G26ster wrote:I think it's called "freedom." A person has the right not to provide information that isn't required by law, and a person has the right to ask for that information, as long as it doesn't violate a law. Simple. You don't want a bill of sale, then don't do business with anyone that asks for one. Doesn't mean they're ignorant, and your desire not to provide that information doesn't out weigh their desire to have it. Just MHO.
srothstein wrote:I think you all have it backwards. I want a bill of sale when i buy a gun, especially a used one in a private sale. It does help cover me if there turns out to be something wrong with the gun. I don't see how it helps the seller, but I can see it protecting the buyer.
with BOTH of the above.
TexasRedneck wrote:Now ah'm REALLY confused!!! In what possible way does it "protect" the buyer?!??
If I buy a stolen gun, or one that later turns out to have been used in a crime (long shot, but possible), when the police ask me when, where, and from whom I acquired that gun, I want to have a clear answer. How many times have you heard/read about serial numbers being run during a traffic stop? Don't tell me it'll never happen. I would NEVER buy a private sale weapon without documenting clearly the sellers information, the date and time of the transaction and getting the seller to sign a sales receipt. I'm also not going to put my freedom at risk because some unscrupulous seller decided to report their gun stolen after they sold it to me.
You are entitled to feel and behave otherwise. Rest assured that I think you are as careless as you think I am an idiot.
And.... I don't care a single hoot whether it's "a legal document" in anyone's opinion. I've put my signature on, literally, billions of dollars worth of contracts. Not a single one was notarized and according to every lawyer I've talked with about it, every one of them became a legally binding contract as soon as it was signed by both parties to the deal.