Ford is now suing the auction house that auctioned off a GT supercar last May.

Ford really hates it when people resell their GT. Last month we reported on how Ford had finally settled their long-standing suit with WWE wrestler John Cena and the dealer that helped him sell his GT, and now we hear that Ford is going after the auctioneer that resold a GT for $1.65 million last May.

According to Jalopnik, Ford is suing Mecum Auction House for the sale of a 2017 Ford GT that crossed their auction block two months ago. At the time it was a controversial sale since everyone knew that anyone who bought a new GT did so under contract with Ford not to resell the car for at least two years. The idea there was to somehow turn every new GT owner into a “Ford brand ambassador” and the thought was that for those ambassadors to resell the car for a profit so soon after purchasing it would look bad on the company.

RELATED: JOHN CENA & FORD FINALLY SETTLE GT LAWSUIT

We’re not sure how good it looks for that company to sue everyone under the sun, but we don’t make billions of dollars worth of cars.

At the time, a Mecum rep prefaced the auction with, “the Judge did rule in Mecum’s favor, that we could sell this car. And if Ford wanted it back, they were welcome to come here and bid on it. So this is a publically legal sale of a Ford GT.”

And at the time, Mecum was right. Ford had tried to block the sale with an injunction, but the judge ruled that Ford couldn’t prove that Mecum was infringing on the original contract between Ford and the original owner.

That owner, by the way, was John W. Miller. He sold the car to Hollywood Wheels, owned by Michael J. Flynn, who then had the car auctioned off at Mecum.

Since Ford couldn’t block the sale and couldn’t prove that Mecum was in cahoots with Miller to sell the car from the beginning, they’re not suing Mecum for unspecified damages.

We haven’t heard back from Mecum’s camp yet and we’re not sure how Ford’s case will fly, but we’re sure of one thing: it doesn’t give Ford the reputation they were hoping for when they made the GT.

NEXT: FORD GT ORDERS WILL START AGAIN IN 2018