Plaintiff H & S Liquor, Inc. brought suit against defendants in the State Court of Cobb County. It appears that defendants were indebted to plaintiff pursuant to three promissory notes and a fourth obligation which defendants assumed. The indebtedness arose follow *817 ing the purchase by defendants of a liquor store which was operated by plaintiff. The purchase was made pursuant to a sales contract which contained a merger clause reading: “This contract of sale is the complete agreement between the parties ...”
In its complaint, plaintiff alleged that defendants breached the sales contract and failed to make payments on the various obligations. Defendants answered the complaint, denying the material allegations thereof. Additionally, defendants counterclaimed, alleging they were fraudulently induced to enter the contract.
The case proceeded to trial and upon the close of all of the evidence, plaintiff moved for a directed verdict. The trial court granted plaintiff’s motion and judgment was entered accordingly. Defendants appeal. Held:
1. Plaintiff began operating the liquor store in the fall of 1982. Plaintiff sold the store pursuant to a memorandum of sale on February 8, 1983. During the period of time in which plaintiff operated the package store it failed to acquire a valid liquor license. (A license was obtained in the name of an individual who had no interest in the business.) Relying upon this fact, defendants contend the sale of the package store was illegal and contrary to public policy. We disagree. The contract for the sale of the package store was for a legal purpose and it could have been performed in a lawful manner. The mere fact that the liquor licensing laws may have been violated was incidental to the performance of the contract. It cannot be said, therefore, that the sales contract was illegal and void.
Shannondoah, Inc, v. Smith,
2. Defendants contend plaintiff was not the proper party to bring this action. In support of this contention, defendants point out that plaintiff was incorporated after plaintiff’s president, Harris K. Leach, purchased the business in September 1982; and that even though plaintiff operated the business it was never formally transferred by Leach to plaintiff. This contention is without merit. The function of the real party in interest provision, OCGA § 9-11-17, “ ‘is simply to protect the [defendants] against a subsequent action by the party actually entitled to recover, and to insure generally that the judgment will have its proper effect as res judicata.’ 3A Moore’s Fed. Prac. 17-9, ¶ 17.01 (8).”
Rigdon v. Walker Sales & Svc.,
3. Defendants contend the trial court erred in granting plaintiff’s motion for a directed verdict because the evidence of fraud was conflicting. Viewing the evidence most favorably toward defendants, we think questions of fact remain as to whether defendants were induced to enter into the sales contract on account of plaintiff’s allegedly fraudulent representations. See
Mercer v. Woodard,
4. Ordinarily, defendants’ fraud claim would fail in view of the merger clause set forth in the contract.
McGuire v. Winkler,
5. “The question as to whether the defrauded party has waived the fraud is one mainly of intent.”
Tuttle v. Stovall,
Judgment reversed.
