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    Estates and Treasures

    3.0 (4 reviews)

    Services - Estates and Treasures

    Estate liquidation

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    10 months ago

    Great prices and great items, setup was quick and easy and friendly atmosphere. Found great items

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    1 year ago

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    2 years ago

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    4 years ago

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    Leftover Treasures - The original post with description

    Leftover Treasures

    (38 reviews)

    This is my favorite auction house around. This is a great place for both buyers and sellers. First…read moreoff zero ghost bids. As a buyer I really appreciate someone who runs their business with honesty and integrity. If I was looking for an auction house to sell my stuff I wouldn't hesitate to use Leftover treasures. After seeing the last auction they handled with ease, I can assure you that they can handle whatever your situation is. If you're looking for a place that's great for both buying and selling then give Leftover Treasures a bid or a call. Phillip so a gr at guy and works so hard to make sure the auction goes the way it should.

    A Caution About Leftover Treasures Estate Sales…read more I feel a responsibility to share my experience with Leftover Treasures Estate Sales, in hopes that others can avoid the costly mistake I made. While I understand that buying secondhand items carries some risk, there is a difference between "sold as-is" and misrepresentation l- and I believe that line was clearly crossed in my case. I purchased a refrigerator through one of their estate auctions for $600. It was advertised as being in "immaculate condition" and "working perfectly." Before placing a bid, I even took the extra step of calling the owner, Phillip, to confirm its condition. I had noticed the refrigerator had been listed in two separate auctions and wanted to know why the first sale hadn't gone through. He assured me the previous bidder backed out due to a housing issue and that the appliance had passed a "diagnostic" and was in excellent working order. Trusting his word, I won the bid and arranged professional movers and a hydraulic lift truck to bring the refrigerator home. The move was less than four minutes from the estate to my house, and the unit was transported upright and with care. Despite this, the refrigerator never turned cold. The electricity worked, but the appliance clearly did not function. When we brought it inside and plugged it in, it was immediately clear something was wrong. The appliance was not cold- not even the freezer. Given the short four-minute trip from the estate, the freezer compartment should have retained some cold if it had recently been running, but it was completely warm from the start. There was no residual cool air, no melting frost, and no signs of recent use- despite the owner Phillip's repeated claims that it had been running "up until the day of the auction." I attempted to reach Phillip immediately - via phone, text, and email - but received no response for days. When he finally replied, it was close to his closing time and one day after the former homeowners had moved out of state so there was no way to return to the owners. His tone was dismissive. He denied any responsibility and offered a series of excuses, suggesting we must have damaged it during the move. I calmly explained that we had used professional equipment and that he himself had helped load it onto his appliance dolly. At every turn, I had a reasonable, documented response. Frustrated, we had two separate repair professionals inspect the unit- one from LG and one independent technician. Both confirmed the refrigerator had a broken compressor, a Freon leak, and a damaged condenser. They also noted that the inner working components, specifically the cooling coils, were caked in thick layers of dust and grime, in sharp contrast to the seller's description of it being "immaculate." Both professionals also independently confirmed that the damage was consistent with age and wear- not poor handling or a rough move. Their repair estimates came in at $1,000 and $1,300 -- more than the cost of the fridge itself. Both technicians even chuckled at the idea that this appliance had been "working perfectly" just minutes before we received it. What's most disappointing isn't just the money lost, it's the utter lack of accountability. I would have been more than satisfied with a partial refund, a shared cost of repairs, or even a genuine effort to make things right. Instead, I was met with silence and deflection. This was not the first time I've received broken or incomplete items from this company, but it is certainly the most financially damaging. In the past, I let smaller issues slide- empty boxes, broken pieces in "bundled" lots- but this experience made it clear that this business operates on a "buyer beware" model with little concern for ethical responsibility. To rub salt in the financial wound, I let Phillip know that that $600 was significant for me as my spouse had recently become permanently disabled, and we were operating on a very limited single income. To even make the leap to spend that money required me to make sacrifices elsewhere in my budget. And in retrospect, I now realize that it is unlikely that the first buyer backed out because of a housing issue. As someone who tries to approach situations with fairness and patience, I'm disheartened. I placed trust in this business based on their own words and representations. That trust was misplaced. I urge future customers to proceed with extreme caution. "Sold as-is" should not be a free pass for dishonesty.

    Estates and Treasures - estateliquidation - Updated June 2026

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