48 Ga. App. 257 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1934
The plaintiff filed suit on September 16, 1932, against the defendant motor company for the recovery of $1000 . received by the company from a sale of her Willys-Knight automobile, and interest, under a writing dated November 12, 1927, and signed by both parties, as follows: “This is your authority to sell my Willys-Knight sedan car for the sum of $1500 (or over), same to be applied to the purchase-price of any Chrysler Model Imperial '80’ desired, delivery f. o. b. Detroit or Savannah, time of
1. The court properly construed the writing as one insufficient to be taken as a mutual, enforceable obligation to sell and buy a “ Model 80” car, since it left such a purchase optional to the plaintiff. It was merely an offer to sell such a car, within a reasonable time, for the regular price obtaining at the time of the purchase, and, upon her acceptance of the offer, to apply her $1500 credit on the purchase-price. Afterwards, by a change in the original offer, which had then been partly executed by the company’s sale of the plaintiff’s car and receipt of the $1500 proceeds, $500 was applied on the purchase-price of a different model of Chrysler automobile from that first offered; but, as the petition alleged, the remaining $1000 was still kept by the company “subject to your petitioner’s order whenever she may desire to have it applied upon a Chrysler 80.” With the modification as to the use of the proceeds, the original offer to sell remained open, subject to the plaintiff’s
2. That the offer by the defendant did not constitute in itself a mutual and binding contract until its acceptance by the plaintiff ■ did not impair her right to a return of her money held by the defendant.
3. Eor the same reason, and since the defendant itself withdrew and repudiated its offer, the plaintiff was under no obligation to select and order a “Chrysler 80” automobile, or to tender or offer to pay the purchase-price thereof, as a condition precedent to her right to recover her own money. See Ansley v. Hightower, 120 Ga. 719 (4) (48 S. E. 197); Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World v. Bell, 42 Ga. App. 323 (2) (156 S. E. 235).
Judgment affirmed.