1. Thе only question argued in this court is the constitutionality of the act above quoted. We will confine our decision to this question.
The statute in question is attacked as unconstitutional because “The classification of manufacturers apart from other remote
*392
sellers has no reasonable relation to the purpose of the statute, and therefore denies such manufacturers the equal protection of the laws.” There is no> merit in this сontention. The act applies alike to all manufacturers of personal property, and it is reasonable to classify manufacturers apart from other remote sellers, such as wholesalers, for the purpose of this legislation. It is a reasonable classification beсause the manufacturer has control over the materials that go into the product, the production methods employed, the labor and workmanship used in the manufacture of the product, the quality control procedures, and all other factors which go into the production of mеrchandise intended for sale to the public, which is entirely lacking in other remote sellers. This classification complies fully with the rules relative to сlassification referred to in
Geele
v.
State,
202
Ga.
381 (
2. It is further contended that “The statute interferes with liberty of contract, thereby depriving a manufacturer of propеrty without due process of law, for it creates an involuntary contractual relationship between the manufacturer and the consumer.” We recognize at the outset the many cases cited by the defendant in error to the effect that the right to contract or not to contract is a property right protected by the due-process clauses of the State and Federal Constitutions, and if it appeared that the act in quеstion unlawfully abridged this right, we would, of course, find that it offended due process. The first difficulty we have with this line of reasoning is whether the implied warranty created by the act here involved is contractual at all. A careful study of this question has convinced us that it is not.
In
Colt Co.
v.
Bridges,
162
Ga.
154, 158 (
It is thus seen that the implied warranty adds nothing to the agreement of the parties, but simply states the legal сonsequences, attached to a described transaction. It is not dependent on any contract either in fact or by implication- The. case of
Bond & Maxwell
v.
Perrin,
145
Ga.
200 (
This distinction has, however, been drawn also by courts of other jurisdictions. In Hoe
v.
Sanborn,
In the instant case, we have no contract between the manufacturer and the ultimate consumer, and the statute here under consideration does not undertake to make a contract between them or to prohibit or rеstrict in any way their right to contract as they please. It simply states that, unless there is an agreement to the contrary, a manufacturer of personal property offered for sale to the public as new property must warrant that he has manufactured such property to confоrm to the miuimirm standards therein set out. Other States have reached the same result without the aid of any statute. See Continental Copper & Steel
v.
E. C. “Red” Cornelius, (Fla.),
We therefore hold thаt the liability created under this statute is not contractual, is not an attempt by the legislature to require manufacturers to enter into contracts with thеir ultimate consumers, and does not restrict their right to contract with reference to the subject matter of this legislation. It is simply a statement of a legal result of the transactions covered thereby. It therefore follows, the statute is not unconstitutional as violating the due-process clausе of either the State or Federal Constitution because it interferes with or restricts liberty of contract.
3. Since, as held above, the implied warrаnty created by the act in question is not contractual, it is not necessary here to pass on the many questions addressed to the proposition that *395 the interference with the right to contract is protected by the due-process clauses of the State and Federal Constitutions.
4. For the reasons stated above, the act in question is not unconstitutional for any reason assigned, and the judgment of the court below dismissing the petition on motion was error and must be
Reversed.
