10 Ga. App. 660 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
The Hesse Envelope & Lithographing Company sued D. A. Loyless in the city court of Atlanta, alleging in substance as follows: On or about December 12, 1908, Loyless ordered of petitioner 50,000 envelopes, at an agreed price of $2.65 per thousand, to be shipped to the Byrd Printing Company, Atlanta, Georgia, f. o. b. St. Louis, Missouri. The envelopes thus ordered had to be made up .and stamped with certain printed matter especially for the- defendant, and, being thus printed and stamped, they were useless to petitioner or to any one else, except tire defendant. On or about January 6, 1909, as per instructions
The defendant by a plea admits that he ordered the quantity of - envelopes alleged, and alleges that he refused to pay for them for. the following reasons: That he was induced to order the envelopes by an agent or salesman of the plaintiff, one A. A. Allen, to whom he stated that he desired them for the purpose of sending out a trade paper or magazine known as “The Southern Carbonator and Bottler,” which is a bulky publication averaging from 95 to 120 pages to the issue, and printed on thick, heavy paper; that never having used envelopes in the mailing of his magazine, and being wholly ignorant of the paper business, he did not know what particular grade or style of envelopes to order, and so stated to the said Allen at the time, but informed him that he wanted an envelope made of paper sufficiently strong and tough to permit of carrying his magazine through the mails without tearing, and that no other sort of envelope would answer his purposes; that Allen then exhibited to defendant a sample envelope and represented to defendant that envelopes made according to this sample would be in every way sufficient for his needs, and expressly warranted that the envelopes would be made according to this sample and would safely carry the defendant’s magazine through the mail,, a copy of which magazine was exhibited to Allen for the purpose of showing him its weight and size; that relying upon this warranty and upon the express consideration that the envelopes to be furnished would be sufficiently strong and tough to carry his magazines through the mails, defendant thereupon ordered the 50,000 envelopes; that early in the month of January, 1909, defendant received from the plaintiff an advance shipment of 10,000 envelopes upon the order, and upon the occasion of the issuance of the next number of his magazine he used some 2,500 of the envelopes in sending out
1. On the trial certain testimony offered by the defendant, to prove the allegations of his plea as to the misrepresentations which induced him to give the order for the envelopes, was excluded by the court, on the ground that, the order being in writing, this evidence was inadmissible because it varied the terms of a written contract. The defendant offered to prove the representa-. tions made to him at the time that the order was given by the
'2. When this case was called for argument in this court, a motion was made to dismiss the writ of error, because the brief of evidence filed with the motion for a new trial was not that which was agreed upon by counsel, in that it did not have attached to it a copy of the written order for the envelopes and certain letters claimed to have been written by the defendant to the plaintiff confirmatory of this order. The motion is without merit. There was no dispute as to the contents of the order or of the letters alluded to. They were referred to by both plaintiff and defendant in the oral evidence, and they are set out in the brief of counsel for the defendant in error, and their correctness is admitted by the brief filed by the plaintiff in error. The decision of this court in granting a new trial does not depend upon a consideration of the written contract or of the letters of the defendant confirmatory of that contract, but the reversal is ordered because of the error in excluding testimony offered by the defendant to prove the allegations of his plea relating to the false and fraudulent representations of the plaintiffs salesman which induced him to give the order for the envelopes. Judgment reversed.