24 Ga. App. 581 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1919
Charles H. Mann, doing business in the name of Southern Hide and Skin Company, brought suit against J. H. Bennett, doing business in the name of Atlanta Hide and Tallow Company. The petition was in two counts. The first count alleges: (1) The defendant is a resident of Fulton County, Georgia. (2) On November 28, 1917, the plaintiff sold to the defendant “from fifteen hundred to two thousand green salted hides, 30# and up, at the price of 20%^ per pound, f. o. b. Jacksonville, hides to be free from damage,” the said words “30# and up” having a fixed and definite trade meaning, to wit, of the weight of 30 pounds and upwards. On said day said sale and purchase were confirmed in writing by the plaintiff and by the defendant.
In the second count of the petition the allegations in paragraphs 1 to 4 inclusive are the same as the allegations in the paragraphs of the same numbers in the first count. The remaining paragraphs allege: (5) Plaintiff then proceeded in the utmost good faith to make a resale of said hides at the'highest price obtainable. (6) On February 27, 1918, defendant ordered plaintiff to prepare the hides for inspection and delivery, and- this was done with reasonable expedition. (7) On March 2, 1918, defendant inspected and selected fifteen hundred hides, which were then and there accepted, weighed, and loaded on ears at Jacksonville, and thereupon defendant refused to pay therefor, said fifteen hundred hides being then
The defendant demurred to the petition, upon the following grounds: (1) It sets forth no cause of action. (2) The contract set up in the petition is too indefinite and uncertain to have any binding force or effect, in that there was no agreement on the part of the plaintiff to sell, or on the part of the defendant to purchase, any definite number of hides, or hides of any definite or certain weight. (3) It does appear from petition that plaintiff resold at defendant’s risk 1500 hides after defendant had inspected, selected,
Only headnote 4 (6) needs elaboration. The petition is to be construed most strongly against the pleader. So construed, we think that under the allegations of paragraphs 6 and 7 of the second count, when they are considered in connection with the other allegations of that count, the plaintiff must be held to have waived the breach of contract occasioned by the defendant’s refusal to accept and pay for the two thousand hides, and to have consented with the defendant to substitute in the contract of sale, in lieu of the two thousand hides, the fifteen hundred hides that were selected and accepted by the defendant but for which he refused to pay. If we are correct in the foregoing conclusion as to the construction to be placed upon paragraphs 6 and 7 of the second count (and we think we are), then it does not appear from the petition that the defendant was ever notified by the plaintiff of his intention to resell the particular fifteen hundred hides that had been selected and accepted by the defendant, and it is quite clear that the plaintiff’s resale of said hides to the Northwestern Leather Company was not binding upon the defendant. We therefore hold that the court erred in overruling the demurrer in so far as it applied to the second count of the petition.
Judgment reversed in pari, and affirmed in part.