115 Ga. 408 | Ga. | 1902
Felder & Rountree, as transferees of an account in favor of the Georgia Handle Company, brought suit against the McCaw Manufacturing Company. The defendant filed an answer, denying liability on the account sued'on, and containing, in substance, the following allegations: The defendant required a large number of wooden boxes to ship its products in. The Georgia Handle Company applied to the defendant to manufacture for it all the boxes that it might need for a period beginning May 1,1900, and ending May 1, 1901, and after some correspondence a contract was entered into between the two companies for such boxes as defendant might require during such period, and at the prices therein stated. In pursuance of the contract the defendant sent to the Handle Company various orders which were accepted by it, and one of such orders was filled. At the time this order was filled the Handle Company had orders from the defendant for two car-loads of boxes, which orders it failed to fill. The price of boxes having advanced in the meantime, the Handle Company refused to further carry out its contract; and after this company was placed in the hands of a receiver, the receiver failed and refused to carry out the contract, which refusal compelled the defendant to purchase the boxes thereafter to be used at prices in excess of those agreed on in the contract between the two companies. By reason of this breach of contract on the part of the Georgia Handle Company, and by reason of the fact that defendant was compelled to purchase boxes in the market at advanced prices, the defendant has been damaged in a sum far in excess of the plaintiffs’ demand, and the amount of this damage should be allowed as a set-off against such demand. Attached
The ruling made in the present case finds direct support in the decision of the Supreme Court of Minnesota in the case of Bailey v. Austrian, 19 Minn. 535. It was there held that where one person promised to supply another with all the “ Lake Superior pig iron wanted by them'in their business from Sept.-2 until Dec. 31st next ensuing, at specified prices,” and the person to whom the offer was made promised to purchase of the promisor all of such pig iron he might want at the prices named, this did not constitute any valid contract between the parties, being void for want of mutuality. This case was followed in Torbox v. Gotzian, 20 Minn. 139. See also Chicago R. Co. v. Jones, 58 Ill. App. 431; Chicago R. Co. v. Dane, 43 N. Y. 240. This court iñ Morrow v. Southern Express Co., 101 Ga. 810, held the tender and acceptance of a proposition somewhat similar in its nature to the one under consideration in the present case to be wanting in mutuality, though that decision turned to some extent on the fact that the proposal was indefinite as to the time within which it was to remain of force. We are therefore of opinion that the agreement relied on by the defendant in its plea could not operate as a binding and valid contract as to the entire number of boxes which the defendant was compelled to purchase for the period specified in the proposal made by the Georgia Handle Company.
It results from what has. been said above that there was no error in striking so much of the plea as set up that the written proposal from the Handle Company to the defendant constituted a valid contract to furnish all the boxes the defendant might choose to order during a period of one year ; that the court erred in striking that part of the plea which related to the failure of the Handle Company to furnish the two car-loads of boxes which had been ordered by the defendant; and that it also erred in disallowing the amendment to the defendant’s plea.
Judgment reversed.