I've thought about that, but not sure of the cost of barrels and I'm not really interested in .38.Are any of those worth re-barrelling to restricted?
I don't if this is true but I was told if someones father passes away they can inherit Prohibs themselves even if they just have restricted on thier licence. due to the fact they are staying in the family.
The Executor of the estate has full authority to possess these firearms and dispose of them. A 12(6) PAL licence is NOT required.
The Executor can join this site and request to sell them for the estate on this site too. Or, at the Executors discretion, sell or otherwise dispose of them to a 12(6) licence holder.
This covers itI don't if this is true but I was told if someones father passes away they can inherit Prohibs themselves even if they just have restricted on thier licence. due to the fact they are staying in the family.
He took these 4 guns and accessories , a colt huntsman ??, 2 poor condition .22 and a fair condition bolt 12 g to the local LGS and was offered $600. The owner has prohib status . Edited: it may have been a browning buck mark , it was valued at 5 to 6 for that alone.As far a s a business goes...
A business licence may permit the store to sell prohibited firearms as an agent on behalf of the owner - or the estate in this case - on consignment. Prohibs cannot become the property of the business. If a business offered to buy them, they were being a bit disingenuous. They cannot buy them. If they paid for them up front, the sale would still be handled as a consignment sale, but instead of collecting a commission, the business stands to make a larger profit.
A commission of 20% would not be unreasonable.



























