137 Ga. 608 | Ga. | 1912
The purchaser of certain peaches brought suit against the seller, under the contract set out in the statement of facts, to recover the balance of the $1,000 represented by the certi- ■ fied check, after deducting the purchase-price of the peaches received. The court directed a verdict for the defendant, and the plaintiff excepted.
There was some evidence, not in entire accord, as to whether the agent of the seller actually tendered or offered other peaches to the agent of the purchaser, or whether he only said he could get up eight car-loads in addition to the first two, by getting his neighbors to join with him; and also as to whether such peaches would have been of the quality called for by the contract. But aside from this, when the seller cashed the cheek, and, after delivering a second car-load of peaches to the defendant at Borne, took it away by diverting it and selling it elsewhere because a draft for the first carload had not been paid, the buyer was not compelled to receive further car-loads. The purchaser was entitled to have restored to it the $1,000, after deducting the amount due for the car-load of peaches which it received and failed to pay for. And the purchaser having become bankrupt pending the case, the trustee in bankruptcy, who was made a party, could recover.
Judgment reversed.