Could be wrong but a gift or inheritance is not a transfer. Firearms gifted from a different state legally you would have to find out what the other states law.
And don't spit on the sidewalk!They certainly are transfers. Guns in state A gifted or given or sold or whatever to person in state B must go through an FFL. The ONLY exception to this is when they are inherited by person B. In this case, the aunt inherited the guns from the uncle because no will was mentioned that stated otherwise. For it to be a legal inheritance, it would've had to have been in writing that nephew inherits uncles guns.
If there's no will or other legal document that states that nephew inherits uncle's guns on uncle's death, they can be given to him by the aunt, but must legally go through an FFL to comply with the law.
Can the OP pick them up and bring them to his local FFL to do the transfer?
Tell her to bake them into the center of a cake. The gun inspection station at the state line never checks inside cakes.
Wrong terminology. The aunt is merely acting as executor for the uncles estate and distributing items as she knew the uncle wanted them to be distributed. Thus they are not gifts regulated by the atf, they are the nephews' inheritance.
Wrong terminology. The aunt is merely acting as executor for the uncles estate and distributing items as she knew the uncle wanted them to be distributed. Thus they are not gifts regulated by the atf, they are the nephews' inheritance.
Youre not the executor if everything is left to you....
She is giving them to me rather than selling them off
I've never done an out of state private purchase, is this the same thing?