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<p>[QUOTE="satootoko, post: 135324, member: 669"]Really valuable collections are normally owned by people who understand the value of professional assistance in everything they do. The executors of their estates (or the successor trustees of their family trusts) know how to get Heritage, Superior, the Goldberg brothers, etc., etc. to accept their consignments.</p><p><br /></p><p>Of course there are occasional opportunities to obtain some coins at less than their real value, but they are few and far between.</p><p><br /></p><p>Publication of intended estate sales is regulated by the probate courts of the 50 sovereign states, the District of Columbia, and the territories and possesions. A visit to your local probate court clerk is the best way to find out if there is a public notice requirement, and if so where to find the notices. Trustees of family trusts (so-called "living trusts") are universally exempt from any such notice requirements, so the only place you're likely to find out about them is in the classified ads of your local newspaper, where you can also sometimes find notices of true "estate" sales.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="satootoko, post: 135324, member: 669"]Really valuable collections are normally owned by people who understand the value of professional assistance in everything they do. The executors of their estates (or the successor trustees of their family trusts) know how to get Heritage, Superior, the Goldberg brothers, etc., etc. to accept their consignments. Of course there are occasional opportunities to obtain some coins at less than their real value, but they are few and far between. Publication of intended estate sales is regulated by the probate courts of the 50 sovereign states, the District of Columbia, and the territories and possesions. A visit to your local probate court clerk is the best way to find out if there is a public notice requirement, and if so where to find the notices. Trustees of family trusts (so-called "living trusts") are universally exempt from any such notice requirements, so the only place you're likely to find out about them is in the classified ads of your local newspaper, where you can also sometimes find notices of true "estate" sales.[/QUOTE]
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