A friend asked me and I do not have a good answer, so thought I would ask for some advise here.
My friends father-in-law has been in ICU for a week and not likely to survive more than about another week.
His my friends wife is the executor of the estate/trust.
The gun collection is in California, but they live in Florida.
She has be directed to sell the collection and divide the money among the siblings.
How should/could this be handled?
Can they just load them up in a truck and drive them to Florida. And if so, can my friends sell them from Florida?
From what I understand, there is about 80 - 100 firearms
Any help/advise would be appreciated.
Thanks for your replies
I've done 4 of these and it's complicated by many factors, sometime legally and illegally owned (by today's standards) class 3 items. If you get authorization before death to act it's different than after death, acting for an auction/soon estate seeking to do all things above board is viewed legally quite differently than clandestine sales. That's how the 4 I steered were done.
First gatheting the items and placing them into a locked, controlled, insured environment was done, (read get them out of California and close to you to reduce your time/cost in handling) than an inventory and assessment for class 3 items needs done. Then if justified by the inventory assessment, more insurance is sought and multiple evaluations of the items financial worth are done. This assessment includes the cost of resolving the legal issues, if the inventory is worthy of it, get a lawyer who specializes in estate firearms. Sometimes moving to an insured auction house for storage needs done. I simply point the executor toward the right people and stay away, it makes the future easier.
Of the 4 I did in 1 estate it was said that it was a great collection, it was, not, 150 hard used not so well maintained field grade rifles. Still, over $50,000 in firearms.
Two were small but interesting collections, 1 had 2 class 3 items but in the end both had over $150,000 each in nicely maintained collectable and field grade firearms.
The last 1 was a small collection that was brought to my attention by the widow of an old friend I had served with, her late husband left her a note to reach out to me when he died about the firearms. Her minister who was a gun collector had offered her $15,000 dollars for the entire collectionand she was poised to sell when she found the note. I looked at the collection and immediately put her in touch with 3 different people to assess the collection, a firearm attorney and an auction house that specialized in private firearm auctions. It turned out that there were 2 old western revolvers, and a dozen properly owned class 3 WWII firearms all with great providence. A small but a 1.65 million dollar collection.
You never know what you'll see in a collection so making good choices both legally and morally make life easier. Good luck. I personally will giving all mine away before I kick the bucket.