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RINKER ON COLLECTIBLES — Column #1224 Copyright © Rinker Enterprises, Inc.
2010 A Buyer's Code of Conduct for Garage/Yard Sales A reader who asked to be identified as
“Confused” sent me the following e-mail:
“Recently at a garage sale, a well-dressed woman
who drove an SUV was looking at a large box of what appeared to be tarnished
silver plate items.
When I began looking at a few pieces in the box,
the woman asked if I had been to many auctions. “I replied, ‘no,’ since I have not. “She apparently meant garage sales
instead of auctions, since she began condescendingly telling me how she felt
garage sales worked.
She said customarily when someone is looking at a
box, everyone else waits until that person is done looking at every item and
decides whether she wants any of the items or not. “Then she dropped a bomb by saying, ‘Apparently your mother
did not live long enough to teach you manners.’ “This confused me greatly.
I did not know her.
She did not know my mother, who is still very much
alive. Further, I have been attending garage sales for decades and have never
seen her version of garage sale protocol in practice. “Does such a custom actually exist?” The SUV lady can thank her lucky stars
that she did not have her conversation with me.
With a reputation in the trade for saying what I
think with little regard to its consequences, I would have made a quick
suggestion or two about long-term storage possibilities for the box of silver
plate. Just as all is fair in love and war,
all is fair at garage/yard sales as well.
To the victor belong the spoils.
Walter Peters, a crusty old collector, taught me
early in my career that “there are no friends at an auction.”
The concept applies equally to garage/yard sales.
The basic rule that applies is every person for
him- or herself. The hunt is a competitive process.
On the surface, rules of courtesy and common sense
should apply.
In reality, the hunt is competitive and cutthroat.
There can be only one winner, the successful buyer.
All other hunters go home with empty pouches. I have yet to attend an antiques show,
auction, flea market, or garage/yard sale where I have found posted or was
handed a sheet indicating how I was to conduct myself as a buyer.
Bustamante Shows, a west coast promoter, does
provide buyers with a buyer’s bill of rights handout, a far cry from a buyer’s
code of conduct. Creating a buyer’s code of conduct upon
which everyone in the trade would agree is impossible.
First, who would create the code?
A code drawn up by buyers would differ radically
from a dealers’ version.
The trade is filled with deeply entrenched vested
interests.
Second, each trade sales venue such as auction to flea
market would require a separate buyer’s code of conduct.
Third, who would enforce the code?
“No one is going to tell me how to run my business”
is an established business principle.
The trade fights every effort to standardize its
practices. It is the seller, whether auctioneer,
dealer, or private individual, who determines what rules apply during any
selling transaction.
Like the kid with the bat and ball, the seller is
the individual with the merchandise.
If the seller decides not to play, he simply walks
away.
Even if an individual is willing to pay the asking/sticker
price, the seller can look him in the eye and say, “I do not like you, and I
will not sell to you.”
Do not discuss legalities with me.
I have seen this happen too many times during my
career for anyone to argue with me that the seller must honor the offer to buy. No sale is complete until money changes
hands.
Technically, title changes hands at the sound of the
hammer at an auction.
Yet, if the buyer does not properly secure/defend
his purchase(s), he may find otherwise.
Early in my career, I attended a catalog auction
where items were placed in storage as they were sold.
When a successful bidder went to pay for his items
at the end of a sale, the auctioneer was unable to locate several of his early
purchases.
Another individual claiming the bidder’s number as his own
paid the cashier for the items two-thirds of the way through the auction.
Cash talked.
The auction company packed up the items and gave
them to whom it believed to be the successful bidder.
Many novice auction buyers have fallen victim to
this practice. I differentiate between a garage/yard
sale and an estate/tag sale.
Some professional estate/tag buyers have a printed
sticker which they place on items they intend to buy.
This allows them to continue shopping without
having to repeatedly checkout and pay for items.
Alas, some sticker generously, going back later and
removing stickers from items about which they have second thoughts.
I have no patience for this practice nor do I honor
it.
If I see something that I would like to buy, I remove the
sticker and go pay for it.
Once I pay for it, I own it. Likewise, some garage/yard sale
shoppers create a pile of possible purchases, preferring to go through the
entire sale before deciding specifically what they will and will not buy.
I do not consider these piles sacred either, not
should the person selling the merchandise.
If you want it, you pay for it.
I have seen an individual who wishes to
buy something another person is examining walk over to the seller and purchase
the item by pointing to it.
Once the purchase is made, the buyer goes over to
the person looking at the item and says, “Hand that to me.
I just bought it and it is mine.”
“Please” is never part of the conversation.
Possession is not nine-tenths of the law.
A bill of sale is. Returning to the box of silver plate, I
have no problem with “Confused” examining the pieces that interested her.
Obviously, the SUV lady was unfamiliar with the
“share and share alike” concept.
Unless she was contemplating buying the entire box,
which she obviously was not, the things in the box were fair game to anyone.
Had the items been spread out on a table or on the
ground, the SUV lady would not have presumed, although I cannot be certain given
her arrogance and actions, others were forbidden to examine items on the table
or ground until she was through. Nice people finish last, and,
successful garage/yard sale buyers are generally not nice people.
They are aggressive, pushy, and driven.
They need to be.
Dedicated garage/yard sale buyers visit more than a
dozen sales in a day.
They do not have time to be nice.
They need to mine a sale as quickly as possible,
discover hidden treasures that appeal, pay for them, and move on to the next
lode. With a few exceptions, garage/yard sale
sellers do not care who buys what they have to offer.
Their goal is to have nothing left at the end of
the day.
Making the sale is far more important than to whom the
sale is made. Garage/yard sale sellers do not want
hassles nor do they have any desire to play policeman.
They rely on buyers to settle things between
themselves.
Successful buyers have an intimidating presence.
The
SUV lady counts on this.
Smart buyers stand up to these individuals and do
not tolerate such abuse.
Good manners should not stand in the way of giving
them a piece of one’s mind.
Rinker Enterprises and Harry L. Rinker are on the Internet.
Check out
www.harryrinker.com. You can listen and participate
in WHATCHA
GOT?, Harry’s antiques and collectibles radio
call-in show, on Sunday mornings between 8:00 AM and 10:00 AM Eastern Time.
If you cannot find it on a
station in your area,
WHATCHA GOT? streams live
on the Internet at www.gcnlive.com.
SELL, KEEP OR TOSS?
HOW TO DOWNSIZE A HOME, SETTLE AN ESTATE, AND
APPRAISE PERSONAL PROPERTY (House of
Collectibles, an imprint of the Random House Information Group, $16.95), Harry’s
latest book, is available at your favorite bookstore and via
www.harryrinker.com.
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