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<p>[QUOTE="Owle, post: 2649234, member: 22004"]A sharp lawyer could make a good argument that PCGS has a history of errors like this it claims are "mechanical" when there is no proof of it one way or another. They owe it to its customers to divulge records on this. It's one thing if it was a careless mix-up which is hard to believe with multi-$10K coins, there must be a notification within their system to scrutinize coins in the high dollar figures for accuracy. Especially if the group was sent on an economy invoice. So PCGS gets to operate in the dark with no accountability on their internal practices when they make major mistakes. In a CA court I can definitely see a judge wanting to know what PCGS' records on the coin are. And forget about contract boilerplate that companies try to use to shield them against consumer rights issues. No contract can operate outside state, federal constitutions or the UCC. If a customer wants you to give him a contract shielding them against liability if you do dangerous work for them and end up seriously injured in lieu of insurance a lawyer could circumvent the contract.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Owle, post: 2649234, member: 22004"]A sharp lawyer could make a good argument that PCGS has a history of errors like this it claims are "mechanical" when there is no proof of it one way or another. They owe it to its customers to divulge records on this. It's one thing if it was a careless mix-up which is hard to believe with multi-$10K coins, there must be a notification within their system to scrutinize coins in the high dollar figures for accuracy. Especially if the group was sent on an economy invoice. So PCGS gets to operate in the dark with no accountability on their internal practices when they make major mistakes. In a CA court I can definitely see a judge wanting to know what PCGS' records on the coin are. And forget about contract boilerplate that companies try to use to shield them against consumer rights issues. No contract can operate outside state, federal constitutions or the UCC. If a customer wants you to give him a contract shielding them against liability if you do dangerous work for them and end up seriously injured in lieu of insurance a lawyer could circumvent the contract.[/QUOTE]
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