I responded to ad on CL for a dining room set. The ad said "moving, priced to sell". When I arrived to inspect the items, I found out that the house was about to be foreclosed and that the woman selling used to live there and was looking to sell as much as possible before the foreclosure which could be happening anytime this week. I ended up buying the dining room set and a number of other items totaling $935 which I paid in cash. When I asked about the history of the furniture, because it was maybe 70-80 yrs old or older and might be worth something more than what she was asking, she said she got it from a woman in her 90s whose children didn't want it and so she had no one else to give it to. The value she said came from the fact that this elderly woman had had many happy family gatherings around the table.
The day after I took delivery, she called me and said she needed the dining room set back because it wasn't hers to sell. She also said that she was being implicated for stealing the items and I was being implicated for accepting stolen goods. Apparently the backstory was much more complicated. She had separated/divorced her husband, it wasn't ever explicitly stated to me, years before and had moved out. The husband stayed in the house for a while longer but he was accused of fraud and so he transferred ownership of the house to his kids and rented it from them I was told that things got too hot for him so he decided to leave town. The house has not had anyone living in it for a year or so.
The woman selling me the items said that everything she was selling belonged to her, I have a voicemail recording say so, and that she needed to sell it before the bank locked up the house. As I said, I bought a number of items but when she called me the next day, she only wanted the dining room set back. She said it wasn't hers to sell and that the owner wanted it back. She said she was going through a divorce and so she thought she was entitled to half but then she sidestepped and said that bank was foreclosing and so she couldn't sell the furniture. When I asked why she didn't want the other items, she couldn't answer. She instead had me talk to her son, the owner of the house, who tried to explain who owned the dining room. Apparently, it belonged to his father's parents who gave it to the couple and so it had sentimental value to him. When I said that this didn't make sense because I bought a bunch of items, not just the dining room set, the son was surprised. I listed out to him everything I bought which included paintings, bookshelves, a card table with chairs, a portable heater, some dishes and some other odds and ends. He wasn't really concerned about the other stuff and just wanted the dining room set back. I told him that I would be willing to make an offer on the set because I really liked it and had gone out of my way to remove it from their house immediately and spent several hours cleaning it. He said he would contact his father to see if he would entertain an offer. That was the last I heard from them.
This leads me to a number of questions. First, I don't believe that I am guilty of receiving stolen goods since she told me several times that she was the owner. So do I own it? To me, this was a legal transaction. If their divorce isn't settled yet, does she have the right to sell the furniture? Would a divorce judge force me to return the property? Does the foreclosure come into play? Does the son owning the house have implications? Please help
The day after I took delivery, she called me and said she needed the dining room set back because it wasn't hers to sell. She also said that she was being implicated for stealing the items and I was being implicated for accepting stolen goods. Apparently the backstory was much more complicated. She had separated/divorced her husband, it wasn't ever explicitly stated to me, years before and had moved out. The husband stayed in the house for a while longer but he was accused of fraud and so he transferred ownership of the house to his kids and rented it from them I was told that things got too hot for him so he decided to leave town. The house has not had anyone living in it for a year or so.
The woman selling me the items said that everything she was selling belonged to her, I have a voicemail recording say so, and that she needed to sell it before the bank locked up the house. As I said, I bought a number of items but when she called me the next day, she only wanted the dining room set back. She said it wasn't hers to sell and that the owner wanted it back. She said she was going through a divorce and so she thought she was entitled to half but then she sidestepped and said that bank was foreclosing and so she couldn't sell the furniture. When I asked why she didn't want the other items, she couldn't answer. She instead had me talk to her son, the owner of the house, who tried to explain who owned the dining room. Apparently, it belonged to his father's parents who gave it to the couple and so it had sentimental value to him. When I said that this didn't make sense because I bought a bunch of items, not just the dining room set, the son was surprised. I listed out to him everything I bought which included paintings, bookshelves, a card table with chairs, a portable heater, some dishes and some other odds and ends. He wasn't really concerned about the other stuff and just wanted the dining room set back. I told him that I would be willing to make an offer on the set because I really liked it and had gone out of my way to remove it from their house immediately and spent several hours cleaning it. He said he would contact his father to see if he would entertain an offer. That was the last I heard from them.
This leads me to a number of questions. First, I don't believe that I am guilty of receiving stolen goods since she told me several times that she was the owner. So do I own it? To me, this was a legal transaction. If their divorce isn't settled yet, does she have the right to sell the furniture? Would a divorce judge force me to return the property? Does the foreclosure come into play? Does the son owning the house have implications? Please help