158 Ga. App. 682 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1981
International Systems, Inc. (ISI), entered into an agreement with the City of Buford, Georgia, as its client, effective when signed by both parties (November 11, 1977), the same to be in effect for a year from that date (November 11, 1977). ISI was to provide the client with federal funding reports and services with reference thereto and in accordance with request for same. The client agreed to pay ISI an annual fee of $15,000, $7,500 when the agreement was signed “and $7,500 on May 11,1977” (1978-?). However, both parties agreed to change the amount of consideration so that the fee was to be paid in two payments, $7,500 when the agreement was signed and $7,500 upon satisfaction of the contractual terms established which was that if the client did not receive revenues or approved grants in at least the amount of the fee paid ISI would refund to the client the difference between the fee and the revenues received. Further, in thé event the client did not receive revenues in at least the amount of the fee paid “the client will send a registered letter to ISI by the beginning of the twelfth month of the agreement requesting a refund of the difference between revenues received and the annual fee.” If “ISI does not receive such a letter, ISI will assume that no refund is due.”
The City of Buford, as plaintiff, thereafter sued International Systems, Inc., claiming that on November 11, 1977, plaintiff and defendant had entered into a written contract based on good and valuable consideration “that the defendant would procure federal grants and revenues on behalf of the plaintiff.” Having received no such revenues or approved grants it has demanded refund of $7,500 having performed all of the stipulations, conditions and agreements. The defendant having failed and refused to refund the $7,500, it sought $7,500 plus interest from the date of breach, together with reasonable attorney fees.
Defendant answered pro se through its president by letter to the court denying the claim and thereafter answered certain requests for
Defendant’s motion for summary judgment came on for hearing,
In spite of the pleadings and the evidence by the city manager by affidavit contending that the defendant was to procure federal grants and revenues on behalf of the plaintiff it is quite apparent that the agreement by and between the parties was the contract of November 11,1977, to provide the plaintiff with certain assistance in obtaining federal funding. Consequently, the other admissions and the contract are controlling here.
Looking to the contract dated November 11,1977, as amended by the reduction in the consideration to $7,500 on December 6,1977, the plaintiff was required by registered letter to request a refund of the difference between revenues received and the annual fee “by the beginning of the twelfth month of the agreement.” Plaintiff contends that the date of October 23,1978 (date of refund request) was prior to the beginning of the twelfth month of the amendment dated December 6,1977. As the request for refund was sent on October 23, 1978, and time was of the essence of the contract, plaintiff failed to satisfy the condition precedent of the contract. The trial court did not err in awarding summary judgment as the existing contract was not superseded and discharged as they did not enter into a valid and inconsistent agreement completely covering the subject matter embraced by the original contract as was true in the case cited in the court’s order. See Hennessy v. Woodruff, 210 Ga. 742, 744 (1) (2) (82 SE2d 859). On the contrary, the December 6, 1977, amendment incorporated the language “upon satisfaction of contractual terms established in Article 4.” It only changed the obligations on the part of ISI as to producing concrete results before final payment.
The contract here was as to the same matter and no new parties were introduced by novation “so as to change the person to whom the obligation is due.” See Code Ann. § 20-115 with reference to a novation. The original consideration had been $15,000 with the sum of $7,500 already paid. The parties then agreed to reduce the consideration to the amount of $7,500 already paid, with the additional sum to be due . only upon satisfaction of the other terms of the original agreement. Consequently, there was no new consideration involved even though the amount could be reduced by the subsequent modification. See Fair v. General Finance Corp., 147
A novation has four essential requisites: (1) a previous valid obligation; (2) agreement of all parties to the new contract; (3) extinguishment of the old contract; (4) validity of the new one. Williams v. Rowe Banking Co., 205 Ga. 770, 771 (55 SE2d 123). The agreement here being between the same parties, concerning the same subject matter, and upon the same consideration ($7,500) as was the previous agreement, the modification which in effect reduced the amount from $15,000 to $7,500 already paid, was not a novation of the first one. White v. Williams, 87 Ga. App. 496 (1) (74 SE2d 363).
Judgment affirmed.