96 Ga. 120 | Ga. | 1895
The plaintiff' brought suit against the defendant upon a written order for an 'iron safe, a copy of which order is as follows, to wit:
“Town of Sunnyside, County of Spalding, State of Georgia. The Cincinnati Safe & Lock Co. 6/10, 1891. Please ship, to arrive Sept. 1, 1891, one of your No. 20* Pire & Burglar Proof Safes, as per your illustrated catalogues. Safe is to measure inside 23-|- inches high, 17J inches wide, and 14 inches deep; outsidé door to have combination lock, patent inside bolt work and movable cap; for which I agree to pay to your order the sum of two hundred dollars, as follows: cash $25.00, balance in 4 notes of one month between times. Safe delivered on board cars at Cincinnati, Ohio. Name painted on safe,. George W. Wood. Remember Burglar in top, detachable dial. It is agreed that all deferred payments shall be settled for by note drawing eight per cent, interest-after maturity ten per cent. Notes to be signed and forwarded to said company within five days after arrival*121 of safe at our nearest railroad station. In default of settlement, the whole amount becomes- due and payable at once in cash. It is further agreed, that the title of said safe shall not pass until said safe is paid for in full, and shall remain your property until that time; in default of payment, you or your agent may take possession of and remove said safe without legal process. It is distinctly understood and agreed that this order shall not be countermanded by the maker or makers of same, and also that I represent, myself to be good and legally responsible for goods above ordered. Nothing but shipment or delivery constitute an acceptance of this order by the Cincinnati Safe & Lock Co. This contract covers all agreements made between the parties hereto. $200.00. [Signed] Geo. W. Wood.”
The defendant filed the plea of the general issue, and in addition thereto, a special plea of which the following is a copy:
“And for further plea defendant says, that the contract sued on was procured from the defendant by fraud, and should not be enforced by the court; neither should this defendant be held liable on the same. For defendant showeth, that the- agent of the plaintiffs, who procured said contract, came to defendant’s store on the 10th day of June, 1891, and tried to sell defendant a safe. Defendant declined to buy a safe. Said agent remained in the store of defendant for a long while, endeavoring to get defendant’s order for a safe, but defendant repeatedly and persistently refused to buy a safe. Finally said agent said to defendant T am going to take your order for a safe, and if I don’t hear from you before September 1st, we will ship it. Now, any time before that date, if you fiud you don’t .want it, write us, and we will not ship it.’ To this, defendant replied, ‘All right.’ In a few minutes said agent went back to defendant’s desk and began writing. Said agent asked defendant what time the train went up. Defendant told him, and said agent asked defendant for a ticket. Defendant is the railroad agent. Defendant sold said agent a ticket, and said agent continued to write, defendant returning to the front of the store. In a few minutes the train arrived, when said agent called defendant and*122 said, ‘Please sign this,’ holding to defendant a paper. Defendant said, ‘What is it? Let me read it.’ Said agent replied, ‘It is only an agreement that if you take the safe, it is to be ours until paid for. You haven’t time to read it. I will send you a duplicate to-morrow. I have told you all that is in it. Sign it; I have to catch that train.’ Relying upon the representations of what-the said agent of said plaintiffs said and represented, defendant signed said paper. Defendant further says that said agent did not send him a copy of said paper as agreed. Defendant, some time after said date, had, long before the first day of September, wrote plaintiffs not to ship the safe until they heard from him under the agreement made with said agent. Defendant says he had no opportunity to read said paper; that said agent would not allow him to read the same; that said agent by his conduct and manner acted and practiced a fraud on the defendant in procuring his signature to said contract, and the same is not therefore binding on him; that in pursuance to said agreement made with said agent, he wrote and notified said plaintiffs that he did not want said safe, and so notified them before they shipped the same; and said safe had never been accepted or received by the defendant, and he should not be held to pay for the same. But for the fraud practiced by said agent, this defendant would not have signed said contract, and said contract does not represent the agreement between said agent and this defendant. And with this defendant puts himself on his country.”
Upon motion of the plaintiff’s counsel, the court ordered that “ so much of the defendant’s plea as seeks to set up a parol that defendant had a right to and did countermand the order for the safe sued for, be stricken, upon the ground that the same is an effort to change and add to a written contract verbal stipulations different and in conflict with the written contract, the same being, in effect, to strike all pleas except the general issue.” Having stricken the defendant’s special plea, the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant moved for a new trial, (1) upon the general
Whatever may be the rights of third persons, it is a rule of law of universal acceptance, that as between the original parties thereto, fraud in its procurement voids a contract, and this upon the theory that, the consent of the parties being necessary to the binding foi’ce of a contract, if one, apparently consenting by the execution of a written contract, can show that he did not in fact consent to its terms as therein expressed, but that his apparent consent was induced by false and fraudulent practices, by means of which he was overreached by the other party, and, Avithout negligence upon his own part, really deceived as to the terms of the contract, he would be entitled to be relieved from its apparent obligations. A negligent omission to inform himself as to the truth of the representations when he had an opportunity so to do, or might, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, haArn done, would amount to a waiver upon his part, and he would thereafter be estopped to impeach the contract upon grounds against Avhich the exercise of reasonable care would, in the first instance, have protected him. Fraud is exceedingly subtle in its nature. There are infinite means by which it can be accomplished. In its conception human ingenuity is limitless in its capabilities. It is therefore impossible to state any general rule by which particular frauds are to be identified. Classification is almost, if not quite, impossible. It may be perpetrated by willful misrepi'esentations made by one 'person to another, with a design to mislead and which