Byrd v. Campbell Printing-Press & Manufacturing Co.

20 S.E. 253, 94 Ga. 41, 1894 Ga. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 18, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 S.E. 253 (Byrd v. Campbell Printing-Press & Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byrd v. Campbell Printing-Press & Manufacturing Co., 20 S.E. 253, 94 Ga. 41, 1894 Ga. LEXIS 7 (Ga. 1894).

Opinion

Lumpkin, Justice.

The Campbell Printing-Press and Manufacturing ■Company sold and delivered to Charles P. Byrd a printing-press, the latter giving his promissory notes for the purchase price of the same. An action was brought by the Campbell Company upon one of these notes, which, notwithstanding the defences set up and attempted to be set up by the defendant, resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff. That case is reported in 90 Ga. 542. Afterwards the Campbell Company brought a second action against Byrd upon another of the notes above mentioned. To this action the defendant filed a special plea, to which the plaintiff' demurred. Pending argument on the demurrer, the defendant offered an amendment to this plea, which the court refused to allow, and then passed an order sustaining the •demurrer and striking the defendant’s special plea. [43]*43There was a verdict for the plaintiff for the full amount of the note, and the defendant brings the case to thisoourt for review, assigning as error the refusal of the court to allow the amendment offered to his special plea, and the striking of that plea on demurrer. The questions dealt with in the present case were not passed upon or decided in the former case between these parties.

In order to set forth clearly the questions involved in the controversy now presented for adjudication, we will state at some length the substance of the special plea and of the amendment which the defendant desired to make to' the same. Although, in pursuing this course, there may be, to a considerable extent, a repetition of the facts contained in the statement and opinion reported in 90 Ga., supra, this seems, nevertheless, the better method of dealing with this somewhat complicated case.

As to the facts connected with the sale of the press to Byrd and the negotiations leading up thereto, the defendant’s special plea furnishes the following history: In June, 1889, Byrd entered into a written contract with the Campbell Company touching the purchase by him of a printing press, by the terms of which contract he was to have three months trial of the press, with the right to reject the same if it failed to come up to certain ■express warranties as to workmanship, suitability, etc., etc. After a trial of the press, it was found, for a number of reasons, to be entirely unsatisfactory; and accordingly, Byrd, within the time stipulated in the contract, ■exercised his option to reject the press, and notified the resident agent of the Campbell Company to take the press out of his office. The Campbell Company recognized the existence of the defects in the press pointed out by Byrd, and the trade was declared off.

Subsequently, the company wrote Byrd that it was “making some radical changes which would make the [44]*44bed of said press as accessible in front of the cylinder as it is on any back-delivery two-revolution press,” and asked to be permitted to make these changes on the press then in Byrd’s office. Under orders from his company to try every means possible to induce Byrd to keep the press, the agent called upon Byrd and prevailed upon him to allow the press to remain in his office, free of charge, pending negotiations for a trade upon the basis of remedying all defects, which the agent assured Byrd could be done by making certain alterations and improvements, and exhibited a letter from the company to that effect. Some time elapsing, and no steps having been made by the company to perfect the press as proposed, Byrd again requested the agent to remove the same, stating he had recently purchased another of a different kind, and had no need of an additional press. The agent, however, in accordance with instructions from his principal, “ persisted in trying to make a trade, and insisted that Byrd should make him a proposition to buy said press, upon the express condition that such alterations and improvements would be made on it as would remedy all the defects on account of which it had been rejected, and would bring it up to the standard fixed in the original contract.” Byrd thereupon told the agent he would not buy the press at any price in the condition in which it then was; but after much importunity, proposed to the agent to buy it upon certain terms, upon the express condition that all defects would be remedied as aforesaid. At the request of the agent to reduce this offer to writing, Byrd wrote the following letter, which he read over to the agent, and then delivered the same to him to be forwarded to the Campbell Company:

“Atlanta, Ga., Dec. 14th, 1889.
“ Campbell P. P. & Mfg. Co., New York.
“ Gentlemen : In reference to the Oscillator press, I have only to urge the objections with which you are al[45]*45ready familiar. For long runs -it is a good press, but for the ordinary run of book and job work it is altogether too unhandy. That I am honest in this position is evidenced by the fact that I took the Pony press in its stead. The tradé for the Pony press has been consummated ; the press is satisfactory, and I have no desire to make any change so far as it is concerned. With the Whitlock, the two-revolution Campbell and the Pony, I can do all the work at my command, and I do not need any other press. It was with the understanding that the Oscillator was rejected that the Pony was put in, as I had no intention of keeping the Oscillator when the Pony was ordered. In this assertion your Mr. Fiske and Mr. Seitzinger will bear me out. I am very much crowded, and have no room for the number of machines now in my office.
“Now, with the above facts before you, I make you the following proposition, which is the very best I can do, and which shall be final: I will give you my notes for $2,000.00, payable one third in 12 months, one third in 24 months, and one third in 36 mouths, without interest, dated January 1st, 1890. I make the time long because I have about as much to pay in the meantime as I care to ; and I make it without interest because I cannot afford to pay interest on a comparatively idle press. Of course, I understand that there is an object in having an extra press, but I consider I am paying well for such an object when I pay $2,000.00 for it.
“ I am careful to give my notes in such a way as to be absolutely certain of meeting them. I might give you notes for a shorter time, and disappoint you and mortify myself by being unable to pay them, but I do not propose to do this; so far, my record is clear of such transactions, and I propose to so conduct my affairs as to maintain this record.
“ If you see fit to accept the proposition, you may forward your papers for closing the trade.
“Awaiting your reply, I remain, very truly,
(Signed) Chas. P. Byrd.”

As to the circumstances connected with the writing of this letter, Byrd in his plea explains that it was written at night, after closing time, when both he and the [46]*46company’s agent were anxious to go home; and while it was the mutual intention of both to incorporate in the letter Byrd’s true offer, as above set forth; yet, by the inadvertence, oversight and mistake of both of them, the letter failed to contain any mention of the express stipulation that said offer was made upon the condition that the defects in the press should be remedied as proposed.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E. 253, 94 Ga. 41, 1894 Ga. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrd-v-campbell-printing-press-manufacturing-co-ga-1894.