Lee Rountree and James Martin, appellee-plaintiffs in Case No. 74751, are business partners who originally entered into a written agreement to buy certain computer equipment from Shell Group, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as Shell). The sales representative of Shell who conducted the negotiations with appellees was Becky Lemley. After signing the purchase agreement negotiated with Lemley, appellees began to make regular payments to Shell for the computer equip *418 ment. However, two weeks after delivery of the computer equipment, Lemley contacted appellees to advise them that she had found a way whereby their monthly payments for the computer equipment could be lowered. Lemley thereafter presented appellees with a copy of a lease agreement and an indemnification agreement. Lemley stated that “nothing would change” if appellees signed these agreements. To the contrary, however, the new documents would significantly change the nature of the underlying transaction from a sale to a lease of the computer equipment. Moreover, the new documents named Citicorp Industrial Credit, Inc., appellant-defendant in Case No. 74751, rather than Shell, as the lessor of the equipment. With regard to repairs and servicing, the lease agreement provided that appellees, at their “own cost and expense, [would] keep all equipment in good repair, condition and working order and [would] furnish all parts, and servicing required thereof.” The lease agreement also provided that appellees were “entitled to the benefit of any manufacturer’s warranties on the equipment to the extent permitted by applicable law.”
Appellees simply signed the new agreements and did not read them prior to signing. For some time thereafter, appellees submitted to appellant the regular monthly rental payments required by the lease agreement. Whenever the computer equipment did not operate properly, appellees notified both Shell and appellant. However, neither Shell nor appellant provided any repair service. Thus, appellees were forced, at their own expense, to contract with independent service companies for the repair of the equipment.
Appellees eventually refused to make any further rental payments to appellant and demanded that the lease be terminated. Appellant refused appellees’ demands and, when timely payment from appellees was not forthcoming, appellant filed this suit, seeking to recover for appellees’ alleged breach of the lease agreement. Appellees answered, asserting numerous defenses. Appellees also filed a counterclaim for the recovery of all payments that they had previously made to appellant under the lease agreement and of all expenses that they had incurred for the repair of the equipment. The case came on for a jury trial. At the close of all of the evidence, appellant moved for a directed verdict as to both its claim against appellees and appellees’ counterclaim against it. The trial court denied appellant’s motion and the case was submitted to the jury. As to appellant’s main claim, the jury returned a verdict in favor of appellees. As to the counterclaim, the jury also returned a verdict in favor of appellees, but awarded no damages. The trial court entered judgments on the jury’s verdicts and, in Case No. 74751, appellant appeals from those judgments. In Case No. 74752, appellees cross-appeal from the judgment entered on the jury verdict which awarded them no damages on their counterclaim.
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At the outset, we note that the parties were in agreement at trial that the construction of the lease would be in accordance with and governed by the laws of the State of New York. “However, the record shows that the law of [New York] was not proved. Under such circumstances, it will be presumed that the law of [Georgia] obtains, and we will apply the law of this State. . . . [Cits.]”
Crisp v. McGill,
Case No. 74751
1. Appellant enumerates as error the trial court’s failure to grant a directed verdict as to its main claim against appellees for breach of the lease agreement. It is undisputed that appellees signed the lease agreement which named appellant as the lessor of the equipment, that the equipment specified in the lease was provided to appellees, and that, contrary to the terms of the lease agreement, appellees stopped making payments to appellant. Therefore, the issue presented for resolution is whether appellees produced sufficient evidence to create a jury question as to the existence of any viable defense to their obligation to appellant under the lease agreement. If they did, the trial court did not err in denying appellant’s motion for a directed verdict. If appellees did not produce such evidence, the trial court erred in failing to grant a directed verdict in favor of appellant.
Appellees first contend that Lemley was an agent of appellant and that, as her principal, appellant is bound by any representations made by her. Appellees further assert that, insofar as they were fraudulently induced into entering the lease agreement by the misrepresentations of Lemley that “nothing would change” thereby, they have the right to rescind the lease agreement and are not bound by its terms. It would appear that Lemley was acting as an agent for appellant in negotiating the underlying lease transaction. See generally
Potomac Leasing Co. v. Thrasher,
Appellees further urge that the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) would apply to the underlying transaction and provide them with certain remedies or defenses as against appellant. The contention is that the lease of the computer equipment was the equivalent of a sale and that the transaction is thus within the ambit of OCGA § 11-2-101 et seq. However, it is clear that the lease is not equivalent to a sale by appellant and a purchase by appellees of the computer equipment. The lease provided for 60 monthly payments of $711.22. Title to the equipment was at all times to remain in appellant. The lease contained no provision which required or even permitted appellees to purchase the equipment at the end of the lease. Instead, the agreement provided that the equipment was to be returned to appellant at the end of lease. “Nowhere therein can it be construed that the parties contemplated a sale, an option to purchase, or creation of a security interest. [Cits.] Thus, [OCGA § 11-2-101 et seq.] does not apply and the parties’ conduct is governed by the terms of the lease. . . .”
McGuire v. Assoc. Capital Svcs. Corp.,
Appellees also contend that their lease of the equipment from appellant should not be considered as an entirely separate transaction, but as a continuation of the initial sales transaction between themselves and Shell. Thus, they urge that the two separate contracts should be construed together so as to evince a single sales transaction governed by the UCC. However, by signing the subsequent lease agreement with appellant, appellees, in effect, agreed to the rescission of their original agreement to buy the equipment from Shell and Shell, in apparent reliance thereon, then sold the equipment to appellant. Appellant never assented to the terms of the original rescinded sales contract between appellees and Shell. A contract is an agreement between two parties to do or not do some specified thing. OCGA § 13-1-1. Appellant cannot be bound by the terms of a contract to which it was never a party. It follows that the sales contract and the
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lease agreement are separate and complete contracts. “[N]o construction is required or even permissible when the language employed by the parties in their contract is plain, unambiguous, and capable of only one reasonable interpretation.”
R. S. Helms, Inc. v. GST Dev. Co.,
Appellees urge that, notwithstanding their default, appellant’s failure to mitigate damages provides them with a defense to liability. Insofar as this case concerns a lease rather than a sale, the parties’ conduct is governed by the terms of the lease which specifically provide that appellant was not required to sell or release the equipment for the benefit of appellees. See
Capital Assoc. v. Zabel,
Appellees further urge that there was a failure of consideration in that the computer equipment did not function properly. However, there was no evidence presented at trial to show that appellant had ever made a warranty as to the repair of the equipment. The lease signed by appellees provided that they, at their “own cost and expense, shall keep all Equipment in good repair, condition and working order and shall furnish all parts, and servicing required thereof . . . In the event that any item of Equipment shall become . . . damaged beyond repair for any reason . . . [appellees] shall promptly pay to [appellant] the installments of rent then remaining unpaid hereunder for such item. ...” The contemporaneous indemnification agreement which appellees signed also provided that: “[A] 11 of the equipment described in the above Agreement(s) has been delivered to and received by the undersigned; that all installation or other work necessary prior to the use thereof has been completed; that said equipment has been examined and/or tested and is in good operating order and condition and is in all respects satisfactory to the undersigned and as represented, and that said equipment has been accepted by the undersigned and complies with all terms of the above Agreements. . . . In the future, in the event that said equipment fails to perform as expected or represented we will continue to honor the above Agreements) by continuing to make our monthly payments in the normal course of business and we will look solely to the seller or manufacturer for the performance of all covenants and warranties. In addition, we indemnify [appellant] and hold [it] harmless from any nonperformance of the aforementioned equipment. We acknowledge that [appellant] is neither the manufacturer, distributor or seller of the equipment and has no control, knowledge or familiarity with the condition, capacity, functioning or other characteristics of the equip
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ment.” Thus, appellant agreed
only
to provide the computer equipment to appellees. In return, appellees agreed to make repairs to the equipment and to make monthly payments to appellant under the lease, which payments were lower than those which would have been made to Shell under the original purchase money sales agreement. Under the evidence, failure of consideration may have been a proper defense as against Shell, the original vendor, but not as against appellant, the subsequent lessor. See
Petroziello v. U. S. Leasing Corp.,
A motion for directed verdict is to be granted when “there is no genuine issue of material fact to be resolved by the trior of the facts, and that the movant is entitled to judgment on the law applicable to the established facts. [Cits.]”
Standard Accident Ins. Co. v. Ingalls Iron Works Co.,
2. Appellant enumerates as error the trial court’s failure to enter a directed verdict in its favor as to appellees’ counterclaim.
In their counterclaim, appellees had sought to recover for appellant’s failure to repair the equipment and for appellant’s breach of express and implied warranties. OCGA § 44-12-63 provides that a bailor, such as appellant, is obligated to keep the bailed item in suitable order and repair for the purposes of the bailment and to warrant that it is free from any secret fault rendering it unfit for the purpose for which it is hired. However, “parties are free to contract and may by express agreement enlarge, abridge, qualify, or supersede obligations that otherwise would arise from the bailment by implication of law — so long as the contract does not violate statutory law or contravene public policy — and, so long as such restrictions are expressed in clear and unambiguous language. [Cits.]”
Hall v. Skate Escape, Ltd.,
Case No. 74752
3. Appellees cross-appeal from the judgment entered on the jury’s verdict as to their counterclaim. As we have held in Division 2, the trial court did err as to appellees’ counterclaim but that error was in failing to direct a verdict in favor of appellant. Thus, appellees’ cross-appeal is moot.
Judgments reversed in Case No. 74751. Appeal dismissed in Case No. 74752.
