I think the people doing this auction may have had good intentions, but may have simply been overwhelmed by the number of cars they had.
There was a guy I knew that had about 8 classic cars. A 72 Pontiac convertible,
4 Chrylser-Maserati cars from the 80s, a 4 door Cadillac that he claimed was the biggest 4 door Cadillac ever made in standard production, and a few other Cadillacs from the 70's-80's.
The house he lived in was small. He begged his friends for 1 car space in their garages. He only drove a 1990 Cadillac himself. So his mechanic told him he would store the cars for free. He thought the mechanic would take in 6 of them and store them somewhere in his garage. Nope, he stored them on the lot behind the mechanic's shop. The guy wasn't charging him any storage fees.
Unfortunately, this guy passed on quite suddenly from a heart attack. So his sister handled the estate. When she went to look at the cars, the mechanic said her brother hadn't been by to see the cars in at least 8 years. After sitting outside in the Texas sun for 8 years and exposed to the elements, it wasn't a pretty site.
Most of the cars paint was peeled off, the roof on the Pontiac Convertible had just rotted away leaving the interior open to the elements. She tried listing the cars in Hemmings, tried local classifieds, even tried Craigslist but there were no takers. The few people who came to look at the cars turned around and said "no thank you". So the cars were hauled off to the junkyard for scrap.
I helped a guy once with an authentic "barn find". It was a 1967 VW Sqareback that was located in the small Texas hill country town of Comfort, Tx. It was in a barn since the mid 70's. It didn't look too bad just filled with all kind of fluff & grasses and weeds. We towed it back to Houston into a storage building. When we rolled it off the trailer the guy in the drivers seat jumped out pretty quick. He said there "are noises in that car". What they had was a car that had a family of rattlers in it. They were all buried in the debris in the car. He opened the back hatch an a few of them came out. At that point I said no way was I going to work on that car with those snakes in it. I heard later on that he just parted the car out and it wasn't in the greatest shape and he felt it wasn't worth restoring.