Posted on 05/15/2014 2:18:11 PM PDT by nickcarraway
I think the writer meant "who sold it" not "who stole it"!
BTW, good story about these kids doing the right thing.
A really beautiful thing those kids did.
Absolutely! I am among the loudest on these threads when it comes to dumping on Millenials, but these kids absolutely showed the kind of character, honesty, and respect for others which made this country great. And it does give me some hope.
I would have kept the money.
Me too. If you’re stupid enough to donate a couch in which you have $40,000 stashed, well, you’re stupid.
Keep quiet, and split the money. No telling if it was granny’s stash, a drug dealer ripoff, or worse, a Clinton or BHO bundler...
40 grand would buy one helluva toga party!
I think they did the right thing, but it can be argued on the other side.
They bought the couch in good faith. Whatever was in the couch went with it.
They had no moral obligation to return the money, but since the couch was donated without the knowledge or consent of the actual owner, I think what they did was admirable.
For the record I would have been sorely tempted to just keep the money...I hope I would have had the integrity to do what these kids did.
Uh,,,,,,
“She didn’t trust banks, and her kids donated the couch when she was in the hospital.” 91 years old, and in the hospital with a broken hip.
Yeah, I’m a greedy bastard. I’m keeping the cash.
So someone wants to hide something in a couch and installs a ZIPPER instead of sewing it closed again??
If her kids didn't know about it, she didn't trust them either!
Did they “check their privilege?” I mean... really./sarc
“I feel like this is a gift from my husband, he’s looking down on me and that’s part of the reason you guys came here”
She trusts and most certainly misses her husband.
I would say that contractually, their good faith purchase is trumped by the lack of knowledge or consent by the owner of the sale. So they actually had no legal claim to the money. Morally, of course, they certainly had no claim to money once they realized they could contact the owner and return it.
Practically speaking, however, since no one knew of their discovery but them, these issues conflated into a spiritual test - which they passed.
LOL! A friend of my brother’s inherited an auto salvage lot when his grandfather died, and he found cash squirrelled away in many of the junk cars.
The grandfather fell off the porch and broke his leg, and when he woke up and found he was in the hospital, he died of a heart attack, poor fellow.
Sofa cushions have zippers on them, so you can take the covers off to clean them, or replace the foam insert if it’s too lumpy or the cat peed on it.
Most all sofa cushions that are removable have zippers. It's easier, cheaper, and faster than tying to sew them shut after they've been stuffed. Worked in the furniture-making biz for a few years. Stuffing cushions sucked. It was made easier with a vacuum and some silicone spray (wrap the foam in light plastic, vacuum shrink it, put the cover on, release the vacuum, then work the foam into the corners and zip 'em up.
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