Ely & Walker v. DUX-MIXTURE HARDWARE CO., INC.

582 F. Supp. 285, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17649
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedDecember 16, 1982
DocketC81-1936A
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 582 F. Supp. 285 (Ely & Walker v. DUX-MIXTURE HARDWARE CO., INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ely & Walker v. DUX-MIXTURE HARDWARE CO., INC., 582 F. Supp. 285, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17649 (N.D. Ga. 1982).

Opinion

*287 ORDER

RICHARD C. FREEMAN, District Judge.

Plaintiff filed this diversity action seeking damages from the defendant in the amount of $21,911.68, plus interest from May 5, 1981, which the plaintiff claims is the balance due on account for sales of merchandise to the defendant. The court, having received evidence in this matter at a trial held on July 14, 1982, and at a supplemental hearing held on September 30,1982, makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

I. FINDINGS OF FACT

Plaintiff Ely & Walker is a division of the First National Company, a Tennessee Corporation whose headquarters is in Nashville, Tennessee. Orders for Ely & Walker’s merchandise are solicited by sales representatives, at least four of whom reside and operate in the state of Georgia. These representatives procure orders for customers by completing printed forms, which provide that

[t]his order becomes a contract either, when signed and delivered by Buyer to Seller and accepted in writing by Seller or at Sellers [sic] option, when Buyer accepts delivery of all or any part of the merchandise ordered hereunder.

The authority of Ely & Walker’s sales representatives is limited to solicitation and procurement of orders. Their employment contracts provide that they have no authority to enter into contracts on behalf of Ely & Walker. Completed order forms are sent to Ely & Walker’s offices in Memphis, Tennessee. Orders that are neither paid for in advance nor shipped C.O.D. are held in the Memphis office pending approval by Ely & Walker’s credit department. The order forms also state that “[t]he delivery of goods to a common carrier or licensed trucker shall constitute delivery to buyer and all risk of loss or damage in transit shall be borne by buyer.” All of Ely & Walker’s shipments to Georgia buyers are made from its Memphis warehouse.

Ely & Walker’s sales representatives annually produce sales totalling approximately $1,000,000 to buyers in Georgia. The activities of these representatives are the only business operations of Ely & Walker in Georgia. The company maintains no offices, warehouses, shipping terminals, telephone listings, books and records, or other employees within the state.

Defendant Dux-Mixture Hardware and Supply Co., Inc. (Dux-Mixture), is a Georgia corporation owned by four members of the Schulman family. David and Vita Schulman, husband and wife, each own forty percent of the corporation’s stock. Howard and Alan Schulman, their sons, each own ten percent. David Schulman, co-founder of Dux-Mixture over thirty years ago and both a director and the president of the corporation since its incorporation twenty-five years ago, has long exercised primary control over Dux-Mixture’s business operations. At present he shares the direction of daily operations with Howard Schulman, who serves informally as business manager and formally as both a director and a vice-president of the corporation. Alan Schulman has at times also been active in Dux-Mixture’s affairs. Although Vita Schulman contributed her separate property to the corporation when the family bought out the interests of David Schulman’s former partner at the time of incorporation, since that time she has taken no active part in the operation of the business.

From the time of Dux-Mixture’s incorporation, the family has held no formal meetings or taken any votes regarding any matter, and all major business decisions have been made informally, either by David Schulman personally or only after obtaining his consent. Howard Schulman testified that his father has always done as he pleased with the business. Although David, Howard, and Alan all three routinely exercise the authority to place orders with Dux-Mixture’s existing suppliers, David Schulman’s approval is required for any single purchase of over $1500 worth of merchandise.

*288 Alan Schulman serves as director, secretary, and treasurer of Dux-Mixture. His participation in the daily affairs of the business, however, appears to have varied with the extent of his business interests elsewhere. During the time that this litigation concerns, Alan Schulman spent only about ten percent of his working hours engaged in Dux-Mixture’s affairs. He devoted the rest of his time to the operations of Seriously Companies, Ltd. (Seriously), a Georgia corporation that operated several retail clothing stores. Alan Schulman is vice-president, secretary, treasurer, a director, and a shareholder of Seriously. Charles Economy, who is unrelated to the Schulman family, is a shareholder, the president, and the only other director of Seriously. David Schulman also owns some of Seriously’s shares, but has had no other role in its affairs.

In the spring of 1979, Seriously sought to establish an open line of credit with Ely & Walker for the purchase of western apparel. After reviewing Seriously’s financial statements, Ely & Walker declined to extend the requested credit. In telephone conversations with Ely & Walker’s regional credit manager, Alan Schulman explained his family’s history of business success in Atlanta, specifically the operations of Duxmixture, in an attempt to persuade Ely & Walker that Seriously was a good credit risk. As a result of these conversations, Ely & Walker decided that it would allow shipment of goods on credit so long as all purchases were billed directly to Dux-Mixture. Although neither Ely & Walker’s regional credit manager nor Alan Schulman recalls any mention of the words “guaranty” or “surety” during those conversations, Alan Schulman assumed that Ely & Walker had extended credit to Seriously and would look to Dux-Mixture only as guarantor or surety.

Alan Schulman drafted a letter that contained the language he thought Ely & Walker required as a prerequisite to shipment of goods to Seriously:

This letter is authorize [sic] your company to bill us for any purchases made by Seriously Companies Limited.
We appreciate your working with us in setting up this account this way.
Please feel free to contact us for any further information.

Alan Schulman explained the purpose and contents of the letter to his father, who signed the letter without reading it. Alan then sent the letter to Ely & Walker, who began shipping Seriously’s orders for goods and arranged its records to indicate that all purchases would be billed to DuxMixture and shipped to Seriously. Over the course of several years, although all orders were taken by sales representatives directly from Seriously, Ely & Walker mailed all invoices to Dux-Mixture. When envelopes containing the invoices, addressed to Dux-Mixture and bearing the return address of Ely & Walker, arrived at the offices of Dux-Mixture, Howard Schulman, acting on instructions from Alan or David Schulman and unaware of the exact nature of their contents, forwarded the unopened envelopes to Alan Schulman. Throughout the course of Ely & Walker’s dealings with Dux-Mixture and Seriously, all payments on the account were made by Seriously.

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582 F. Supp. 285, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ely-walker-v-dux-mixture-hardware-co-inc-gand-1982.