Atlantic Fertilizer Co. v. Southern States Phosphate & Fertilizer Co.

187 S.E. 237, 53 Ga. App. 798, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 401
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 15, 1936
Docket25167
StatusPublished

This text of 187 S.E. 237 (Atlantic Fertilizer Co. v. Southern States Phosphate & Fertilizer Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Fertilizer Co. v. Southern States Phosphate & Fertilizer Co., 187 S.E. 237, 53 Ga. App. 798, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 401 (Ga. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Stephens, J.

Atlantic Fertilizer Company sued Southern States Phosphate and Fertilizer Company for alleged breach of a contract dated July 14, 1931, for the sale by the defendant to the plaintiff of 4000 tons per annum for three years, total 12,000 tons, of bulk superphosphate, to be shipped during January, February, March, each year, for major portion in about equal monthly quantities, as ordered by the buyer, seller agreeing to supply the buyer’s summer and fall requirements, as far as possible under the contract, to be settled for cash against documents as delivered, payable in Savannah funds. (Further provisions omitted.) It was also alleged that the defendant shipped to the plaintiff 1664 tons of acid phosphate in the spring of 1932, and was paid therefor; that no call was made by the plaintiff on the defendant for shipment of acid phosphate either in the fall of 1932 or the spring [799]*799of 1933, because the plaintiff was able to secure acid phosphate elsewhere at a less cost than the contract price; and the open market price at said times being, higher than the contract price, the plaintiff thus conferred a benefit on the defendant in not then calling for any shipment; that under the custom of trade prevailing among fertilizer dealers and manufacturers in the City of Savannah, available acid phosphate contracted for future delivery over a period of more than one year, when the amount allotted for any one year is not called for in that year, can be called for in the succeeding year and thus be cumulative of 'and added to the amount contracted to be delivered in the succeeding year; that in pursuance of said custom, and with the acquiescence of the defendant in the plaintiff’s omitting to call for deliveries in either the fall of 1932 or the spring of 1933, the plaintiff called on the defendant in October, 1933, to begin deliveries under the contract and to continue to make deliveries in the fall of 1933, and the winter and spring of 1934, until the full balance of 10,336 tons had been delivered to the plaintiff; that the defendant on November 10, 1933, declined to ship to the plaintiff any acid phosphate whatever; and that on November 10, 1933, the open market price of acid phosphate was 60 cents per ton, and the contract price was 50 cents per ton, and therefore the plaintiff sustained a loss of 10 cents per unit, run of pile, on an average of 18.50 per cent, or $1.85 per ton for 10,336 tons, or a total loss through the .breach of the contract by the defendant of $19,121.60, with interest from November 10, 1933.

The defendant filed a general demurrer and an answer to the petition. The plaintiff amended the petition in answer to the demurrer, by adopting certain allegations of the defendant’s answer and alleging that in addition to the contract of July 14, 1931, the plaintiff and the defendant entered into two other fertilizer contracts which are set out in the defendant’s answer, one dated February 7, 1931, and the other dated December 18, 1931, which contracts are incorporated herein, not as a basis for the plaintiff’s cause of action under the contract of July 14, 1931, but as illustrating and defining the rights of both parties under the contract of July 14, 1931; that while under the contract of February 7 the defendant was obligated to deliver to the plaintiff during February, March, and April, 1931, the full 2000 tons of super-[800]*800phosphate, only 1235 tons were delivered, and were delivered and accepted by consent of both parties under the custom of trade existing in Savannah as set out in the petition, and the remaining 765 tons were delivered during January, February, March, and April, 1932, by consent of both parties and under the custom of trade aforesaid, at a price of 55 cents per unit of available phosphoric acid, and thus the contract of February 7 was terminated, whereas the price under the contract of July 14 was 50 cents per unit; that the 765 tons sued on under the contract of February 7 became material which was used by the defendant in mixing fertilizer for the plaintiff under the contract of December 18, and the 1664 tons delivered under the contract of July 14 was credited by the petitioner on tonnage covered by the contract of July 14, in accordance with the language of the contract of December 18, saying "tonnage of superphosphate under outstanding contracts will be diminished by the amount used and shipped under this contract,” and thus a balance of 10,336 tons remained to be delivered to the plaintiff under the contract of July 13; that when the contract of December 18 was under consideration the defendant submitted for the plaintiff’s acceptance a contract in which appeared the words, "either buyer or seller shall have the right to suspend or cancel any unshipped goods under this contract, in the event of any occurrences which would make continuance unsatisfactory,” but the plaintiff protested against that language on the ground that it would permit the defendant to cancel out the tonnage due under the contract of July 14, would leave the indebtedness of the plaintiff to the defendant unsatisfied, and would deprive the plaintiff of the available means which the contract of July 14 afforded for paying the defendant what the plaintiff owed, and accordingly the contract executed on December 18 was so worded as not to impair the rights of the plaintiff under the contract of July 14, all of which is shown by certain letters attached as exhibits; that when the receipt of July 13, 1932, was signed, which is quoted in the defendant’s answer, such receipt did not in any way alter or impair the plaintiff’s rights under the contract of July 14, for that in making the settlement and adjustment covered by the receipt the defendant, in order that it might be made clear that the claim of December 18 alone was settled and adjusted by the receipt, wrote upon the contract of December 18 a [801]*801cancellation thereof which was signed by both parties, but the defendant did not require any cancellation of the contract of July 14, and the defendant, reciting in said receipt that all claims of every kind held by either against the other party had been settled in full, thereby drew a distinction between the settlement of claims and the cancellation of the outstanding contract, for that at the time of the settlement of claims there were two contracts outstanding between the plaintiff and the defendant, one of which was satisfied and the other not; that the payment made by the plaintiff for 1664 tons, as recited in the plaintiff’s petition, was made partly in cash, but the exact amount of cash can not be stated, because of misplaced data, but the balance of the payment was made by the plaintiff by the transfer and assignment to the defendant of accounts and bills receivable, the full particulars being in the hands of the defendant; that in October, 1933, the plaintiff requested the defendant to ship, under the contract of July 14, 1931, 50 tons of acid phosphate to be paid for by a check on receipt of trackage receipt, weight certificate, and bill; and that the plaintiff complied with the terms of the contract as heretofore recited in the petition and in the amendment. The three letters attached as exhibits to the amendment were in substance as follows: On December 11, 1931, the defendant wrote to the plaintiff regarding the proposed agreement, and insisting on the clause giving the right to cancel previous acid phosphate contracts. On December 12, 1931, the plaintiff wrote to the defendant, declining to agree to the provision which would have the effect of cancelling “our acid contract and leaving our present indebtedness to you unpaid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 S.E. 237, 53 Ga. App. 798, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-fertilizer-co-v-southern-states-phosphate-fertilizer-co-gactapp-1936.