Charles v. Tyler
This text of 104 S.E. 93 (Charles v. Tyler) 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.
Opinions
1. Where a purchaser seeks rescission of a contract for the purchase and sale of machinery, together with a recovery of the price paid therefor, and his claim to a rescission and recovery is based upon the express terms of the sale agreement, and where the agreement provides that the purchaser’s right to rescind and recover back the purchase-money is conditioned upon his own compliance with certain obligations resting upon him, to the effect that after one day’s trial of the machinery he must immediately notify the seller in writing of any defects existing therein, and must immediately return the machinery to the seller, if the efforts of the seller to make it operate properly should then fail, before the purchaser will ordinarily be entitled to claim his contractual right to a rescission the burden is upon him. to show that he. on his part had complied with the obligations thus resting upon him, and which, under the contract, were made prerequisite to the exercise of such right. McCormick Harvesting Machine Co. v. Allison, 116 Ga. 445 (42 S. E. 778); Malsby v. Young, 104 Ga. 205 (30 S. E. 854).
2. In such a suit by a purchaser, the burden of proof being upon him to set out and prove a compliance on his own part with the conditions precedent essential to his right to a rescission, a denial by the defendant of any breach of his own obligations under the contract, a denial of liability under the contract, and a denial of the facts set up by the plaintiff as amounting to a waiver by the defendant equivalent to a performance by the plaintiff of his contractual obligations prerequisite to his right of rescission, sufficiently raise the issue as to the performance by the plaintiff of the prerequisite duties and obligations devolving upon him by the contract.
3. Although reasonable stipulations contained in a contract of purchase and sale which provide conditions precedent to the right of the purchaser to set up his contractual right to a rescission will ordinarily be enforced, still it is within the power of the seller, either expressly or by implication, to waive his rights in this respect; and [627]*627under the pleadings and the evidence in the instant ease it was a question for the jury to decide whether the conduct and course of dealings between the parties amounted to such a waiver on the defendant’s part. McDaniel v. Mallary Bros. Machinery Co., 6 Ga. App. 848 (66 S. E. 146). It was therefore error’for the judge by his charge to limit the plaintiff’s recovery to a strict compliance on his part with the conditions precedent contained in the contract.
[627]*6274. The terms of a tender govern the effect of its acceptance or rejection. The rejection of a conditional tender does not dispense with a return or tender of the property by the purchaser, such as may have been provided for by the express terms of the contract. Irrespective of any question as to the implied waiver by the seller as to the time of the tender, his evidence in respect to the character of the tender, as finally made by the purchaser prior to the bringing of the suit, raised an issue as to whether or not the purchaser refused to part with the machinery except upon the payment of damages, and this evidence of the defendant as to the nature of the tender authorized the charge of the court upon that subject.
5. The charge of the court in respect to the defendant’s plea of accord and satisfaction was not adjusted to the defendant’s own evidence, and might have been harmful to the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
104 S.E. 93, 25 Ga. App. 626, 1920 Ga. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-v-tyler-gactapp-1920.