127 Ga. 735 | Ga. | 1907
As it takes two parties to make a contract, when the order was signed by Rounsaville & Brother there was no contract between the parties, as the writing was not signed by the plaintiff. The order amounted simply to an offer by defendants to purchase froni plaintiff a designated amount of described goods, at a stipulated price. It may, for the purposes of this case, be granted that the making out of the invoice, in accordance with the order, and mailing the same to defendants amounted to a written acceptance of the order by the plaintiff, and so bound it to execute the contract by the delivery of the goods; still the contract would be executory on its part until delivery, actual or constructive, of The goods to the defendants. And until delivery, defendants could break the contract by refusing to accept and pay for the goods; and plaintiff could not then deliver the goods to a common carrier for transportation to defendants, and thereby constitute such carrier the agent of defendants to receive them. We think the telegram from defendants to plaintiff, to hold shipment of buttons and see the letter of defendants, when followed by the letter written on the same date, wherein defendants, after stating that they were astounded at receiving an invoice for 250 gross of buttons, and denying that they bought them, declared, that they would not buy $750 worth (the amount contained in the invoice), that there was a mistake somewhere, as they only wanted 12 gross, amounting to $36, and that was the amount which they wanted plaintiff to ship, was equivalent to notice to plaintiff that defendants would not accept and pay for 250 gross, but only 12 gross. Certainly plaintiff must have understood from this telegram and letter that defendants repudiated the order for 250 gross of buttons, and did not intend to be bound by its terms. And that it did so understand is evident from the letter which it sent to defendants, wherein it threatened to place the goods in public storage, unless defendants at once wired it to ship the goods. With this information, plaintiff had no implied authority from defendants to deliver the goods for them to a common carrier; consequently delivery thereafter to such carrier was not delivery to defendants.
Counsel for plaintiff in error contend “that, if for any reason the delivery was not completed, plaintiff could still recover in this, action, under the common-law rule set out in the last remedy of the seller given by section 3551 of the Code, to wit: ‘he may store or retain the property for the vendee and sue him for the entire price.’ ” A complete reply to this contention is that, after the breach of the contract by defendants, the plaintiff did .not. pursue this remedy. It neither stored nor retained the property for the defendants, and then brought an action for the breach of' the contract; but it did exaqtly what was done by the plaintiff in the Oklahoma Vinegar Company case; that is, delivered the goods, consigned to the defendants, to a common carrier, for transportation’ and delivery by the carrier to the defendants, and subsequently sought to recover upon an open account for goods sold and delivered. ■ So the following language from the opinion in that case, delivered by Mr. Justice Little, will, without the slightest alteration except to cure a mere verbal inaccuracy, apply as
The contention of counsel which we have just been considering is based upon the following facts. The goods, which were shipped by plaintiff to defendants, from Cleveland, Ohio, to Rome, Ga., •on April 9, 1903, after reaching the latter point were there stored by the final carrier in its freight warehouse, where they remained until November 13, 1903, when, in order to prevent them from being sold by the railroad company as unclaimed freight, they were, under a written agreement between the parties to this case, without prejudice to the cause, taken out and stored, free of charge, by defendants, to abide the final judgment in the case. Counsel for plaintiff in error, while frankly admitting that “the .status of the defendants at the time the consent agreement was
Judgment reversed on main bill, and affirmed on cross-bill of exceptions.