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Old 11-18-2008, 09:07 AM   #1
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This Ad is NOT fake - '63 Pontiac Tempest sells for $226.5k

Unbelievable!

'63 Pontiac Tempest
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Old 11-18-2008, 09:59 AM   #2
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huh?

Please explain.
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Old 11-18-2008, 10:00 AM   #3
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Ridiculous!
Sounds like either a hacked/bogus account, or a kid on their parents computer.
Whatever happened, I would have gone with this .
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Old 11-18-2008, 10:01 AM   #4
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No one is paying that for that lol, negative feedback for that buyer coming soon!
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Old 11-18-2008, 10:39 AM   #5
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Looks legit, CRAZY but legit.

http://bringatrailer.com/2008/11/07/long-lost-racer-1963-pontiac-lemans-super-duty/#more-1318
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Old 11-18-2008, 10:48 AM   #6
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Wow, Aron - thanks for the link. What a KEWL story.
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Old 11-18-2008, 11:40 AM   #7
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Nice piece of Detroit history. Definitely for the more money than brains crowd.

My dad owned a 63 Pontiac Tempest for a while. A beater car that he bought in the 70's for my brother to drive to school. It was a V8 block with only 1 cyl head and a plate bolted across the other side. 4 working cylinders and a 2 speed push button slush-o-matic trans. What a pile. It was really slow and it was hit and totaled within 1 year.
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Old 11-18-2008, 12:39 PM   #8
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Something tells me I should have hung onto this:


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Old 11-19-2008, 07:27 AM   #9
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Wow, classic stuff. What a barn find!!! If only someone had known what they were looking at straight off they could have grabbed it for the buy it now price of $4,000!

Kirk
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Old 11-21-2008, 03:09 AM   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kirk
Wow, classic stuff. What a barn find!!! If only someone had known what they were looking at straight off they could have grabbed it for the buy it now price of $4,000!

Kirk
What, so then the guy could turn around and sell it for over 200k? That would be the same as stealing. I'm happy that didn't happen, and the original guy got what the car was worth. He deserved it far more than someone who took advantage of a situation.
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Old 11-21-2008, 03:46 AM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JackG
What, so then the guy could turn around and sell it for over 200k? That would be the same as stealing. I'm happy that didn't happen, and the original guy got what the car was worth. He deserved it far more than someone who took advantage of a situation.

WTF? Stealing?
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Old 11-21-2008, 08:57 AM   #12
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WTF? Stealing?
Hehe... when it's an informed banker on Wall St. giving a loan to an uninformed house buyer that they know has no chance of being paid back, we call it criminal. But if it's an uninformed guy who asks 4K for a car that an informed buyer would pay 250k for, that's suddenly OK.

However, the word "stealing" was a bit strong. Unethical fits perfectly.
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Old 11-21-2008, 09:43 AM   #13
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I would like to see the heirs get some compensation, I mean the old man didn't store a car in this condition not knowing it's potential value, it wouldn't make sense to spend money storing an old 'junker'. But we're getting waay ahead of ourselves.

We do not know there are any heirs. We do not know the circumstances of the delinquent storage bill - how long was it in arrears?

From the start of this auction, it appears the seller didn't know the true value, so it's a little difficult to call it fraud, deception, or unethical. The fact that the car brought way more than the seller first sought is no crime and certainly the seller cannot be faulted here.

The laws governing the seizure of stored property by the 'landlord' to satisfy a delinquent bill varies by state, but usually involve filing papers, informing the renter (usually to last known address and/or by posting a notice in a newspaper), and allowing a set period of time where the renter can bring the account up-to-date and recover their property.

Assuming there are heirs, were they so informed? Did they ignore the notice? Or, lacking knowledge of the car's true value did they just let the 'landlord' keep the property rather than fork out money for an 'old' car?

Was the old man's estate probated? If so was the car a known posession (it appears to have had a very old original title, issued before such documents were computerised) or it's true value disclosed? If not, there could be upcoming issues with the state and fed. revenue depts. if they get wind of this ebay sale. The value of this car could well have caused an otherwise exempt estate to now be required to be filed in probabte court. Also, the seller is going to have to report the sale as a capital gain and pay the appropriate taxes... a LOT of taxes.

Assuming there are heirs, are they even aware of this auction? If so, what might their future actions be? They wouldn't likely find an attorney to challenge the ownership on a contingency basis, so again, they'd be out money upfront with no guarantee of winning the case and coming out ahead.

There are way too many unanswered questions right now to draw any conclusions about whether or not the seller was honest, or even if his ownership of the car was fully established.

I wouldn't be at all surprised to see this story pop up again sometime in the future - I don't think we've heard the end of it just yet.
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Last edited by Lil bastard; 11-21-2008 at 10:20 PM.
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Old 11-21-2008, 08:35 AM   #14
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Originally Posted by JackG
What, so then the guy could turn around and sell it for over 200k? That would be the same as stealing. I'm happy that didn't happen, and the original guy got what the car was worth. He deserved it far more than someone who took advantage of a situation.

Nope... I don't think that the "original guy" "deserved it" more than anyone else. The "original guy" who put up the auction and got the quarter of a million dollars was kind of "sealing" it too. See some older gentleman (who has not been named so as to try to hide this from the family) had this car in storage. When he passed away he got behind in his storage payments (hard to do you see when you're dead). The brother-in-law (who owned the storage) of the eBay seller then got title to the car in lieu of overdue storage costs. It wasn't until they had the car up for auction that they figured out its real value.

The interesting things is whether or not the eBay seller will actually get to keep any of that money. See they can get title to the car if the due storage costs exceed the value of the car, which they estimated at $4,000 at most. Clearly they were wrong as the real value is $226,000. So.... IF the family can find out about this, they'll probably have them in court in a heartbeat and get at least $222,000 back for the car.... and the "original guy" will get the $4,000 or so that he truly deserves.

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Old 11-21-2008, 09:12 AM   #15
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Originally Posted by Kirk
Nope... I don't think that the "original guy" "deserved it" more than anyone else. The "original guy" who put up the auction and got the quarter of a million dollars was kind of "sealing" it too. See some older gentleman (who has not been named so as to try to hide this from the family) had this car in storage. When he passed away he got behind in his storage payments (hard to do you see when you're dead). The brother-in-law (who owned the storage) of the eBay seller then got title to the car in lieu of overdue storage costs. It wasn't until they had the car up for auction that they figured out its real value.

The interesting things is whether or not the eBay seller will actually get to keep any of that money. See they can get title to the car if the due storage costs exceed the value of the car, which they estimated at $4,000 at most. Clearly they were wrong as the real value is $226,000. So.... IF the family can find out about this, they'll probably have them in court in a heartbeat and get at least $222,000 back for the car.... and the "original guy" will get the $4,000 or so that he truly deserves.

Kirk
I haven't heard the lead-in story about how he came to own the car, and couldn't find it on the net. However, with it being so valuable, IF there was a family around, it sure seems they would have known about it and rescued the car.

One thing is for sure... in your scenario, once the seller sold the car for 4k, and the new owner then sold it for 250k. the family, IF they exist, would have ZERO chance of getting anything. Not the best outcome, huh?
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Old 11-21-2008, 09:41 AM   #16
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haha wow... the new owner of that low mileage garage beauty just got rickrolled!
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Old 11-21-2008, 11:49 AM   #17
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Originally Posted by JackG
I haven't heard the lead-in story about how he came to own the car, and couldn't find it on the net. However, with it being so valuable, IF there was a family around, it sure seems they would have known about it and rescued the car.

One thing is for sure... in your scenario, once the seller sold the car for 4k, and the new owner then sold it for 250k. the family, IF they exist, would have ZERO chance of getting anything. Not the best outcome, huh?
Go here:
eBay link
Read that page and work your way to the bottom.
At the very bottom, go to Questions From Other Memebers. To view all 38 questions, you will have to login. Go to the last page of questions as they are the oldest and work your way up.

BTW, the previous owner died and the car sat for a year with no one claiming it and no one paying storage. The current owner gained title in return for unpaid storage.
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