Brown Shoe Co. v. Moore

184 S.E. 923, 53 Ga. App. 159, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 17, 1936
Docket24675
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 184 S.E. 923 (Brown Shoe Co. v. Moore) 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
Brown Shoe Co. v. Moore, 184 S.E. 923, 53 Ga. App. 159, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 29 (Ga. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinions

Stephens, J.

Brown Shoe Company sued L. L. Moore as guarantor of an account for shoes sold to Wilson Shoe Company. The contract sued on was in the form of a letter addressed to Brown Shoe Company and signed by the defendant saying: “In compliance with your request for a guarantee to establish with you credit for the Wilson Shoe Company, Moultrie, Georgia, and in consideration of one dollar to us in hand paid by you, the receipt and sufficiency of which is hereby acknowledged, (I we) hereby unconditionally jointly and severally guarantee payment, in accordance with the terms of the sale of whatever the said Wilson Shoe Company shall at any time be owing you, at the above or any other location or locations whether heretofore or hereafter contracted; the guarantee is to take effect without notice of its acceptance (which is hereby waived) and it is to be an open guarantee and to [160]*160continue in full force notwithstanding any renewals or extensions granted by you without obtaining any previous consent hereto and until expressly revoked by notice to that effect by registered mail (return receipt requested) from each of us to you, and until receipt of such notice is acknowledged by you. Notification of said party’s defaults is hereby waived and it is agreed that this guarantee'does not limit the amount of credit extended the said party, but (my our) liability hereunder is not to exceed the sum of Two Thousand and No/100 Dollars ($2000) at any one time. It is mutually understood that this guarantee is to bind the party who signs it, whether the same be signed by any other party (or parties) or not. No shipments are to be made except on orders confirmed by the undersigned. Dated this 5th day of April, 1932.” It was alleged in the petition that the contract was modified by a later letter from defendant to plaintiff, dated May 5, 1932, as follows: “I have copy of your letter of May 2, 1932, to Wilson Shoe Co., advising that you do not have my approval on the special orders of April 29th, for two pairs of D-57, two pairs of D-74 and one pair of G-221. Mr. Wilson and I did not understand that these small special orders were to have my approval. In order that his trade can be satisfactorily served, and in order that the detail of getting off these special orders it seems that it will be necessary for you to ship such orders as stated above without my approval. We find that there are several days at a time when there are no special orders, and then some times there are two or three in the same day. We have agreed here that you ship these special orders about as indicated above without my special approval on each order, but I wish to advise you that in those cases, the special guarantee holds good for these special orders, without my writing an approval on the special orders or without a special letter from me. This letter is to modify our previous understanding so that special orders can be shipped by you as indicated above without my special guarantee in each case and yet they will be ^protected by my guarantee to you. Now as to the special orders made in letter of April 29th, by the Shoe Co. please wish to say that the Wilson Shoe Co. still wants them for these customers and I will thank you to ship them by parcel post, by air mail if possible, as these customers are in a hurry. My guarantee is extended to cover this special order.” Attached to the petition was a long account beginning in Decern[161]*161ber, 1932, ending in July, 1933, and totaling $1303.70. It was also alleged that Wilson Shoe Company was insolvent and that. Moore was a stockholder of this corporation. The defendant in the plea admitted the two latter allegations, and that the defendant had signed the guaranty and the letter of modification, but denied that he was indebted to the plaintiff as alleged.

On the trial the defendant’s counsel moved to dismiss the suit on the ground that no cause of action was set out. Whereupon the plaintiff amended the petition by alleging in substance that certain of the sales orders which had been introduced in evidence had the personal approval of the defendant and that all those which did not have such approval were “special orders.” The plaintiff introduced in evidence a large number of sales orders, a number of which bore the defendant’s “O. K.,” and also introduced a letter dated February 22, 1933, from the defendant to H. L. Miller, who was shown to be the credit man of Brown Shoe Company in which the defendant outlined plans for reorganizing the business of Wilson Shoe Company in which he made these statements: “There is due your company around $1600 or $1700 I understand. . . I am personally responsible for the amount due the bank and due Brown Shoe Company, and therefore, up to now, so far as the Brown Shoe Company account is concerned, the mortgage has made little or no difference. . . We are giving Mr. Baxter a check for $500 on your account and he and Mr. Sanders, the new manager, are to send you an order for fill-in on shoes required for the sales in the immediate future and especially the Buster Brown sale to be advertised at the Moultrie Theatre on March 9th. Our plan is that Mr. Sanders, the new manager, will make the Brown plan reports each week and send a cheek each week for as much or more than he buys each week and that the business will be put on its own footing, nothing to be taken from it to pay on the bank debt or other accounts except from profits after the Brown Shoe Company account is in satisfactory condition. I think the effect of what we are doing is to put the store strictly on the Brown plan now full fledged.” The plaintiff also introduced evidence in proof of the entire account against Wilson Shoe Company. A witness who had had a long experience in the shoe trade testified that “‘special orders’ are termed an order that was a rush order, calling for special pairs and some special styles for quick shipment. Special [162]*162sizes or styles. There might be two pairs or maybe more pairs. . . They might have a special order for two or three pairs or there might be several dozen that would be a rush order, calling for special sizes and styles and we would term it 'special order.’” At the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff the defendant moved for a nonsuit which was granted.

Counsel for the defendant in error contend that the nonsuit was properly granted because the plaintiff failed to prove the case as alleged and because the evidence showed that the Brown Shoe Company had broken the contract of guaranty by shipping goods to Wilson Shoe Company on orders not confirmed by the defendant. The construction of the original contract of guaranty is not free from difficulty. It provides "that this guarantee does not limit the amount of credit extended said party, but my liability hereunder is not to exceed the sum of $2000 at any one time.” It further provides that "no shipments are to be made except on orders confirmed by the undersigned.” If this last provision is to be applied to all transactions with Wilson Shoe Company it obviously limits the amount of credit extended to the company. If otherwise it would be construed to mean that no shipments are to be covered by the guarantee except those made on orders confirmed by the defendant. The defendant limits his liability at any one time to $2000, and further limits it to sales made on orders confirmed by him. Tinder this construction the provision allowing the extension of credit to the Wilson Shoe Company is not destroyed by the subsequent provision as to shipments being made only on orders confirmed by the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.E. 923, 53 Ga. App. 159, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-shoe-co-v-moore-gactapp-1936.