I agree John Deere goes to him to get their property back and he has no recourse against them. But the buyer goes after the auctioneer that conducted the consignment auction. They are the ones who sold the property - that's who he made the check out to, they were the ones representing a legal transfer of property.
My younger brother had something similar happen at a sale barn. He bought 30 head of cattle and brought them home. A couple weeks later the sheriff showed up at his house because it was determined that cattle were stolen and the thief arrested. They traced the cattle to him. He gave the cows up and then had a talk with the auctioneer - who first tried to say it wasn't his fault the cattle were stolen and it was my brother's tough luck. Then the lawyers got involved and the sale barn cut him a check for the amount of purchase. The sale barn can go after the thief (most likely nothing there) for their money but they can't sell stolen property and be paid for stolen property and then say they have no liability.
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Today's Featured Article - Antique Tractor Wiring Basics - by Curtis von Fange. One of the most neglected parts of old tractors is the wiring. After sitting in the elements for half a century or more much equipment wiring has deteriorated to sparsely covered strands of copper or other metal. Plastic insulation has cracked, mice have eaten through the older clothed style coverings and the exposed wires have reacted to winter moisture and salts by turning blue and powdery. Terminal ends have corroded, rusted or just plain evaporated away. Aged wires not only keep an engin
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