23 Ga. App. 598 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1919
Willard Bag and Manufacturing Company sued Neely and Wilcox, doing business as South Atlantic Fertilizer Company, alleging that the defendants, on June 8, 1914, _entered into a written contract with the plaintiff for the purchase of 15,000 fertilizer bags of specified size' and weight, .at the price of $89 per thousand, “printing usual, delivery Jan./May next,” and that among other things the contract provided as follows: “It is understood and agreed that, unless otherwise specified, shipments will be made in approximately equal quantities during the months named.” It was alleged that under this provision, it not being otherwise specified in the contract, it was the right of the plant tiff to ship the bags in lots of 3,000 during each of the months of January, February, March, April, and May, 1915; and.that by. the ■terms “printing usual” it was meant that the printing upon the bags should be of the usual type and character, -but the defendants were to notify the plaintiff of the exact words and figures they desired to be printed upon the bags in the usual type and style. It was further alleged: In December, 1914, and January, 1915, the plaintiff duly notified.the defendants that it was ready to begin shipment of their order, and requested specifications as to the printing desired, and shipping instructions, so that the shipment of bags might begin. The defendants, however, failed and refused to give such specifications and shipping instructions, and the plaintiff thereupon, on January 29, 1915, telegraphed the defendants as follows: “Your failure to give specifications and shipping instructions on your contract for bags forces us to dispose of the raw material covering same in New York open market for' your account unless you direct immediate sale we will sell gradually. on favorable market for your account.” Thereupon the defendants notified the plaintiffs that they would cancel the order, and the plaintiff might sell- the bags for its own' account; such notification being contained in a letter to plaintiff from defendants, dated January 29,1915, which, after acknowledging receipt of the above telegram, concludes as follows: “In reply beg to say that under your contract we expected to give you
The contract, a copy of which was attached to the petition, was as follows: “Wilmington, N. C., June 8, 1914. Sold by Willard Bag and Manufacturing Company, Wilmington, N. C., to South Atlantic Fertilizer Company, Augusta, Georgia, the following: Number of Bags 15000; size 40 x 54; weight of cloth 10y2 oz.; printing usual; delivery Jan./May next; freight paid; price $89.00 per m; terms net cash. Sellers not responsible for delays or losses occasioned by fires, strikes, wars, breakage of machinery, or any cause not sellers’ fault. Any disagreements arising under this contract to be settled by arbitration in Wilmington, N. C. It -is understood and agreed that, unless otherwise specified, shipments will be made in approximately equal quantities during the months named. Accepted: South Atlantic Fertilizer Co., by S. H. Wilcox. Accepted: Willard Bag and Manufacturing Co., by E. Payson Willard, Secretary and Treasurer.”
.The defendants demurreá upon the following grounds: (1) Because the petition does'not set forth clearly and distinctly a cause of action. (2) Because it appears from the petition that the plaintiff breached the contract by selling the bags on March 4, 1915, prior to the end of the period within which they were to be delivered. (3) . Because it appears from the petition and from the attached copy of the contract that even if' the bags were to be delivered at the rate of 3;000 per month, the months of delivery stated in the contract were January, February, March, April, and May, 1915, and the plaintiff sold all the bags on March 4, 1915, and up to that date only two months of the period of delivery had expired, and the plaintiff by its own act rendered itself unable to make deliveries in March, April, and May, and therefore in
The plaintiff demurred to a part of paragraph 11 of the plea and answer, in which paragraph the defendants say: “For want of sufficient information, defendants are unable to admit or deny the allegations of paragraph 11 of plaintiff’s petition, but further answering said paragraph these defendants say that plaintiff had no right, under said contract, to sell said bags on the 4th of March, 1915, as stated in said paragraph, for the reason that the time of delivery had not expired, and the action of plaintiff in selling said bags at said time and three months before the period of delivery under the contract had expired was a breach of the entire contract on the part of plaintiff, and rendered plaintiff unable to fill the contract, and by said action on the part of plaintiff these defendants were fully released and relieved from all liability and from any damages which plaintiff may have suffered by reason of selling said bags or failing to deliver or tender the same. In addition thereto, these defendants say that plaintiff’s action in selling said bags three months before the full term of delivery had expired certainly relieved defendants from any damages for the portion of the bags which were to have been delivered according to plaintiff’s contention, during the months of March, April and May.” The demurrer was to “all that portion, following the first clause, which reads, ‘For want of sufficient information defendants are unable to admit or deny the allegations of paragraph 11 of plaintiff’s petition/ upon the ground that the allegations of said paragraph, following said quoted language, set forth no defense against plaintiff’s cause of action.” The court sustained this demurrer and struck this portion of the paragraph, and to this the defendants except.
The Civil Code (1910), § 4131, provides, among other remedies, where a purchaser refuses to take and pay for goods bought, that the seller “may sell the property, acting for this purpose as agent for the vendee, and recover the'difference between the contract price and the price on resale.” Did the defendants, in view of their contract with the plaintiff, so comport themselves as to render
The defendants say that despite such notice and alleged breach, the plaintiff might have sued, on January 29, for damages, by making a case which entitled it to damages and setting up sufficient facts to show what damages it had sustained up to that timei To sustain this position, the defendants cite American Manufac
The trial judge did not err in overruling the general demurrer to the petition, nor in thereafter sustaining the demurrer to that' portion of paragraph 11 of the answer which was attacked by the demurrer.
Judgment affirmed.