My dear friend lost his dad a year ago. Sad, but not unexpected. His dad lived in a rented flat and the landlord was very understanding about giving us time to clear the possessions, but it did need to be done quite quickly as the flat needed a complete refurb before he found new tenants.
A lot of the things were packed up and are being stored. My friend (df) is paying for this storage.
DF had to pay for the funeral, as his dad had no money or savings at all. He talked at the time about selling the possessions to recoup the money for the funeral - that might sound a bit mercenary but he is on NMW so does not have much money either.
The biggest problem is that his father was, to try and put it delicately, probably living with mental health issues and rarely left his flat. He had a dog and also smoked very heavily. As such, his possessions - mostly books, dvds and old computers - are all very grimy, covered in dog hairs and smell very very strongly of smoke.
I honestly don't think anything is going to sell. My friend seems to think he can sell the books and DVDs at car boot sales to recoup some of the £3000 he paid for the funeral. We went to one car boot and didn't even make back the money that it cost for the pitch. There were people there that were selling pristine, brand new looking hardback books for 50p to £1. Most of the books we had taken were paperbacks, broken spines, yellowed pages and just dirty looking.
He has just found out that the army benevolent fund, or a similar organisation - I'm not sure of the details, are going to reimburse him the money for the funeral because of his fathers military service.
Since the money is no longer the issue, should I, gently, try to tell him that i think he is wasting money, paying for storage for items that will not sell. I don't want to hurt his feelings but I also don't want to give him false hope...