Brooks Peanut Company, Inc. v. Great Southern Peanut, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 11, 2013
DocketA13A0633
StatusPublished

This text of Brooks Peanut Company, Inc. v. Great Southern Peanut, LLC (Brooks Peanut Company, Inc. v. Great Southern Peanut, LLC) 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
Brooks Peanut Company, Inc. v. Great Southern Peanut, LLC, (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION PHIPPS, C. J., ELLINGTON, P. J., and BRANCH, J.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

July 11, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A0633. BROOKS PEANUT COMPANY, INC. v. GREAT JE-032 SOUTHERN PEANUT, LLC.

ELLINGTON, Presiding Judge.

Brooks Peanut Company, Inc. (“Brooks Peanut”) appeals from an order of the

Superior Court of Lee County granting summary judgment to Great Southern Peanut

Company, LLC (“GSP”) on Brooks Peanut’s claims for breach of contract,

promissory estoppel, negligent misrepresentation, fraud, and attorney fees arising out

of a commodities transaction. The superior court found that GSP’s alleged promise

to sell peanuts to Brooks Peanut was unenforceable under the Statute of Frauds,

OCGA § 11-2-201. Brooks Peanut also appeals from the order denying its motion to

compel arbitration. For the following reasons, we reverse the court’s grant of summary judgment to GSP; however, we affirm the court’s order denying Brooks

Peanut’s motion to compel arbitration.

1. Brooks Peanut contends that it produced evidence showing that a writing

sufficient to satisfy the Statute of Frauds exists; therefore the trial court erred in

concluding that GSP’s Statute of Frauds defense bars Brooks Peanut’s claims as a

matter of law. We agree.

Summary judgment is appropriate when the record shows that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. On appeal from the grant or denial of summary judgment, we conduct a de novo review, construing the evidence and all reasonable inferences most favorably to the nonmoving party.

(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Daniel Mill, LLC v. Lyons, 283 Ga. App. 604, 605

(642 SE2d 226) (2007). So viewed, the record reveals the following relevant facts.

Brooks Peanut is a peanut shelling company operating in Samson, Alabama.

GSP is a competing peanut sheller located in Lee County, Georgia. Because there is

no established peanut commodities market, peanut shellers and other businesses

handling peanut products often use brokers to buy and sell peanuts. Typically, the

broker’s fee is paid by the seller. The commodities transaction at issue in this case

2 was brokered by Mazur & Hockman, Inc. (“M & H”). Brooks Peanut and GSP have

both used M & H, as well as other brokers, to buy and sell peanut products on their

behalf.

In mid-September 2010, Barrett Brooks, president of Brooks Peanut, called

Richard Barnhill and Jay Strother, peanut brokers with M & H, and asked them to

find peanuts for his company to buy and to have delivered to his shelling facility.

Brooks requested that Brooks Peanut not be identified as the buyer when M & H

contacted potential sellers. According to Brooks and Strother, that is not an unusual

practice. M & H solicited offers from several peanut shellers, including GSP, and

conveyed them to Brooks. After reviewing the offers, on September 20, Brooks asked

Strother to communicate a counteroffer to GSP’s manager, Doug Wingate.

Specifically, the counteroffer was an offer to buy 3,168,000 pounds of 2010 crop

medium runner shelled peanuts for $.4675 per pound, to be delivered monthly

throughout 2011.

According to Strother, Wingate accepted the counteroffer that same day,

September 20. After Wingate accepted these terms, Strother revealed that Brooks

Peanut was the buyer. According to Strother, Wingate “sighed” upon learning that a

competitor was involved in the transaction; however, he did not reject the deal.

3 Wingate testified that, although he initially accepted the deal, he declined to

consummate it when he learned that Brooks Peanut was the buyer.

On the same day, M & H prepared and then faxed to GSP and Brooks Peanut

a written confirmation of the sale of peanuts. The confirmation stated: “We confirm

a Sale and Purchase Transaction as described below[.]” The confirmation was printed

on M & H letterhead and listed the names and addresses of the seller and the buyer,

as well as terms covering price, quantity, quality, crop year, delivery schedule, and

payment method. Spaces for the seller’s contract number and the buyer’s purchase

order number were left blank. The confirmation stated that “[t]his confirmation is

subject to the following condition[]: Seller’s contract and Buyer’s purchase order to

follow[.]” Next to the term “Quality,” the confirmation noted that the “American

Peanut Shellers Association Trading Rules” applied to the transaction. The

confirmation was signed by M & H’s Strother.

GSP and Brooks Peanut each received the faxed confirmation from M & H. It

is undisputed that GSP did not issue a contract and that Brooks Peanut did not issue

a purchase order. After Strother sent the confirmation to GSP and Brooks Peanut, he

continued communicating with the parties to finalize the logistics of the deliveries.

For example, on September 21, he told Brooks that GSP had offered to haul the

4 peanut loads. They also discussed increasing the monthly shipments, but Wingate

stated that he wanted “to stay at 6 loads a month on the [B]rooks [Peanut] contract for

right now[.]”

GSP did not raise any objection to the fax confirmation until late January 2011,

almost four months after M & H sent it. Wingate testified that he “did not see the

need” to object to the confirmation. Beginning in January 2011, GSP took the

position that, despite the confirmation, GSP and Brooks Peanut had not entered into

that particular transaction because Wingate had rejected the sale when he learned that

it involved his company’s competitor, that M & H was not authorized to confirm the

sale or to send the confirmation, and that a condition precedent had not occurred

because GSP had not issued a written contract.

The evidence adduced shows that M & H had routinely brokered thousands of

peanut sales between other peanut companies, shellers, and manufacturers using the

same form of trade confirmation at issue here. Further, it is undisputed that GSP

agreed to sell peanuts to Brooks Peanut in June 2009 and April 2010 and that such

agreements were memorialized solely by M & H sending the parties confirmations

that were substantially similar to the one at issue in this case.

5 The formal requirements of the Statute of Frauds in the context of the

Georgia’s Commercial Code appear in OCGA § 11-2-201, which corresponds to

Section 2-201 of the Uniform Commercial Code. That Code section provides, in

relevant part:

(1) Except as otherwise provided in this Code section a contract for the sale of goods for the price of $500.00 or more is not enforceable by way of action or defense unless there is some writing sufficient to indicate that a contract for sale has been made between the parties and signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought or by his authorized agent or broker. A writing is not insufficient because it omits or incorrectly states a term agreed upon but the contract is not enforceable under this paragraph beyond the quantity of goods shown in such writing.

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