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The seller does not own the item, they are selling it for someone else. When the item is sold, they pay the person the money and keep a percentage.
"Sold for costs/taxes to plaintiff" means that the property was sold at a sheriff sale to cover outstanding costs and taxes owed by the previous owner, and any remaining proceeds will go to the plaintiff who initiated the legal action. This language typically indicates that the sale proceeds will first satisfy the costs and taxes before any other claims are settled.
This means the item stamped is a reproduction item that was sold in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's gift shop.
item 86 is (item is not available or sold out from the menu)
$25 off a $50 item would mean it was being sold for $25, a 50% discount. A 25% discount on a $50 item would mean it was being sold for $37.5 As you can see your question was not very clear and did not result in one answer. Please take care to make your questions clear.
Reassessing simply means to assess something again, or to reconsider something. Typically monitory value is assessed, or assigned to an item before the item is sold, sometimes one needs to re-think what the value of an item is. That is reassessing.
25%
If the item sells, you can take down your listing.
No, a former can't reclaim something that they sold willingly at an auction even if it has historical or financial significance.
If something is commercially extinct, it means that there isn't enough of that thing to be commercially profitable. Or it might mean that the popularity of that item is going downhill, and not enough people are buying it, and so that item won't be sold anymore, making it commercially extinct.
The salesperson sold this item to me.
It is the price for 1 "item". The item may be a can, on 100 ml or 1 kilogram and the idea is that calculating the unit price allows comparison of things that are sold in different packaging.