130 Ga. 113 | Ga. | 1908
There have been two trials in this case. When the first was reviewed by this court (126 Ga. 279, 55 S. E. 50), a
The only decision of this court which has dealt with the questions of the time, method, and place of resale is that rendered in Camp v. Hamlin, 55 Ga. 259, to which we have already alluded. If that decision were now; in all respects, the law of this State, our conclusion that the. resale need not be at the contract place for delivery would be erroneous; and the defendant in the court below, might have gone further than it did, and insisted that the resale should have been at auction. It was there held: “The purchaser of goods at a stipulated price, who refuses to accept and pay for them according to his written contract, is liable to the seller in damages for th*e difference between such price and the market value of the goods at the time and place fixed by the contract for delivery; and .the seller, after.a tender of the goods and a refusal by the purchaser to receive them, may, if they be perishable, expensive to keep, or likely to go out of season, sell them within a0 reasonable time, at auction, in the market of delivery, and the ‘amount they bring will be evidence in ascertaining the damages.” That decision was, however, as we have said, rendered before the adoption of the statutory provisions contained in the Civil Code, §3551, which were not found in any Code of this State prior to the adoption of the Code of 1895. It seems clear to us that that section was not intended to follow the law as laid down in Camp v. Hamlin. The section in full is as follows: “If a purchaser refuses to take and pay for goods bought, the seller may retain them and recover the difference between the contract price and the market price at the time and place for delivery; or, he may sell the property, acting for this purpose as agent of the vendee, and recover the difference between the contract price and
Judgment reversed.