Questionable Authenticity Question on coins bought on Auction
I bought couple coins from B&M on June 19, 2010 auction. Right after I received them from B&M I expressed mail to NGC to grade. One of the coins is over $4k so it has to use express tier since it is over $3k. I just checked the result on NGC site it stated it is Questionable Authenticity. I just email B&M asked to return the coin and get my money back. Do you think I can get my money back on that coin? Thanks for your opinions. I still have couple coins that I bought from B&M waiting for grading result from NGC. I am little worry about them now.
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Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
If a TPG can't decide if the coin is real, how can you expect a court to decide that it's counterfeit?
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
What is the country of origin of the coin? Someone here can probably recommend an expert for you.
Does the fact that neither the consignor nor the auction house certified a $4k Chinese coin before selling it raise a red flag? Or is this common?
<< <i> I hope auction house should act the same as ebay if not better. >>
That's really not a high standard to meet, is it?
"The Central Intelligence Agency owns everyone of any significance in the major media" - William Colby, former CIA director
Having said that, a bidder should specifically ask an auction house if they will accept returns if a TPG comes back with a no opinion if they feel there is any possibility of receiving a no opinion before bidding. The term,s of most houses say they are not obligated to accept such returns.
It is a bad situation for buyer, owner, and the house. Still, sometimes a "no opinion" is warranted.
www.rfrajola.com
<< <i>Having said that, a bidder should specifically ask an auction house if they will accept returns if a TPG comes back with a no opinion if they feel there is any possibility of receiving a no opinion before bidding. >>
I agree. I've seen dealers that will only refund on a negative opinion (no return if "no opinion"), and I've personally made arrangements with dealers that the purchase of an item is contingent upon receiving a clean cert (returnable if no opinion). It's dependent upon the agreement between the buyer and seller/auctioner in advance. If there was no prior arrangement made, it's solely at the discretion of the seller/auctioneer and usually reverts to the published terms and conditions of the auction.
I've also seen a wide variance in policy as to who pays for the cert cost if the opinion is bad. Some dealers will pay the cert cost in addition to refunding the original purchase price of the item, others will not.
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I was afraid that if I sent the coin to be graded they would break the coin out of the sealed B&M 2X2 it came in and B&M wouldn't take it back then. I decided to leave the coin in the sealed B&M 2X2 rather than send it in for grading and contacted B&M. They offered to take it back and have it graded themselves by either PCGS or NGC. If the coin graded, it was mine and if it didn't they were willing to take it back.
The folks at B&M were great and everything was resolved to my satisfaction...
<< <i>I purchased a raw coin from B&M a few months back at auction. The coin was described as Uncirculated (a little different situation than the OP's current problem). When I received the coin I felt that although the coin was beautiful it wasn't UNC. It was a very good looking AU.
I was afraid that if I sent the coin to be graded they would break the coin out of the sealed B&M 2X2 it came in and B&M wouldn't take it back then. I decided to leave the coin in the sealed B&M 2X2 rather than send it in for grading and contacted B&M. They offered to take it back and have it graded themselves by either PCGS or NGC. If the coin graded, it was mine and if it didn't they were willing to take it back.
The folks at B&M were great and everything was resolved to my satisfaction... >>
Thanks for the post. That makes me feel much better. I really think they should take it back, that would give me confident to buy again from them
www.rfrajola.com
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Don
<< <i>Does a TPG ever state 'not authentic' for a coin? If they did, wouldn't they be obligated to turn the coin over to the Secret Service? Isn't that the reason they say 'Questionable Authenticity' and not 'Fake'? >>
I don't think they turn the coin to Secret Service any more. I once bought two coins from a seller and both graded fake. I got the coins back from ANACS and I returned them and got my money back.
All the time, when they're sure.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
<< <i>That TPG statement is, in effect, a "no opinion" statement. >>
No, they have a "no opinion" verdict they often render.
If you're considering any high-quality Chinese coins in upcoming major auctions please remember that PCGS's guarantee on China material is $1000 max, and some houses don't take returns of TPG material. Just a word to the wise.
Lastly, as long as they make good on the mistake I wouldn't damn B&M for this slip. Every dealer and TPG that regularly handles China material gets burned sometimes. Every one.
Contact B&M period and see what they can/will do. You may be surprised. I never had this type of a problem with them but have once in the past with Heritage. They were more then accomodating , and i'm sure B&M will listen too.
Can you post the coin perhaps also it might pay to consider cracking it out and sending to pcgs?
Marc
<< <i>Marc is right. You should contact B&M before you start worrying about a lawyer. >>
I did. I sent them two emails so far no reply.
<< <i>
<< <i>Marc is right. You should contact B&M before you start worrying about a lawyer. >>
I did. I sent them two emails so far no reply. >>
If it was me, I'd call them up. I'm sure they've got a phone number listed somewhere.
When you received the coin, was it sealed? If it was, is it still sealed now?