Goodwill use it to your advantage if he pop's a top you can fall back on Goodwill. You loaned it out on goodwill for his use your goodwill to provide equipment that you were willing to accept normal ware in tear not for him to loan it out on his goodwill to use/damage.
He took advantage of your goodwill he should own it are pay up parts and labor.
I have been lucky except in one case were I loaned a mower to a uncle. He put 200 hr. on it in a matter of 3 weeks. He was mowing grave yards ( I thought he was going to mow just a few yards) I had never took the safety's off he wore the electric PTO clutch out backing up and mowing around head stones. I am not sure how many hours he would have put on it had it not been for the PTO relay failed. When he brought it back for me to repair and I looked at the hour meter it did not get loaded back on his trailer I jumped in his truck and we went mower shopping till we found him a new mower. He's been good to me I sucked it up he did not stay in the lawn care businesses long after that when his new found money did not go as far when his own money was involved.
I will loan equipment to a few close friends those that will pay for what breaks are wares out as far as that goes. I tell them if I am using it and it breaks I pay if they are using it and it breaks you pay I expect payment immediately, That has eliminated folks that borrow that can not afford there own equipment.
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Today's Featured Article - A Farmall Story - by Ed Meadors. The year was 1978. Our young family had recently moved to rural Chesapeake, Virginia to a plot of land which would finally allow us to realize our dreams of a huge garden, critters and more lawn and pasture than we would ever use! We needed a TRACTOR; not a riding mower or tractor wannabe, but a real TRACTOR. The answer to our needs materialized in the form of a '44 Farmall A, complete with cultivators, discs, single plow, a 5ft.Woods belly mower and one, mounted spare 9.00x24 rear wheel.
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