
Old 01-13-2025, 03:02 PM
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Sometimes, examples are needed to help explain the law.

I bought a 10,000 card collection a few years back that included cards from different sports cards from the 60s thru the 80s. Most of the cards were in fair to good condition except that the 80s were all near mint. One card was the 84 fleer Don Mattingly RC, which although not rare or pricy, is one of my favorite 80s cards. I was ecstatic to see that the card’s corners were razor sharp and the centering was perfect. However, upon close inspection, I saw a very small indentation that looked like the card had been stabbed by a ball point pen. Fortunately, the indentation was not very deep.

Well, I instantly thought that if I applied a tiny bit of water to the hole and then some pressure, I could push out the indentation. Sure enough, it worked. Using a 10x loop, I looked at the area where the hole had been. There was no evidence a hole had been there.

So was this act a “alteration?” I think the answer is yes. However, if I sold that card, should I have to disclose what I did? That’s a harder question. Under the UCC, I must be honest in fact, so my statements to a potential buyer must be true. Next, I must use good faith. That means beside honesty, I must be fair and reasonable, and have a genuine belief that I am acting in good faith.

In the case of the Mattingly card, I do not feel that I must disclose what I did to the card. First, the UCC has no duty to disclose in this case. Second, as long as I believe that I am acting fairly and reasonably under the circumstances, there is no harm.

In my opinion, I am acting fairly and reasonably even if I don’t disclose the previous indentation. There is no evidence that the indentation was ever there. It was extremely small to begin with. Also, if a very small dent (on an expensive car) is pulled / pushed out, I’m not sure the seller would feel a need to disclose that. Finally, what would be the industry standard for a situation like this? I’m not sure, but I would bet many hobbyists do this at some point, and as long as the card’s value is not impacted, I’m not sure anyone would care.

So this is an example where my subjective belief would be examined, and I don’t think anyone could find that I acted in bad faith here. However, I understand that these issues are not black and white, so I’m sure some would disagree with me.

The key is that I can make a decent subjective argument for why I believe I have acted in good faith, and since subjective intent typically is a low bar, I believe I have met it here.

Every situation / legal issue is fact intensive, and that’s why lawyers must hear all the facts before drawing any conclusions.
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  #3  
Old 01-13-2025, 03:13 PM
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Of course you can posit a set of facts which would show good faith by the seller. However, you stated as a general proposition in post 18 that as long as a seller SAYS he is acting honestly, he would NEVER have a duty to disclose. Goalposts moving.

Your own words:

"So as long as the seller (non-merchant) says they were acting honestly, that should be sufficient.

The bottom line: unless I’m told differently, I’m not sure that non-merchants have a duty to disclose material facts (I.e., facts that could change buyer’s decision to buy a card)."

Bottom line for me, if you trim a card and sell it to me without disclosing it, it makes no difference if you are a merchant or non-merchant, it's fraud.
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Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 01-13-2025 at 03:20 PM.
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Old 01-13-2025, 03:26 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth View Post
Of course you can posit a set of facts which would show good faith by the seller. However, you stated as a general proposition in post 18 that as long as a seller SAYS he is acting honestly, he would NEVER have a duty to disclose. Goalposts moving.

Your own words:

"So as long as the seller (non-merchant) says they were acting honestly, that should be sufficient.

The bottom line: unless I’m told differently, I’m not sure that non-merchants have a duty to disclose material facts (I.e., facts that could change buyer’s decision to buy a card)."

Bottom line for me, if you trim a card and sell it to me without disclosing it, it makes no difference if you are a merchant or non-merchant, it's fraud.
Uhh…when did I ever use the word “NEVER?”

Any lawyer worth his / her weight does not deal in absolutes. My words were “should” not “never.”

But my main goal in responding to this thread was to help clarify some of the issues. That’s all. It’s not to argue.
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Old 01-13-2025, 03:29 PM
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You're now confusing your own words. You stated as a general proposition that you did not believe a non-merchant had a duty to disclose material facts, so long as he said he acted in good faith.
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Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 01-13-2025 at 03:32 PM.
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  #6  
Old 01-13-2025, 03:42 PM
G1911 G1911 is offline
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How long does it take to put into a listing:

"Trimmed"

"Soaked out of scrapbook"

"Pencil erased"

"Corner rebuilt"

Should take 3 seconds for even a very slow typer. Why would somebody not just tell the truth? Every time there's a line of people trying to come up with reasons not to just tell the truth, for the blatantly obvious reason that if people don't know the history they might pay more, but usually pretending it's something else. Far, far more time is spent trying to justify why not disclosing or lying or covering up are totally okay than it would take to just be honest. It's the only hobby I've been apart of where just being honest is treated as such a problem.
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