Well, it is his property, and he can do with it whatever he wants to. If the rifle was in original shape at the start, it is too bad that another collectable milsurp, and as pointed out, an already hacked one or a sporter from Trade-Ex could have been used. As a Swedish rifle proponent, I do not like to see an original one altered, and we see on this website quite a few posts on "Where have all the milsurps gone?. This is one answer to the question.
After over 50 years of hunting all across Canada, there are a couple of points with this one that I do think a hunting rifle should have. One is auxillary open iron sights. I have seen quite a few scopes knocked out of kilter by careless baggage handlers or rough truck rides, and even broken scopes without any spare scope packed. (There are a LOT of people who spend thousands of dollars on a hunting trip, but do not put an extra scope and tool kit in their luggage --- and a lot of them even but the cheapest ammunition they can to go with it.) Iron sights can be used easily out to 200 yards, and can save a hunt. The second thing is the mirror shiny finish. Even on factory rifles, I have observed hunters several miles away on a mountainside "flashing" like a signal light because of the sunlight reflected off a rifle stock. (Did you take the sunglasses off the Deer for the photos? ----LOL)
Other than that, the approximately 20 inch barrel is handy and efficient in the dark black timber of a Western Elk range or an Eastern Cedar swamp, and I have taken more than my share of large game animals with a Ruger 77 Carbine in .308 Winchester Calibre.