185 Ga. 466 | Ga. | 1938
Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation sued in ejectment the grantor under a deed to secure debt, and a third person in possession of land, basing its claim of title on the security deed and a deed executed to it by virtue of a power of sale in the security deed. The third person pleaded that he had made a contract to purchase the property from the plaintiff, through its salesman and agent, for $2,250, $450 in cash, and the balance $90 a year for 20 years, the terms of this contract to be later effected by a warranty deed from the plaintiff and a deed to secure debt from the defendant; that on making the cash payment this defendant took possession, “breaking the lands, sowing oats, . . purchased material for the repair and improvement of the buildings, . . and is now growing and cultivating crops on said premises upon the faith of said sale,” all “at an expense of approximately $500 besides the cash payment on the purchase-money.” The judge, by agreement trying the case without a jury, found for the defendant and decreed specific performance. The undisputed evidence showed that legal title was in the plaintiff; that on November 2, 1936, the defendant submitted to the plaintiff a signed written offer to purchase the land on the terms alleged in the plea; and that a bank check to cover the $450 cash deposit was delivered to the plaintiff, and was paid on November 7, 1936. No fraud in the procurement or execution of the written offer was shown. It contained these provisions: “In the event a contract of purchase and sale of the premises is not consummated between offerer and the bank, the cash portion of the purchase-price paid to or deposited with the bank shall be returned to offerer. Collection by the bank of any cheek, draft, or other form of remittance deposited with the bank shall not be construed as an acceptance of this offer to purchase. . . The acceptance by the bank of this offer to purchase . . must be in writing; and to be binding on the bank or the corporation, the title to the premises must be approved by the bank’s legal department. The bank’s acceptance of this offer to purchase, . . to be valid, must be approved by the executive committee of the bank, or by one member of the executive com
1. '“The consent of the parties being essential to a contract, unless each has assented to all the terms the contract is incomplete; until assented to, each party may withdraw his bid or proposition.” Code, § 20-108. While “an offer may contemplate acceptance by the doing of an act; and if the act be performed while the offer is
2. The defendant as the alleged purchaser having required by the terms of his written offer that in order to effect a contract of purchase and sale his offer should be accepted in writing by certain named officials of the plaintiff corporation, no binding contract was consummated by mere oral statements to the offerer by other alleged agents of the vendor corporation that the contract had been” accepted and was in force, where the alleged agents did not assume to speak by virtue of any action having been taken on the part of the officials, but on the contrary made their alleged declarations before any sort of action was taken by such officials. Since' it was not made to appear that the corporation was ever made aware of such statements having been made before its written rejection was communicated to the offerer, no principle of ratification or estoppel could be given effect.
3. Where the terms of the offer itself provided that “collection . . of any check . . or other form of remittance deposited with the bank shall not be construed as an acceptance Of this offer
4. Under the preceding rulings, the judge erred in finding for the alleged purchaser and decreeing specific performance of the alleged contract of purchase.
Judgment reversed.