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#51
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Posted By: Bob Casmer
Joann, |
#52
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
The let's go back to my "plan A" and talk about lawyers who are BB HOFer's. |
#53
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Posted By: barrysloate
Ted- we are baseball card collectors. |
#54
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Posted By: Todd Schultz
Barry, I believe Ted's topics would be of substantial interest to aspiring lawyers or talent agents, although other than factual distinctions, it looks like the same issue repackaged over time. The rights to protect and control the use of one's image seems germane and important to professions where these people may be working one day. I do not know the level of audience sophistication or what depth Joann would care to provide, but I don't think Ted's ideas are off base. |
#55
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Joann, |
#56
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Posted By: D.C. Markel
......I've got a good lawyer joke! Ah wait -- nevermind. The problem with lawyer jokes is that the lawyers don't think they are funny and everyone else doesn't think they are jokes. |
#57
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Posted By: P Spaeth
I don't see any liability unless you can prove the auction house/consignor actually knew or was reckless in not knowing the card in question was altered and that the opinion expressed by the grading service was wrong. Otherwise they are not selling a guarantee of authenticity just an opinion. EDITED TO ADD The mere fact that the auction house/consignor know that SOME cards are improperly slabbed would not create liability in my opinion, one because the same thing is known generally by buyers who assume that risk, and two because unless it was so obvious the auction/house consignor knew or was reckless in not knowing, it really says nothing about the particular card in question. |
#58
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
In my view that info is material and therefore should be disclosed. |
#59
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
An area to discuss could be the legal issues involved in 21st century internet baseball card transactions. |
#60
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Posted By: barrysloate
Corey- if I had to assume legal liability on 15% of the slabbed cards I sell, I would go out of business. It would be early retirement for me. |
#61
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Posted By: P Spaeth
I tend to agree with you on the first point from a strictly legal point of view ("materiality" is defined as something a reasonable buyer would consider important to the total mix of information and the fact that a major grading service had rejected a card would seem to pass that definition) but I can't see it ever happening, can you? A catalog description stating FYI this PSA 8 was rejected by SGC, or vice versa? No chance. |
#62
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
My questions don't assume you would have to have legal liability. Rather they raise the issue of what disclosures/actions, if any, you might have to take to avoid it. |
#63
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Posted By: P Spaeth
Where will you retire? |
#64
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Posted By: P Spaeth
I am not sure any boilerplate disclosure would negate liability for actual fraud, that is knowingly selling an altered card. |
#65
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Posted By: Bob Casmer
Todd, |
#66
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Posted By: barrysloate
Brooklyn |
#67
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
First, I would argue that in regard to cards slabbed in the early days before the grading companies had the equipment and people with the experience/expertise to detect alterations, the grading industry has been sufficiently discredited to make the risk of alteration sufficiently great that it would be reckless to sell such a card without either current re-examination or very explicit disclosure. |
#68
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Posted By: P Spaeth
Corey why do you think cards in the "early" days are less likely to be properly authenticated? What advances in technology have there been since 1992 vis a vis detecting trimming, recoloring, rebuilt corners, etc.? EDITED TO ADD As far as people go, Mike Baker was not at PSA at its very inception but joined pretty soon thereafter, and many folks believe him to be the best there is in terms of people working for the major grading companies. |
#69
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Posted By: barrysloate
Corey- what if Sotheby's had a full plate tintype of a baseball player and they claimed, for example, that it was Jim Creighton. What would be their liability in that case? |
#70
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Peter, |
#71
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Barry, |
#72
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Posted By: P Spaeth
Corey these are all good points but the essence of what you are saying (simplifying slightly of course) is that, for vintage cards, third party authentication is meaningless. Perhaps that is so, and certainly there are adherents of that view on this board and elsewhere, but I doubt that at this point -- given the general acceptance of third party grading -- a tribunal would agree with that. If third party grading is meaningful, I can't see a tribunal imposing a general duty to independently examine a card on an auction house -- not to mention of course the practical difficulties of examining edges inside a slab etc. etc. |
#73
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Posted By: Kevin Saucier
"But the thrust of your point, at least as regards PSA (assuming what I read is correct that they have inexperienced graders, perhaps working without adequate equipment) is correct" |
#74
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Peter, |
#75
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Posted By: P Spaeth
Disclosure is generally a good thing, but how meaningful would it be, really, to put in the fine print somewhere (or in a letter for that matter as REA did) a disclosure that third party authentication is no guarantee of authenticity and that the slabbed cards you bid on may in fact be altered? Does that really give anyone meaningful information? I tend to think not. |
#76
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Posted By: P Spaeth
As to your other point, if the auction house is not entitled to rely on the third-party opinion but instead is held to a duty to independently authenticate, then at least in this context how "meaningful" is the third-party opinion? It seems to me, because it is difficult to articulate partial duties, one must either take the position that the third-party opinion absolves the auction house of duties except in the case of red flags; or the auction house has a duty to independently authenticate certain types of material, in which case the third-party opinion has no legal effect. |
#77
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
We might agree to disagree on this one. I think if a guy is prepared to fork over $75k for a PSA 9 T206 Johnson portrait, then happens to read a warning that there is a not insignificant possibility the card is altered, he might think twice. Certainly no harm in having the disclosure, right? In fact, seems to me, that any resistance by an auction house to having it might be indicative of their concern that people might actually notice it and be influenced by it, thereby lowering the profitability of the auction! |
#78
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Posted By: barrysloate
The hobby has evolved to the point of near total dependence on the decisions of the grading companies. That's why roughly 90-95% of the cards that go to auction are graded, and that number is likely to increase. |
#79
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Posted By: P Spaeth
Corey, no harm in the disclosure, I agree with you there. I just think most people buy with that general knowledge and that at that level of generality the disclosure doesn't say much. Maybe I overestimate buyers' sophistication. |
#80
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Posted By: Kevin Saucier
"I could easily be put out of business if the most expensive card I sold turned out to be altered" |
#81
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Peter, |
#82
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Posted By: barrysloate
Yes Kevin, absolutely, but what if I simply couldn't detect it? Some of these alterations, as you know, are incredibly sophisticated. And that is exactly why I pay that $100 fee to the graders- because they are supposed to have the skills that I don't. |
#83
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Posted By: Kevin Saucier
"And that is exactly why I pay that $100 fee to the graders" |
#84
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Posted By: P Spaeth
Corey -- establishing a duty based on a BELIEF that a signficant percentage of graded cards are bad? Seems awful speculative to me. Not to mention the evidentiary issues in proving the existence of such a "belief" or "perception." |
#85
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Posted By: barrysloate
Kevin- I hear you, but I am going to put you to task: |
#86
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Posted By: JimCrandell
My strategy from now on is that any card over $1,000 I buy they have to send it to Kevin Saucier who will then give me his opinion. If I choose not to buy the card based on what Kevin tells me, I will pay Kevin's fee and the cost of postage/insurance. |
#87
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Posted By: barrysloate
Jim- I think that is great. But if he deems a graded card altered, who do you go to for restitution? |
#88
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Posted By: Kevin Saucier
"Kevin- I hear you, but I am going to put you to task: |
#89
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Posted By: D. C. Markel
"'But the thrust of your point, at least as regards PSA (assuming what I read is correct that they have inexperienced graders, perhaps working without adequate equipment) is correct" |
#90
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Barry, |
#91
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Posted By: Kevin Saucier
"Do you need to "loup" a modern card with a crease or dinged corner or measure a card that appears to have wide borders for that issue?" |
#92
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Peter, |
#93
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Posted By: barrysloate
Kevin- I've always wondered the same thing. You would assume that for $100 your card would get a much more thorough look, even though part of that money goes to fast turnaround and the fact it is valued in excess of 5K. |
#94
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Posted By: Kevin Saucier
"Kevin- I've always wondered the same thing. You would assume that for $100 your card would get a much more thorough look" |
#95
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Posted By: Peter Spaeth
Corey, we are probably in uncharted legal waters here, but if I were a court I sure would be reluctant to do that, and that is assuming you could prove this "perception" which by the way is hardly "universal" I would think. And I am not sure how you would prove this "perception" anyhow consistent with the rules of evidence. Is it a proper subject of expert testimony? Possibly but possibly not. So how else would you prove it, print out a series of Net 54 threads and try to offer them into evidence not for the truth of the matter asserted (which would be inadmissible hearsay) but for the state of mind of the posters? And how far would that go really towards proving a "universal" "perception"? Have some collectors testify? As to what, their own perception or their perception of the general perception? I am not trying to be a wiseass here but it isn't as easy as you think to "prove" things sometimes. |
#96
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Posted By: Kevin Saucier
"As I no longer buy at auctions(at least expensive cards), I would make my purchase contingent upon Kevin's seal of approval." |
#97
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Peter, |
#98
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Posted By: Peter Spaeth
Corey I agree it will hit the fan eventually. No question. And I would also counsel making as many disclosures as possible to protect myself, particularly as I don't think they would deter sales one iota. |
#99
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Posted By: leon
IS that SGC will look at a higher value card with more scrutiny than a lower valued one....I could be wrong but it seems like common sense....They are getting 5x-10x the fee and have more liability....If I were them I would be more careful. |
#100
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Corey, |
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