My name is Ruben Truit, and for 43 years I sold other people’s lives to the highest bidder.
I do not mean that cruelly.
Auctioneers learn the story of a life through what gets left on tables, hung from rafters, stacked in barns, wrapped in quilts, and carried out by strangers who never knew the owner but suddenly need the owner’s tools.

I ran Truit Family Auctions out of my 1896 bank barn in Monroe County, West Virginia, about 40 miles south of Lewisburg.
The barn had a stone foundation, hand-hewn oak beams, three working floors, and a loading dock worn smooth by generations of boots, cattle panels, hay wagons, estate boxes, and grieving families.
It had stood through 91 Monroe County winters without leaking once.
The land had been in my family since 1871, when my great-great-grandfather Orville bought it with Confederate paper that proved more useful as kindling than as currency.
My wife, Susanna, taught kindergarten for 36 years at Monroe County Elementary, and she could settle a screaming child with one look and one calm sentence.
We had one daughter, Amelia.
She was born in 1990, and she died in March of 2022 from fentanyl in a contaminated batch after she had been clean for three years.
There are losses that make noise forever, even when the house is quiet.
Amelia left behind a son named Tucker, and six months later Susanna and I became his legal parents.
He was 15 when the barn trouble began, a sophomore at Monroe County High, all long limbs, sharp questions, and his mother’s exact grin when he forgot to be guarded.
Every Saturday, he helped me in the barn.
Amelia’s 4-H ribbons hung on the second-floor workshop wall, and her sketchbook of West Virginia wildflowers sat in a glass case on my workbench because I had been able to sell thousands of objects in my life but not those.
The barn was where I worked.
After Amelia died, it became where I grieved.
In 2018, Pelum Holdings bought the old McCree dairy farm north of my property and platted a 40-lot subdivision called Sycamore Ridge Estates.
The houses were big, the lots were 2 acres each, and most of the buyers were retirees from Northern Virginia or young doctors from Charleston who wanted land without wanting to understand the people who had lived beside it first.
For five years, we got along fine.
We fixed our share of the gravel road.
We waved.
We minded our business.
Then Miranda Voss moved in with her husband, Kenton.
Miranda was 52, a former commercial real estate broker from Northern Virginia, and she liked phrases that sounded expensive but did not mean much once they touched dirt.
She said she had come to cultivate an “authentic rural elevation experience.”
Kenton was a cardiologist who commuted to Charleston three days a week, and he carried himself like a man used to rooms making way for him.
By early 2025, Miranda was HOA president.
By August 2026, she had passed what she called the community asset consolidation resolution.
The resolution authorized the HOA board to identify suitable shared spaces for centralized storage of HOA-owned equipment and seasonal materials.
The resolution did not define shared spaces.
That omission became the door she thought she could walk through.
She chose my barn.
I found out on a Wednesday afternoon in early September while I was at a farm equipment auction in Lewisburg watching a 1953 Allis-Chalmers WD sell for $3,400.
My phone buzzed in my shirt pocket, and Tucker’s name lit the screen.
“Grandpa, you need to come home,” he said.
His voice had gone tight in the way Amelia’s used to when she was trying not to cry.
I stepped into the gravel parking lot and asked what was wrong.
“Somebody is in the barn,” he said.
“A woman in a white blazer. She’s got four men. They’re unloading a box truck.”
I asked whether Susanna was home.
She was at the library.
Tucker was alone in the house.
When he told me they had a Christmas tree the size of the second-floor loft, I put my coffee on the hood of my Ford and told him to lock the doors, stay inside, and record from the window if he could.
Then I drove home at 82 mph.
At 4:10, I pulled into the farm and saw a 30-foot box truck marked Voss Family Storage backed up to my loading dock.
Four men were unloading sections of a 40-foot commercial climbing wall.
Miranda walked toward me with a clipboard and a smile that had been practiced in cleaner places than a barnyard.
“Reuben, perfect timing,” she said.
She explained that Sycamore Ridge Estates had designated my barn as the primary shared asset storage facility.
She said I would receive a formal invoice for a $2,500 community contribution assessment.
She called it an honor.
Through the open loading dock doors, I saw what four hours of entitlement could do to a working barn.
Folding chairs were stacked to the second-floor joists.
Banquet tables leaned against the east wall.
A commercial BBQ grill sat on a pallet.
There were holiday inflatables, tinsel garlands, clear totes, wooden signs, a carousel horse, two industrial patio heaters, and the largest artificial Christmas tree I had ever seen outside a town square.
Against the back wall, I saw four cases of professional-grade mortar fireworks.
That was the first moment the matter changed from disrespectful to dangerous.
I did not speak for 10 seconds.
Then I told Miranda to remove everything and leave my property.
She laughed lightly and told me the board had passed a resolution.
I told her the board could not designate private property as anything.
She told her men to keep unloading.
Nobody around her stopped.
That silence mattered.
Not because those men owed me loyalty, but because every bad idea gets braver when four ordinary people keep carrying boxes for it.
I walked back to the house and found Tucker at the kitchen window with his phone in his hand.
“Grandpa, she did it on purpose,” he said.
“Yes,” I told him.
He asked whether I was going to do something.
I put a hand on his shoulder and said, “Not yet.”
At 5:02 p.m., I called Winslow Harkness.
Winslow was 67, an estate attorney in Lewisburg, and one of the quietest loud men in Greenbrier County.
He had known my family for 29 years.
He told me not to touch the contents, not to return calls, not to start a driveway argument, and to document everything.
He came down that Friday and looked through the barn himself.
The HOA doubled down before he even finished building the file.
Three days later, the board voted 5 to 1 to ratify Miranda’s designation of my barn as the Sycamore Ridge Shared Asset Storage Facility.
The only dissenting vote came from Bonnie Trudale, a retired teacher who later told me she spent the meeting wondering whether the rest of the board could hear themselves.
The board also approved a $500 per month maintenance assessment against me and threatened a lien if I did not pay within 30 days.
That was when their mistake became useful.
On October 4, I padlocked the barn.
On October 5, Miranda had a man in a Sycamore Ridge hardscape polo cut my Medeco lock with a 4 1/2-inch angle grinder.
Tucker caught it on the wildlife camera he had mounted 6 feet up on a sycamore tree.
The video was 17 seconds long.
At 9:48 on a Sunday morning, a man walked up with the grinder.
Sparks came off my lock.
A second man stood behind him with a new padlock bearing an HOA tag.
At second 12, Miranda stood at the edge of the driveway, holding coffee and nodding.
Tucker sent me the clip while I was at the feed store in Union.
I watched it leaning against my tailgate and then called Winslow.
“She just cut my lock,” I said.
He told me to come to his office Monday at 9:00 and bring Tucker.
That Monday, Tucker wore the khakis Susanna had bought him for his spring band concert and the button-down shirt Amelia had given him the Christmas before she died.
He sat with his hands folded while Winslow explained West Virginia Code Section 38-10-4.
If an owner leaves personal property on private land after certified 30-day notice and does not remove it, legal title transfers to the landowner.
Tucker understood it faster than most adults would.
“If Grandpa gives her 30 days to come get her stuff and she doesn’t come get it, then the stuff is his,” he said.
Winslow nodded.
Tucker asked whether I could give it away for free.
Winslow looked at me over his glasses and said my grandson might have the better instinct.
I laughed for the first time in nine days.
Then Winslow slid the notice across the desk.
He filed one copy with the Monroe County Clerk that afternoon at 2:40, certified mailed copies to Miranda and the HOA, and had Tucker post the third copy on the barn door himself.
The clock started.
For the next 30 days, Tucker and I built the best inventory I had ever built.
We photographed every item.
We measured every section of climbing wall, every table, every rack, every heater, every tote, every holiday figure, and every chair.
By the end of the first week, we had 314 individual listings tied to a spreadsheet showing $247,000 of HOA-funded property.
Winslow added a legal column for the statutory basis of transfer.
We separated $38,000 of Miranda’s personal items into a different section, including 18 Lenox holiday pieces, three Persian rugs, two Eames lounge chair reproductions, a steamer trunk, and 12 vintage ski sweaters.
The fireworks created their own problem for Miranda.
Winslow identified them as professional-grade mortar fireworks subject to storage requirements under ATF rules and West Virginia Code Section 29-3E.
The HOA had no storage permit.
He checked the state database himself.
Miranda called when she received the certified notice, and I did not answer.
She left a voicemail about a misunderstanding and a community partnership.
Then she drove up with wine and fudge and rang our bell seven times.
We watched from the kitchen window.
Nobody opened the door.
Kenton came next in a Mercedes S-Class, asking to come in and discuss the situation his wife had created.
I told him to call Winslow.
His offers climbed from $10,000 to $20,000 to $40,000 to $75,000 and a public apology in the Lewisburg paper.
I told Winslow no each time.
Some people think every injury has a price because they have spent their lives buying exits.
This one did not.
On the 28th day after notice, at 2:11 a.m., Tucker’s cellular camera triggered again.
Miranda appeared in black fleece and a headlamp, carrying a battery-powered angle grinder.
She tried to cut the Medeco signature series padlock for 1 minute and 37 seconds.
Then she tried a second time with a fresh blade.
Sparks, steam, and a bright white glow flashed against the side of the barn.
The grinder battery died before the lock gave up.
At 3:10, Sheriff Penrose’s office had the footage.
He called me at 6:42 that morning and told me he had her, the grinder, the timestamps, and her plate on a deputy’s dash cam from the gate.
He also told me Anel Crowder from the state fire marshal’s office would be there Friday morning at 7:45 to secure the fireworks.
“Prepare your driveway for traffic,” he said.
So we did.
Tucker and I cleared the pasture west of the barn for overflow parking.
Wy Hulkcom brought his bush hog and cut the grass to 4 inches.
We marked 22 vehicle rows with orange flags, ran temporary fencing from the barn to the road, and set up a 4-foot check-in table with pens and inventory sheets.
Susanna baked seven pans of brownies and four pans of blondies.
Wy’s wife, Linda, brought pulled pork at 4:00 a.m. because she said people would be hungry and we would be busy.
Bonnie Trudale arrived at 5 with a legal pad and said she was done with the board.
At 6:30, the first pickup truck rolled up the driveway.
By 7:15, 17 vehicles were lined up along the county road.
At 7:40, Anel Crowder arrived in a white state truck with a trailer and secured the four cases of mortar fireworks.
He photographed each case, loaded them into his trailer, wrote me a receipt, and said our documentation would make the state’s case possible.
At 8:00 a.m. on Black Friday, Tucker and I clicked publish on 214 Facebook Marketplace listings and one master Craigslist post.
The title was simple.
Free pickup.
Entire HOA storage barn.
Monroe County, West Virginia.
Saturday only.
Show up.
The first wave hit at 8:04.
By 9:00, 217 vehicles had come through my gate.
By 10:30, the overflow pasture was full, the county road was backed up three-quarters of a mile toward Union, and Sheriff Penrose had extra deputies running traffic.
The scene looked like the busiest auction I had ever held, except nobody raised a paddle and nobody handed me cash.
A father and two teenage sons loaded 120 folding chairs for their church picnic.
The VFW Post 4578 brought three trucks and a trailer for the bleachers and the commercial BBQ grill.
Meals on Wheels took banquet tables.
Prudence Langley from Mountaineer Children’s Hospital loaded the carousel horse, eight sets of holiday inflatables, and the 40-foot climbing wall for their annual fundraising carnival.
A church group from Beckley took the 20-foot Christmas tree for a community event serving children of incarcerated parents.
Tucker worked the small-item table with a seriousness that made him look older than 15.
Every time a child came up for tinsel or lights, he shook their hand like he was closing an auction lot.
The barn that Miranda tried to steal became a loading dock for everybody she thought was beneath her.
At 10:04, a WCHS-TV news van arrived from Charleston.
Weatherbe Lane interviewed me at the edge of the loading dock.
I gave her the facts in order, the way auctioneers do when facts are enough.
I explained the August resolution, the unauthorized fill, the 30-day notice, the statute, the fireworks, and the charities.
I thanked my wife and my grandson.
I did not name Miranda.
I did not need to.
At 10:32, Miranda Voss drove up in her Subaru Outback and parked sideways across the pickup lane.
She got out wearing a white wool coat and leather boots.
She was screaming before she cleared the first row of parked vehicles.
“You are stealing community property,” she shouted.
Every trailer ramp seemed to pause.
The driveway froze around her, full of people holding chairs, ropes, ratchet straps, clipboards, coffee cups, and things her board had never had the right to put in my barn.
Nobody moved.
Sheriff Penrose was 15 feet away.
Miranda went straight to him and demanded that he arrest everyone there.
He told her he was not arresting anyone and asked her to step back across the driveway.
She refused.
She stepped toward him and grabbed at his sleeve.
She should not have done that.
A deputy moved in behind her within 3 seconds.
Penrose stepped back one pace.
The deputy took Miranda’s arm.
She struggled, kicked once, caught him in the shin, and was in cuffs within 7 seconds.
The cameras caught everything.
They caught her screaming at the sheriff, at me, at Weatherbe Lane, and at Tucker.
They also caught Tucker refusing to look up from the small-item table while he handed a six-year-old girl a string of red Christmas lights.
“Thank you, sir,” the girl said.
“You’re welcome,” Tucker told her.
“Merry Christmas early.”
At 11:09, a Monroe County Sheriff’s Office transport cruiser took Miranda Voss to Union for processing.
By noon, my barn was nearly empty.
The aftermath moved the way aftermaths do in Monroe County, slowly at first and then all at once.
Miranda was charged with attempted theft of evidence, obstruction, misdemeanor assault on a law enforcement officer, and a Class B felony count of unlawful storage of consumer fireworks under West Virginia Code Section 29-3E.
She pleaded guilty in January to reduced charges.
She received 18 months of suspended jail time, a $45,000 fine, 300 hours of community service at the Mountaineer Children’s Hospital donation intake dock, and a 2-year no-contact order covering me, Susanna, and Tucker.
Kenton Voss was not criminally charged, but the West Virginia Board of Medicine opened an ethics inquiry into his signature on the HOA resolution.
His hospital privileges in Charleston were suspended pending review.
In March, he accepted a six-month suspension of his cardiology license, a $50,000 fine, and mandatory retraining on fiduciary conflicts.
The Sycamore Ridge Estates HOA board was recalled in February by a 38-2 vote.
Bonnie Trudale became president.
At the new board’s first meeting, the community asset consolidation resolution was repealed unanimously.
Then Bonnie read a letter of apology to me and entered it into the community record.
The HOA dues used to buy the items in my barn over the previous six years were refunded to the homeowners.
The total refund was $263,000, paid from insurance reserves and a special assessment against Miranda’s property.
Miranda’s house was listed in May and sold in August for $150,000 less than she and Kenton had paid for it.
I am told they moved to a gated community outside Sarasota.
In March, Susanna and I established the Amelia Truit Recovery Fund.
It supports harm reduction outreach and recovery scholarships in Monroe, Summers, and Greenbrier counties.
It also funds summer arts programming for county high school students who have lost a parent to the opioid epidemic.
The third part is a standing $5,000 family emergency fund for grandparents in Monroe County who have taken custody of grandchildren after a parent’s overdose.
Tucker is 16 now, and he joined the fund’s junior advisory board in April.
On the drive home from his first meeting, he told me he wanted to study substance use counseling at West Virginia University.
I could not speak for a mile.
Then I told him I would pay for every semester, every book, and every roof over his head for as long as he needed one.
The barn is back to being a barn.
The loading dock is clear.
The second-floor loft is once again just a loft.
Amelia’s 4-H ribbons are still on the workshop wall, and her sketchbook is still in the glass case on my workbench.
I have done six small consignment auctions in the last eight months for families in the county who needed them.
Wy Hulkcom and I rebuilt the 1953 Allis-Chalmers I bought back in September at the Lewisburg auction.
Tucker drove it across the pasture on a cold Saturday in April with his mother’s grin on his face the whole way.
The Medeco locks are still on the barn.
They are the same locks Miranda failed to cut in the November dark.
I kept them because a lock that held deserves to stay.
If you ever find yourself in a fight like mine, remember this.
You do not always need to sue everyone who wrongs you.
Sometimes you need to read the code, file the paper, wait the days, and open the barn doors.
Petty power cannot survive a well-run free pickup.