Cable Co. v. Hancock
This text of 58 S.E. 319 (Cable Co. v. Hancock) 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.
Opinion
(After stating the foregoing facts.) The usual and implicit power of a traveling salesman is merely to take orders, offers to buy, and not to make completed contracts of sale. Such was the fact in this case. Even in the absence of a condition in the written instrument itself requiring approval or acceptance by the principal, the law would have implied such a condition in the transaction. The writing (although in form, save only for the clause requiring approval, a binding contract) needed something to make it complete, viz., the acceptance of its terms by the opposite party; for, until the opposite party agreed to sell on the terms in the writing mentioned, the promisor’s agreement to buy _ and to pay was without consideration. Until the owners of the piano made a valid promise to sell, the consideration contemplated for the promise to buy and to pay was unilateral, and amounted only to a mere offer. This principle is now so well established by a large volume of authority as not to require specific citations.
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
58 S.E. 319, 2 Ga. App. 73, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cable-co-v-hancock-gactapp-1907.