24 Ga. App. 504 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1919
1. The original petition showed a plaintiff and a defendant, and set out sufficient allegations to indicate and specify some particular fact or transaction as a cause of action. It was defective, if at all, only in that it omitted to sufficiently allege facts essential to raise the duty or obligation involved in the cause of action which the plaintiff evidently originally intended to declare upon, and was therefore amendable by -supplying the omitted facts. The trial court erred, therefore, in holding that there was not enough in the original petition to amend by, and in refusing to allow the proffered amendment. Civil
2. While it is true that in order for a contract of purchase to become . effective when entered into by correspondence through the mails, the offer to sell must be accepted by the buyer unequivocally, unconditionally, and without variance of any sort, and while it is true that if the acceptance by the' buyer contains a change or modification of the offer as made by the seller, or a counter proposition, the latter is privileged to- repudiate the proposed contract in its entirety, still, if the seller elects to assent to and acquiesce in the change, modification, or counter-proposition as thus made, the contract as so altered becomes binding in its entirety upon each of the parties thereto, for in that way their minds have "met and assented to the same thing in the same sense. Civil Code (1910), § 4231; Phinizy v. Bush, 129 Ga. 479, 490 (59 S. E. 259); Gray v. Lynn, 139 Ga. 294 (77 S. E. 156); Dillin-Morris Co. v. Gillespie, 15 Ga. App. 210 (82 S. E. 812); Good Roads Machinery Co. v. Neal, 21 Ga. App. 160 (2) (93 S. E. 1018); Matthews v. American Textile Co., 23 Ga. App. 675 (99 S. E. 308); Saluda Wholesale & Warehouse Co. v. Rooney, 24 Ga. App. 11 (99 S. E. 542); 9 Cyc. 269 (3).
3. When it'-is possible to do so without contravening any rule of law, the courts will construe a contract as binding on both the parties, where, from the language of the contract, the conduct of the parties, and all the attendant circumstances^ it appears that the intention of the * parties was that both should be'bound by the sale, and substantial justice requires that the contract be given effect. Good Roads Machinery Co. v. Neal, supra, and cit.
4. The special demurrer attacking paragraph 5 of the petition which alleges, “Petitioner shows that it was understood between himself and the defendant that the hay contracted for was to be shipped to plaintiff at Atlanta, Ga,.” upon the ground that it is an attempt to vary the terms of the contract alleged in the petition, is without merit, since the correspondence between the parties, set out in the petition as amended, shows that such a shipment of the hay was contemplated by them.
5. The special ground of the demurrer, that the allegations of the 6th . paragraph of the petition “are not germain to the plaintiff’s action and ,are irrelevant,” is likewise without merit, _ since it is therein alleged, among other things, that the plaintiff had demanded of the defendant that he comply with his contract, and that the defendant had failed and refused to do so, and these allegations were germain and material to the plaintiff’s cause. If it was intended by this special ground-'of*demurrer to attack any particular allegations of this paragraph, the demurrer is too vague and indefinite to be considered by the reviewing court, since the office of a special demurrer is to point out clearly and specifically the alleged imperfection in the pleading attacked by it. It “must lay its finger, as it were, upon the very point.” Alford v. Davis, 21 Ga. App. 820 (95 S. E. 313).
6. The petition as amended set out a cause of action, and the trial court erred’ fin sustaining the demurrer thereto.
Judgment reversed.