Dixie Belle Mills, Inc. v. Specialty MacHine Co.

120 S.E.2d 771, 217 Ga. 104, 1961 Ga. LEXIS 387
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 8, 1961
Docket21236
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 120 S.E.2d 771 (Dixie Belle Mills, Inc. v. Specialty MacHine 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
Dixie Belle Mills, Inc. v. Specialty MacHine Co., 120 S.E.2d 771, 217 Ga. 104, 1961 Ga. LEXIS 387 (Ga. 1961).

Opinions

Head, Presiding Justice.

1. Jurisdiction of the present case is in the Supreme Court, and not the Court of Appeals, for the reasons stated in the opinion of Judge Frankum for that court. See Dixie Belle Mills v. Specialty Machine Co., 103 Ga. App. 478 (120 SE2d 54).

In its amendment seeking equitable relief, which was stricken by the court on oral motion in the nature of a general demurrer, the defendant prayed that the written contract be “reformed to comply with the oral understanding between the parties as to completion of the entire work,” and that, if it should be found that the contract did not result from mutual mistake of fact, it be adjudged that the contract resulted from a mistake of fact material to the contract on the part of the defendant and fraud on the part of the plaintiff.

The written contract or agreement between the parties, in the form of a letter signed by John D. Carter, president of the plaintiff, and approved by the defendant’s employee, Irving Funk, was not uncertain, vague, indefinite, or ambiguous. It proposed to install certain equipment in the defendant’s plant, pursuant to stipulated drawings, for a stated amount of money. “Parol contemporaneous evidence is inadmissible generally to contradict or vary the terms of a valid written instrument.” Code § 38-501. “All previous negotiations are merged in the subsequent written contract, and an additional obligation can not be grafted thereon by parol testimony.” Roberts v. Investors Savings Co., 154 Ga. 45 (5) (113 SE 398). See also Williams v. Waters, 36 Ga. 454 (3); Howard & Soule v. Stephens, 52 Ga. 448; Arnold v. Malsby, 120 Ga. 586 (48 SE 132); Charles v. Sterling Security &c. Co. 182 Ga. 480 (3) (185 SE 807); Thompson v. Riggs, 193 Ga. 632, 634 (2) (19 SE2d 299); Thompson v. Arrington, 209 Ga. 343 (2) (72 SE2d 293); Early v. Kent, 215 Ga. 49 (108 SE2d 708).

The allegations in this amendment to the effect that the defendant’s employee Funk had previously had business relations with Carter on oral understanding, and had confidence in him, are insufficient to establish any confidential relations between [106]*106the parties. Code § 37-707; Dover v. Burns, 186 Ga. 19, 26 (196 SE 785); Thomas v. Eason, 208 Ga. 822, 827 (3) (69 SE2d 729).

The defendant’s amendment alleges that the defendant’s employee Funk, relying on the oral agreement that Carter would do the complete job, signed the letter of April 24, 1956, Without making any investigation as to what was to be included therein with reference to the blueprints, because discussion of the prints had been between Carter and technical engineers. It was further alleged that those who discussed the prints and drawings on behalf of the defendant with Carter were an engineer of New York who prepared the prints and drawings, and Frank Cooper and Lawrence Gaines, employees of the defendant. From the allegations of the defendant’s amendment, it appears that any lack of knowledge on the part of Funk as to what drawings should be included in the written contract was due solely to his own negligence. It is not shown that the two named employees of the defendant who participated in the negotiations with the plaintiff’s president, Carter, were not available, could not have been consulted, and that Funk in executing the contract on behalf of the defendant could not have been fully informed as to- the nature and extent of the work to be done by the exercise of any degree of diligence. “Ignorance of a fact, due to negligence, shall be equivalent to knowledge, in fixing the rights of parties.” Code § 37-116. “If a party, by reasonable diligence, could have had knowledge of the truth, equity shall not relieve; . . .” Code § 37-211. “It is well-settled law in this State that equity will grant no relief to one who- by the exercise of ordinary diligence could have prevented the injury complained of.” Prince v. Friedman, 202 Ga. 136, 140 (42 SE2d 434). See also Bostwick v. Duncan, Johnston & Co., 60 Ga. 383; Keith v. Brewster, 114 Ga. 176 (39 SE 850); Brooks v. Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co., 193 Ga. 522 (18 SE2d 860); Adler v. Leopold Adler Co., 205 Ga. 818, 826 (55 SE2d 139).

Under the foregoing rules, the amendment of the defendant did not state a cause of action for any of the equitable relief prayed, and it was not error to strike it.

2. In ground 1 of the amended motion for new trial the [107]*107defendant excepted to the following extract from the charge of the court: “I charge you that where the amount of a debt is unliquidated or disputed, and the debtor pays to the creditor an amount less than the amount of the debt claimed by the creditor, upon the distinct understanding that the same was to be received in full discharge of the debt, if the creditor did not, within a reasonable time after the money was received, repudiate the offer and return the money remitted to him, all liability on the debt would be discharged. And in this connection and in this case, I charge you that it is a question of fact for you to determine, you members of the jury, whether or not in fact and in truth there was a distinct understanding between the parties to this case that any check was paid by the defendant and received and retained by the plaintiff in full discharge of all debts owed by the defendant to the plaintiff.”

The defendant averred: (a) The charge was erroneous and not sound as an abstract principle of law. (b) It was confusing to the jury in that it instructed them that there must have been a distinct understanding that the check was in full payment, and deprived the defendant of its defense of accord and satisfaction, (c) It was misleading in that it instructed the jury that they must find a distinct understanding before they could find an accord and satisfaction, and the court at no time corrected this charge, (d) It was such harmful error as to require the grant of a new trial.

In Rivers v. Cole Corporation, 209 Ga. 406 (73 SE2d 196), this court in a full-bench decision adopted the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Duckworth (now Chief Justice) in Sylvania Electric Products v. Electrical Wholesalers, 198 Ga. 870, 876 (33 SE2d 5). It is now the law of this State that if a debtor remits to the creditor a sum of money, less than the amount actually due, upon the condition, either express or implied, that it is in satisfaction of the creditor’s claim, and the latter accepts and retains the money, an accord and satisfaction results, and this is true whether the demand be liquidated or unliquidated, disputed or undisputed.

The court’s language that, “I charge you that where the amount of a debt is unliquidated or disputed, . . .” was, in effect, [108]*108applying the applicable rule, since the plaintiff’s claim was both unliquidated and disputed. See Hamilton & Co. v. Stewart, 105 Ga. 300 (31 SE 184). The words “unliquidated or disputed” were applicable in the present case under both the pleadings and the evidence, and it was not, therefore, a limitation on the rule that an accord and satisfaction may operate as to a liquidated or undisputed debt, neither of the latter being an issue in the cause.

It appears that the trial judge may have based his charge as to a “distinct understanding” on language of this court in Jenkins v. National Mutual B. & L. Ass’n., 111 Ga.

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120 S.E.2d 771, 217 Ga. 104, 1961 Ga. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixie-belle-mills-inc-v-specialty-machine-co-ga-1961.