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Last year,
and
became dominant news about the
, but it wasn’t the only GT exchange to become litigious. Mecum Auctions consigned a 2017
, number 48 of the production run, for its May
in Indianapolis, and
,
first tried to institute a restraining order on the sale, but the local court ruled in favor of Mecum.
, and Ford sued.
The same car even went for auction again at Mecum’s Monterey auction that year
, but didn’t sell, even with the high bid of $1.6 million. After all this, the lawsuit between the two companies has been settled out of court.
Ford announced the settlement that notes an undisclosed amount of money coming from Mecum Auctions. That money will be donated to the
Fund, which provides money to various community organizations with a focus on education, safety and community services. In addition, Mecum Auctions agreed to not consign any Ford GTs from original owners that are still under the two-year restriction on resale. The company will also contact Ford for permission before offering Ford GTs from non-original owners that have cars still within the two-year restriction. Both companies also ask original owners to abide by the two-year sale policy.
With this lawsuit settled, we realized that the Cena Ford GT alone was
sold a few times in the span of a year
, and we were curious if there are any other suits pending. A Ford representative confirmed that there are some additional lawsuits, and the company is “confident we can enforce the ownership agreements.” As the lawsuits are current, he couldn’t give us any further information. We also reached out to Mecum Auctions for a statement, but did not receive one by the time we published.
Related Video:
from Autoblog http://bit.ly/2sL438g