SESS
Gold Member
Dear EasyEd-
On this statement: "2) Interested parties become dealers borrowing money from Textron to buy inventory and having Textron finance tractors bought from those dealers."
The dealers did not borrow money from Textron. Textron is the floorplanning company. The dealers signed an agreement with Farmtrac to become a dealer (Dealers also signed agreements with Textron stating that when a tractor was sold that is currently on their floorplan account-the dealer would remit the invoice amount to Textron to "clear off" that total on the account); tractors were delivered to the dealer; Textron paid Farmtrac the invoice amount of that tractor; when the dealer sells the tractor-payment is mailed to Textron for the invoice amount that is currently on their floorplan account. There was NO borrowing of money. The agreements also state that dealers would sell the tractors on their property "during normal business conditions". When Farmtrac went out of business (thus there is no manufacturer to stand behind the product, no warranty from the manufacturer, no financing for the equipment because there is no manufacturer, dwindling parts supply again because there is no manufacturer, etc etc etc)-NORMAL business went out the window.
That is the very, very short version of dealers-Farmtrac-Textron relationship.
On this statement: "2) Interested parties become dealers borrowing money from Textron to buy inventory and having Textron finance tractors bought from those dealers."
The dealers did not borrow money from Textron. Textron is the floorplanning company. The dealers signed an agreement with Farmtrac to become a dealer (Dealers also signed agreements with Textron stating that when a tractor was sold that is currently on their floorplan account-the dealer would remit the invoice amount to Textron to "clear off" that total on the account); tractors were delivered to the dealer; Textron paid Farmtrac the invoice amount of that tractor; when the dealer sells the tractor-payment is mailed to Textron for the invoice amount that is currently on their floorplan account. There was NO borrowing of money. The agreements also state that dealers would sell the tractors on their property "during normal business conditions". When Farmtrac went out of business (thus there is no manufacturer to stand behind the product, no warranty from the manufacturer, no financing for the equipment because there is no manufacturer, dwindling parts supply again because there is no manufacturer, etc etc etc)-NORMAL business went out the window.
That is the very, very short version of dealers-Farmtrac-Textron relationship.