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  #1  
Old 07-05-2009, 01:21 PM
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Default Btw

Is anyone else thinking that this is going to be a real interesting National dinner?
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  #2  
Old 07-05-2009, 01:40 PM
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Default what Dinner?

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Originally Posted by Exhibitman View Post
Is anyone else thinking that this is going to be a real interesting National dinner?
The way it's going there will be like 10 people at it.....
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  #3  
Old 07-05-2009, 01:42 PM
Rich Klein Rich Klein is offline
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Default Well if there are truly only going to be 10 people at dinner

Then Leon can spring for Steaks for all of us
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  #4  
Old 07-05-2009, 02:03 PM
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Dave is a very successful and seasoned dealer and hobby veteran. I think the shill bidding defense is weak unless of course the FBI investigation goes someplace. Right now it has not been proved they have shill bid.

As far as Mastro running a Ponzi scheme that is also a bit absurd. I don't think Mastro was engaged to do business simply to pay off past consignors. However they may have exercised poor judgment in extending credit to certain customers to the detriment of certain consignors. In both Bill Fisher's and Dave Forman's circumstances I suspect both showed the ability to make good on the credit which was extended to them. Not a unique situation where one day someone is a good customer and the next a bad creditor and as an auction house it can be tough to know when that is going to take place. I think Mastro got caught up in the feeding frenzy and was attempting to get the most they could for their items and the best way in which to do that is to extend credit.

I too would like to understand the arrangement Dave had with Mastro. Something very unsettling about this whole thing.
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  #5  
Old 07-05-2009, 01:43 PM
spacktrack spacktrack is offline
Brian Dwyer
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Hi Everyone,

Hopefully everyone had a nice, safe holiday weekend. I wanted to take the time to address some questions that have arisen on the board. It's unfortunate that Dave Forman and Mastro Auctions could not resolve their differences outside of court, but this personal matter between these two parties does not impact SGC's day to day operations or policies.

I want to stress the fact that SGC employees and/or owners are not able to submit cards for grading. All grading decisions and policies are under the sole discretion of the Director of Grading and his senior grading team. SGC has the industry's only "real" guaranty and stands behind every single card that we've graded.

Anyone having any further questions or concerns is welcome to contact me during normal business hours.

Thank you,

Brian Dwyer
SGC
1-800-742-9212 x114
bdwyer@sgccard.com
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  #6  
Old 07-05-2009, 01:55 PM
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Adam--If the consignment agreement says that the consignor has the right to request the return of unpaid items after 60 days I still don't see where that prohibits Mastro Auctions from sending out the lots before payment is received. However, by doing this they are taking on the responsibility to pay for the item regardless of whether the buyer pays or not. By sending it out they are implicitly saying two things:

1-Consignor has been paid and we owe the consignor his money
2-We have entered into an interest free loan (or perhaps not) with the buyer to pay us the amount due

Therefore, if the consignor is not paid his or her claim is against Mastro, not the buyer. Mastro must file claim against the buyer.

Adam--Obviously, I am not a lawyer and I didn't even stay at a Holiday Inn last night, but where am I wrong?
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Old 07-05-2009, 02:05 PM
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I thought I read on this board or maybe another years back when Forman took control of SGC that he was divesting his collection so as not to have any conflicts of interest as a collector/dealer and grading company owner. Am I wrong about that?
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  #8  
Old 07-05-2009, 02:13 PM
Rob D. Rob D. is offline
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It goes without saying that if Mastro wasn't liquid enough to pay consignors before receiving payment from buyers, then it was incredibly stupid to deliver items before receiving payment.

But for people to post today how terrible such a practice is in theory when previously praise was heaped on REA for doing the exact same thing (that is, shipping before receiving payment), that's the very definition of Monday morning quarterbacking.
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Old 07-05-2009, 02:18 PM
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"...that's the very definition of Monday morning quarterbacking. "

Agreed. But that's what we do best, so we're sticking with our strengths!
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  #10  
Old 07-05-2009, 02:25 PM
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Rob--What Mastro did was working when they had credit lines they could draw on. I would guess that they went out of business when these lines dried up and Silk Road would not advance any more money to make good on these obligations. So, that would imply that this mess is a function of bad credit decisions and some exogenous factors.
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  #11  
Old 07-05-2009, 02:21 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by oldjudge View Post
Adam--If the consignment agreement says that the consignor has the right to request the return of unpaid items after 60 days I still don't see where that prohibits Mastro Auctions from sending out the lots before payment is received. However, by doing this they are taking on the responsibility to pay for the item regardless of whether the buyer pays or not. By sending it out they are implicitly saying two things:

1-Consignor has been paid and we owe the consignor his money
2-We have entered into an interest free loan (or perhaps not) with the buyer to pay us the amount due

Therefore, if the consignor is not paid his or her claim is against Mastro, not the buyer. Mastro must file claim against the buyer.

Adam--Obviously, I am not a lawyer and I didn't even stay at a Holiday Inn last night, but where am I wrong?
If you grant a consignors the contract right to exercise an option to recall their items after 60 days, you are impliedly representing that (1) the items will still be there and (2) you won't do anthing to make the right unenforceable. Sending out an item w/o payment in that context removes the item from Mastro's possession and destroys that right, which is precisely what happened here. If Mastro knew that it routinely sent out items without receiving payment, then it knew that it did not comply with the terms of its contracts on a regular basis, yet it told none of its consignors and certainly never obtained their permission to repudiate portions of their contracts. Or, to put it another way, show me the part of the Mastro contract that says Mastro had the right to send out the items w/o payment and to pay the consignor "whenever." It doesn't say that because no one would be stupid enough to agree to it. Yet if that is what Mastro was doing, which appears to be the case, any consignor would have wanted to know. Or, to place it in a slightly different context, what happened is the equivalent of if you listed your house with a realtor and the escrow agent then gives the keys and title to a buyer without getting the money for the house. The fact that the escrow agent may be able to rustle up the cash from somewhere else to pay you off doesn't make it right.

As far as a Ponzi scheme goes, the essence of the colloquial term "Ponzi scheme" is taking funds earmarked for one purpose and using them to pay off earlier "investors." I am not saying Mastro was a pure Ponzi scheme; it did more than simply pay earlier investors with money from later investors. However, it appears to me that given the increasing scale of unpaid but shipped items as the deals worsened/soured in 2007-2008 Mastro increasingly relied on credit lines and/or consignors' money to paper over its unpaid consignments. The extent to which that happened could be untangled from its accounting records. What is apparent is that at the end the cash needed to pay the last group of consignors and their items both went missing. I know some of the consignors who are unpaid have been told, in effect, "tough ***t, no money and no item" and have to watch their items being resold on Ebay.
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Last edited by Exhibitman; 07-05-2009 at 02:25 PM.
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  #12  
Old 07-05-2009, 02:35 PM
sportscardtheory sportscardtheory is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Exhibitman View Post
If you grant a consignors the contract right to exercise an option to recall their items after 60 days, you are impliedly representing that (1) the items will still be there and (2) you won't do anthing to make the right unenforceable. Sending out an item w/o payment in that context removes the item from Mastro's possession and destroys that right, which is precisely what happened here. If Mastro knew that it routinely sent out items without receiving payment, then it knew that it did not comply with the terms of its contracts on a regular basis, yet it told none of its consignors and certainly never obtained their permission to repudiate portions of their contracts. Or, to put it another way, show me the part of the Mastro contract that says Mastro had the right to send out the items w/o payment and to pay the consignor "whenever." It doesn't say that because no one would be stupid enough to agree to it. Yet if that is what Mastro was doing, which appears to be the case, any consignor would have wanted to know. Or, to place it in a slightly different context, what happened is the equivalent of if you listed your house with a realtor and the escrow agent then gives the keys and title to a buyer without getting the money for the house. The fact that the escrow agent may be able to rustle up the cash from somewhere else to pay you off doesn't make it right.

As far as a Ponzi scheme goes, the essence of the colloquial term "Ponzi scheme" is taking funds earmarked for one purpose and using them to pay off earlier "investors." I am not saying Mastro was a pure Ponzi scheme; it did more than simply pay earlier investors with money from later investors. However, it appears to me that given the increasing scale of unpaid but shipped items as the deals worsened/soured in 2007-2008 Mastro increasingly relied on credit lines and/or consignors' money to paper over its unpaid consignments. The extent to which that happened could be untangled from its accounting records. What is apparent is that at the end the cash needed to pay the last group of consignors and their items both went missing. I know some of the consignors who are unpaid have been told, in effect, "tough ***t, no money and no item" and have to watch their items being resold on Ebay.
Don't forget the fact that when things got hot, they simply closed down shop and started anew while saying "Sorry about your bad luck!" to those they owed money too. It WREAKS of Ponzi scheme. Maybe not in the true definition of the phrase, but it is something very close.
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