Hypothetical #9 - PCGS but Whizzed
Suppose you're an experienced collector. You buy a PCGS AU-58 1893-S Morgan from a big dealer's website at his full retail asking price. The coin is described as a perfect original toned borderline unc. When the coin arrives in the mail, you think it's undergraded so you crack it and resubmit it. This time, PCGS calls it whizzed. You show it around and the consensus is that the coin has been whizzed and retoned. At this point, it's three weeks after you bought the coin. You ask the dealer for a refund. Does he have to give you your money back?
Andy Lustig
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
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Comments
"damaged goods".
Ken
<< <i>Suppose you're an experienced collector. You buy a PCGS AU-58 1893-S Morgan from a big dealer's website at his full retail asking price. The coin is described as a perfect original toned borderline unc. When the coin arrives in the mail, you think it's undergraded so you crack it and resubmit it. This time, PCGS calls it whizzed. You show it around and the consensus is that the coin has been whizzed and retoned. At this point, it's three weeks after you bought the coin. You ask the dealer for a refund. Does he have to give you your money back? >>
Heck no!
You're taking a helluva chance cracking out expensive coins in the first place - you chose to do it, now you have to pay the consequences. There could've been other options like sending it in to have it re-evaluated. The owner wanted to make a score - well - he got burned instead.
Jerry
On this one I'd talk to PCGS first.They should make it right through their grade guaranty.
I'm working on a little project...
One more day of this and we're done, I promise!
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
<< <i>On this one I'd talk to PCGS first.They should make it right through their grade guaranty. >>
It was cracked out.
<< <i>
<< <i>On this one I'd talk to PCGS first.They should make it right through their grade guaranty. >>
It was cracked out. >>
<< <i>I'm working on a little project... >>
<< <i>One more day of this and we're done, I promise! >>
No problem,just curious.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
These are the important aspects. The dealer MUST give you your money back. It is felony mail fraud if he/she does not.
No, because he already spent it
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since 8/1/6
Heck no, if you submitted it for upgrade in the slab then yes, but once you broke the slab open it became your liability.
My 1866 Philly Mint Set
and it sets us apart from practitioners and consultants. Gregor
After a heated discussion I sold the thing back to the dealer at a $100 loss and chalked it up to "education expense." This dealer is one of the biggies in the business, and as far as I’m concerned his ethics are in the toilet. I will not waste my time at his table ever again under any circumstances. He knew what was wrong with the coin and played games with it.
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
In the case that I cited above it was impossible to tell that coin had been polished and retoned given the condition of the holder. The coin was an early quarter that had been graded VF-30. From you could see, the “meat” (detail) was there for the grade, but the holder was scratched in such a way that it knocked down the shine from the polishing. In short it would have been impossible to have seen the problem in the holder and to have sent the coin back to PCGS for an adjustment.
The primary fault here lies with PCGS because they blew the grade. The secondary fault lies with the dealer who tampered with the slab in order to put one over on a prospective buyer. After the deed had been done, it would have been very difficult to have gotten PCGS to honor its commitment because spotting the damage was nearly impossible.
So is it OK for PCGS to walk away from its comment to stand behind the grade when they missed it by a mile? Is it ethical for a dealer to hide the problem in the coin by scratching up the holder? I put that question to you.
<< <i>In the case that I cited above it was impossible to tell that coin had been polished and retoned given the condition of the holder. The coin was an early quarter that had been graded VF-30. From you could see, the “meat” (detail) was there for the grade, but the holder was scratched in such a way that it knocked down the shine from the polishing. In short it would have been impossible to have seen the problem in the holder and to have sent the coin back to PCGS for an adjustment. >>
Fair enough. In this case, though, if a new holder would have allowed the whizzing to become evident, then perhaps the appropriate thing would have been for a reholdering of the coin, sent to PCGS in its original slab.
Then, either the coin returns to you in a holder where you can see the whizzing and take action, or perhaps PCGS notices the whizzing on the reholdering/regrading and has to make good on the guarantee (painful for a '93-S Morgan).
<< <i>As the man said, you break it you bought it. >>
If the coin was still in the slab, then the dealer would have to give you your money back.
But then you cracked the slab out of it's original holder, then it's not the dealer's problem anymore.
Ben
<< <i>No........and again as David Hall said, once it's cracked out, all bets are off. >>
HRH has said repeatedly that PCGS coins are cracked before entering the grading room so that the graders aren't biased. If you don't trust PCGS to be without bias, and you crack it, you're screwed.
<< <i>full retail asking price. The coin is described as a perfect original toned borderline unc. When the coin arrives in the mail, you think it's undergraded so you crack it and resubmit it. This time, PCGS calls it whizzed. You show it around and the consensus is that the coin has been whizzed and retoned >>
P.S. Who would "show it around" for opinions AFTER they submit it rather than BEFORE? IMO they deserve what they get.
I firmly believe in numismatics as the world's greatest hobby, but recognize that this is a luxury and without collectors, we can all spend/melt our collections/inventories.
eBaystore
<< <i>Does he have to give you your money back? >>
In my dreams!
Tiger trout, Deerfield River, c. 2001.
Tiger trout, Deerfield River, c. 2001.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
Having gotten to know you a bit better recently, I sense the "ta da" that's coming at the end of this "research project".
In a Fruedian like fashion I will answer the question with another question....
----Why was it slabbed by PCGS in the first place?
A whizzed coin is a whizzed coin! It doesn't get whizzed after it got in to the holder. When a dealer sells a slabbed coin he is selling someone's opinion on that coin on any given date/time when that coin was first graded. The dealer should not be held responsible. The culprit here is the TPG.
Forget about cracking the coin and sending in for upgrade. When a person buys a coin slabbed by the "suposedly" top tier grading service with that purchase comes a lifetime implied warranty....even if it is unstated. The implication is that the coin is genuine and grades somewhere close to the stated grade. If a collector wants to collect the coins raw, but doesn't know how to grade, he/she can buy a slabbed coin...graded as an AU58 by a top tier TPG and is lead to believe that it is. If he she cracks it out to only find out several years later that it is not, the blame is with the TPG.
And I disagree with whoever stated that once cracked out the coin materially changes -- that's Dung!
--You buy a diamond ring certified as XXX and loose the certificate...you later sell the diamond ring to someone who goes and gets it re-certified and it grades as YYY...the first certification service should be held accountable.
--You own a jewelry store (XYZ, Inc.) and buy a chain that is stamped 14k from a certified Gold company. You sell it to a customer. That person wears it for 10 years and the 14k wears off. They don't like the chain anymore and go to a different jeweler to sell it/trade it in. The jeweler does the gold test and tells the person it's 10k and not 14k. Is it XYZ, Inc.'s fault? No! They were mearly selling the opinion of someone in a common-law accepted position of authority.
So back to my first answer/question -- why was it slabbed in the first place?
EDITED TO ADD: Off topic, but I just gave a (not "the" but "a") reason why the grading standards all of a sudden changed this year. The bigger you get, the more visible you become. The more visible you become the more scrutiny you draw. The more scrutiny you draw, the greater the likelihood that a itigious person or firm will try to test your (what they perceive to be a) common-law accepted position of credibility, even to the extent of implying that by de facto (and they would hope soon to be de jura) your opinions are legally binding. A CPA is "certified" and hence has professional liability, and so do others that claim the word "certified."
This was a clear misrepresentation. However, remember that the buyer is an experienced collector. He would not have relied on that misrepresentation, so he has no claim against the dealer.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
CG