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Stamp
Auctions
Ding-dong! Ding-dong! Vendue! Vendue! Ringing a bell and shouting “vendue”
the town crier used formerly to call the public to attend upon sales by
public bidding. By this method all sales by order of courts or other public
officials were required to be made.
It was also a convenient method of disposing of miscellaneous property
expeditiously.
In later years we find the auction-room a popular method of dispersing
many kinds of merchandise. The entire product of a large cotton or woolen
mill may thus be distributed among the wholesale or jobbing houses of
the country.
This method of selling, once synonymous with sacrifice, is now often the
arbiter of market prices.
In no line of business has the auction mart become more popular than the
stamp trade. The sales of stamps at auction in New York have reached nearly
$100,000 in a single season.
Still it is a matter of surprise how few collectors avail themselves of
the advantages of buying at auction. And there are not a few who, not
understanding the method, have tried unsuccessfully to buy at auction.
The purpose of this paper, then, is to assist those who are, or would
be, buyers, by outlining the course of an auction sale and advising them
of their rights and obligations.
First, it must be understood that those who conduct sales rarely offer
their own goods. Cataloguers of reputation have sufficient consignments
to tax their facilities to the utmost.
The first work of the cataloguer is to separate a collection into lots
best suited to the convenience of the probable buyer, be he collector
or dealer. From a careful collation of these lots results a catalogue
which will enable the would-be purchaser to form a pretty accurate idea,
with the aid of a standard catalogue, of what stamps constitute each lot.
The condition of these stamps can only be generally described, as there
is no fixed standard. Many collectors erect a standard of quality so very
extreme that they can only determine by examination personally, or by
a special agent, if the stamps offered will suit them.
The average collector, however, may accept the description in the catalogue
to mean “marketable,” unless otherwise described.
Probably not ten percent of the best collections of the world are in the
condition required by the ultra-extremist. It is, then, hardly reasonable
to expect perfection where there is only a possibility of 1 in 10 of its
existence.
Having placed this catalogue before the buying public, many bids may be
expected by mail. And it is at this point many bidders fail to understand
the character of the sale. If a lot of stamps which a bidder wants is
catalogued at $10 and he would be quite willing to buy from a dealer at
$6, why should he not bid $6 for it and perhaps get it for less if others
did not bid on it?
If one makes liberal bids, it does not follow that he will have to pay
the limit. It is customary to execute the highest bid at a fair advance
over the next higher, at which bid it would be “knocked down”
if there is no competitive bidding from the floor. The room bidders must
always be reckoned with.
The bidder should always remember that there are perhaps twenty others
bidding on the same stamp, some of whom are willing to pay as much as
himself. His bid is, therefore, executed at the limit, the first bid received
at this figure taking the prize, if the room bidders permit. Those in
the room are always at an advantage in the bidding and usually secure
the snaps.
The sale having been completed, in compliance with the law, which in this
city is very strict, is absolute, and every bidder may be compelled to
complete his part of the contract by paying for and taking away his purchases.
No man, under the law, may refuse to accept and pay for his purchase,
which has been on public view, even if not in accordance with the catalogue.
If he has been wronged, he may seek redress and will be surprised to find
how sensitively the law responds. Appeal to the law is needless, however,
as the manager of the sale will wish to avoid any unpleasant notoriety,
and the auctioneer to protect his license and his bondsmen.
Some bidders, not satisfied with their purchases, seek an excuse by which
to avoid their contract, and display a petty meanness of which they are
probably quite ignorant. How hard to see ourselves as others see us. They
return lots because they are not satisfied and compel the manager to become
the purchaser at the prices they have bid. The manager has no redress
but to cut off the offender from his lists.
To make low bids is quite proper and hurts no one except the bidder. We
have seen strings of 200 or 300 bids on a single sale where the bidder
would get two or three lots no one else wanted. If gunning for bargains,
reasonable bids on desirable stamps is often very successful. If the stamps
are not the ones wanted or not in accordance with the instructions of
the bidder, the bids are canceled.
The small commission charged, usually 5 percent, is often saved many times
to the bidder by thus employing an agent who has no direct interest in
the sale.
To summarize: Study the catalogue, mark those lots you wish to buy, enter
a fair price that you are willing to pay for each lot, estimate the amount
you wish to expend, and send your bids for about double this amount to
an agent with full instructions as to your wants in condition, quantity,
etc.
Do not send trifling bids. Do not bid on something you do not want.
And, if you make a mistake, do not try to hold someone else responsible.
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