117 Ga. 541 | Ga. | 1903
Finch brought suit against Cook & Company for $150, on an open account for 100 cords of pine wood at $1.50 per cord. Thé defendants pleaded that they had made a contract with plaintiff to furnish them with 100 cords of pine wood at $1.50 per cord, the wood to be delivered on the right of way of a railroad, and to be loaded by defendants on the cars. The plea further alleged: "Without notice to defendants, and in violation of the contract, plaintiff had 79 3/4 cords of green pine wood loaded on ten cars, averaging 8 cords to the car, whereas 10 cords should have been put on each car, freight and trackage being charged by the car and not by the cord. Defendants had sold the wood to the Stratton Brick-Yard for $2.75 per cord, and, on account of the failure of plaintiff to comply with his contract, defendants lost $38.75, the .amount of profits which they would have made on their contract for the sale of the wood. The wood was bought by defendants from plaintiff for immediate use as firewood, and plaintiff well knew this fact, and that the wood actually furnished was unsuited to the use intended; the wood delivered being worth only $.75 per cord on the right of way of the railroad. The wood was conveyed on -the cars to Stratton’s Brick-Yard, and the persons in charge of the yard refused to take it, on account of its green condition. The defendants thereupon put the wood on the market and sold five cars of it for $79.50 and five cars for $94; making a total of $173.50. From this amount defendants claim the right to deduct $82.50 ex
Complaint is made that the court erred in charging the jury as follows: “ There is a duty on purchasers to discover any defect that
Applying what is said above to the facts of this case, we think the charges given by the court were correct expositions of the law, and were adjusted to the issues raised by the pleadings and the evidence. There being no express warranty that the wood sold the defendants would be dry pine, and they having accepted it without an inspection, they are precluded from pleading as a defense that the wood was in fact green pine and not dry pine. This was manifestly a patent defect which would have been disclosed by the most casual inspection, the evidence in behalf of the defendants showing that the twigs had green straw on them. The sale was completed when the wood was delivered on the cars, the plaintiff having at that time performed everything that he contracted to do. The fact that it was not convenient for the defendants to go down and examine the wood is no fault of plaintiff’s. Having bought on an implied warranty, they took the risk, when they accepted it and ordered it shipped forward, that it would prove reasonably suited to the use intended. And
Judgment affirmed, on conditions.