They came highly recommended by my financial advisors to appraise my jewelry for insurance purposes. My initial contact with them on March 25 was pleasant, and they appeared to know what they were doing. A female employee checked in each piece of jewelry, gave me a receipt, and advised me that a couple of gold chains couldn't be repaired, but they would credit me $248 for those. She said it would be ready on April 15. I phoned on April 15 and had to go through several employees to find out that the jewelry wasn't ready. No problem at that point since it had only been 2 weeks. Another 5 weeks went by with no contact from them, so on May 20, I phoned again, being shuttled between a couple of employees only to be told that the appraiser was at lunch (at 2 p.m.) and would call me back. When I had not received a call back by 15 minutes before their closing time, I again phoned the store. The appraiser I spoke to said the job was not yet completed. I advised that I would pick up my jewelry on Wednesday, May 22, finished or not. Several excuses were given by the staff on each phone call, and finally the manager of the store called me back to see why I was concerned. I told him I was concerned that they had hocked or lost my jewelry, several pieces of which were family heirlooms. He assured me the jewelry was safe and again gave excuses about how busy they are. He said the pieces would be finished by Wednesday, May 22, and he would call me on Tuesday to confirm. The call came after 5 p.m. on Tuesday. When I arrived at the store to retrieve the pieces, they couldn't find them initially. More excuses. Finally, they found them in the back and checked me out. When I arrived home, I realized that they hadn't credited me the promised $248 from the two gold chains that were broken. Another phone call, more excuses, and finally an agreement to credit the card I used to pay for the service. That was Wednesday, May 22. As of today, June 2, the credit has not appeared on my credit card statement. Needless to say, I am appalled at their rotten customer service. When asked and quot;how can we make this right for you?and quot; I told them, and quot;don't treat your next customer the way you treated me.and quot; No remorse from them, and still no credit remitted to my card. I will never shop there again, and I have <br /> notified my financial advisors that they need to find another jeweler to refer their clients; they agreed that my experience was inexcusable and will not refer others to Morrison Smith. Additionally, one of Morrison Smith's employees is an independent contractor who appraises silver flatware. Same problem with her. She came to my house in March to appraise my silver flatware, cashed my $200 check right away, but I had to demand the results of her appraisal which I received when I picked up my jewelry two months later. Shame on them! Their sterling (no pun intended) reputation is very tarnished. <br /> UPDATE, June 8, 2013: I phoned again on Monday, June 3, and spoke with the store manager who promised to look into the matter further. He said that if the credit had not posted to my account, he would have a check issued in the amount of the refund I have due. Three more days went by with no telephone call, no credit to my credit card, and no check in the mail. I called the store manager back on Thursday, June 6, and he put me on hold to speak with the auditor. The store owner, Charles Smith, came on the line and issued a profuse apology, but again made excuses about being away from the store on a family emergency and something about a software glitch regarding issuing refunds to credit cards. I expressed my frustration and concern about the lack of communication between his staff and me and requested an immediate remittance via check of the refund due me. He promised that it would be in today's mail, and sure enough, on June 7, the promised refund arrived with a note outlining his actions with his staff to rectify their sloppy customer service. I can only hope that the staff has learned their lesson; it appears that the owner has. While I still will never shop there again, my advice to others who may is to nail down, preferably in writing, any promises made by them. And good luck.