14 Ga. App. 778 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
(After stating the foregoing facts.) It is agreed by counsel for both parties in this case that the determination thereof depends solely upon the construction of the contract of sale set forth in the above statement of facts; the vital question being whether or not, under a contract providing for delivery “f. o. b. at LaGrange, Georgia,” which contains no other limitation as to delivery, and does not by its express terms reserve to the buyer the right to designate, before any shipment shall- be loaded for transportation, the particular carrier to whom such shipment shall be entrusted, delivery could be made “f. o. b.” to any common carrier at LaGrange, Georgia. The defendants contend that the plaintiff made a breach of the contract, by refusing to ship eight cars of hulls (rejected on that account by the defendants) except “f. o. b. cars plaintiff’s .side-track on the A., B. & A. Bailroad, at LaGrange, Georgia,” whereby a trackage or switching charge of $2 per car would attach thereto if the defendants thereafter routed the shipments over the Atlanta & West Point Bailroad, which was one of the several other railroads entering LaGrange; and insisted. that the plaintiff was bound, under the contract aforesaid, to deliver the hulls, “f. o. b. cars,” to any particular carrier at LaGrange that the defendants might designate. They contended that the goods should have been placed free on board cars at a place or places in LaGrange from which there would'be no transportation
In the first place, it seems clear that the words, “f. O. b. cars at LaGrange, Georgia,” taken in their ordinary and usual signification, would include a delivery free on board cars of any common carrier 'at any point within the limits of the city of LaGrange, Georgia. The Standard Dictionary defines the preposition “at,” when used in a connection similar to this, as meaning “within the limits of; in, within.” In the case of Harris v. State, 72 Miss. 960 (18 South. 387, 33 L. r. A. 85), the court said that “the preposition ‘at/ when it precedes the name of the place and denotes situation, frequently means the same as ‘in’ or ‘within.’” In 4 Cyc. 365, it is said that “at” is “a word of somewhat indefinite meaning, whose significance is generally 'controlled by the context and attending circumstances denoting the-precise sense in which it is used. Hsed in reference to place it often means ‘in’ or ‘within;’ but its primary idea is ‘nearness’ or ‘proximity,’ and it is commonly used as the equivalent of ‘near’ or ‘about.’ ” “The word ‘at’ is somewhat indefinite; it maj'- mean ‘in’ or ‘within,’ or it may mean ‘near.’ Its primary idea is nearness, and it is less definite than in or on. At the house may be in or near the house.” Minter v. State, 104 Ga. 753 (30 S. E. 987). “The word ‘at,’ when used to denote local position, may mean ‘in,’ ‘on,’ or ‘nearby,’ according to the context.” 1 Words & Phrases, 595. Giving the word “at” the more restricted meaning, a delivery “at LaGrange, Georgia,” would Be a delivery in or within that city. It was conceded by both
It is agreed that the plaintiff stood ready, willing, and able to deliver the rejected eight cars of hulls, and kept them for the defendants, repeatedly tendering delivery at the times specified in the contract, and “f. o. b. cars” on the plaintiff’s side-track on the A.,' B. & A. Railroad in LaGrange, Georgia. It appears that the seven cars actually shipped by direction of the buyers were routed, by their direction, over the Atlanta & "West Point Railroad, and it may be that the remaining eight cars, had they been accepted by the buyers, would have been similarly routed, though this is not disclosed by the record and can not be assumed.
As said in 35 Cyc. 174, “the effect of the ff. o. b.’ depends on the connection in which it is used, and if used in connection with the words fixing the price only, it will not be construed as fixing the place of delivery.” Here it appears that “f. o. b.” was used in the contract in direct connection not only with the price per ton, but with the place of delivery, and for the purposes of this ease we will consider it as applying especially to the place of delivery. The railroad commission of Georgia is empowered, under the provisions of section 2664 of the Civil Code of 1910, “to prescribe rules with reference to spur-tracks and side-tracks, with reference to their use and construction, removal, or change,” and may “prescribe rules and penalties for the transfer of cars through yards of connecting roads.” Acting thereunder the railroad commission adopted rule 23-A, regulating charges for local intra-terminal service, and containing, among other things, the following: “2. For a car loaded on the terminal of one carrier, to be unloaded
It was within the power of the buyers, when making the contract, to place therein, provided the seller acceded thereto, a stipulation reserving to the buyers the right to designate the particular carrier at LaGrange, Georgia, to whom they might desire deliveries made when shipments were ordered out at the dates fixed by the contract, biit no such stipulation was actually included in the contract as made. Since undoubtedly, in the absence of a right reserved in the contract to designate the carrier or carriers to whom different shipments should be delivered by the seller, a delivery by the seller to any common carrier at the place where delivery was to be made, “f. O. b. cars” of the carrier, would be a compliance with the terms of the contract; and since a delivery to such a common carrier on a spur-track adjacent to the mills of the seller would place upon the buyers no greater burden than that which would be incurred by delivery at the freight depot, or on the main tracks or line of the
It is perhaps true that the buyers, in entering into the contract (having, as it 'appears, no knowledge of the location of the mills of the seller), anticipated no charge for trackage or switching, but assumed that the seller could as easily and would as readily load cars on one railroad as on another; and possibly they would not have entered into the contract had.they known the exact situation. On the other hand, the contract is clear and unambiguous, with no suspicion of fraud attached thereto, and it may be that the seller, in negotiating the sale of the cottonseed hulls to the buyers, at and for the price agreed upon, was induced to make the contract by the fact that, owing to the location of the seller’s mills on the spur-track of the A., B. & A. Bailroad, the hulls could, with comparatively small expense to the seller, be placed on board the cars.
It is not for us to limit or extend the terms of a simple.contract, and we hold that the plaintiff complied with its obligations under the contract in delivering on a spur-track of a common carrier seven cars of the fifteen it had contracted to deliver, '“f. o. b. cars at LaGrange, Georgia,” and in tendering at the times stipulated by the contract the remaining eight car-loads of hulls, “f. o. b. cars,” on the same spur-track, notwithstanding the instructions received from the bujers to- load the hulls on cars located elsewhere and on a different railroad in the same city. We- therefore hold that the judgment entered in this case was erroneous, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the amount of the loss incurred by the refusal of the defendants to accept the hulls tendered as aforesaid, and to recover the sum paid by the plaintiff as trackage on two cars, charged to the defendants and included in the suit.
Judgment reversed.