Georgia Kaolin Co. v. Walker

189 S.E. 88, 54 Ga. App. 742, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 744
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 3, 1936
Docket25541
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 189 S.E. 88 (Georgia Kaolin Co. v. Walker) 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.

Bluebook
Georgia Kaolin Co. v. Walker, 189 S.E. 88, 54 Ga. App. 742, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 744 (Ga. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Stephens, J.

W. B. Walker sued Georgia Kaolin Company, alleging that on June 28, 1928, he entered into a contract with the company to operate on its premises a commissary to sell supplies, notions, and merchandise to the employees of the company; that the company and the plaintiff adopted a system under which signed orders from employees of the company for merchandise supplied by the plaintiff would be recognized by the defendant, and deductions made as to the employees; that the contract ivas determinable at the will of either party by giving thirty days written notice to the other party; that the contract gave the plaintiff the exclusive right to maintain a commissary on the defendant’s premises, and stipulated that during said term the defendant would not grant a like right to other persons; that pursuant to the agreement the plaintiff placed in the commissary building on the defendant’s grounds a stock of merchandise, and proceeded to operate a commissary business, and did so until July 15, 1934, when he was driven out of business by the wilful and malicious [743]*743conduct of the defendant through its agent and employee; that from the beginning until about June 1, 1934, the plaintiff did a lucrative business, but on or about that time the defendant wilfully and maliciously conspired to and did violate the terms of the agreement, and by wilful and malicious acts intended to injure the plaintiff finally ruined and destroyed his business, credit, and standing, which action resulted in the complete destruction of his business on July 15, 1934, on which date the defendant terminated the contract without notice to him; that, notwithstanding the contract provided that the defendant would not grant a like right to others, the defendant violated its terms by making deductions from its pay-roll, on account of its employees, for goods purchased by them from competitors of the plaintiff not located on its premises, and by so doing wilfully aided competitors .of the plaintiff with the intent to injure and damage the plaintiff and drive him from business; that on January 1, with the wilful purpose of destroying the business of the plaintiff, the defendant would make full deduction from the amount due its employees to competitors of the plaintiff, and would knowingly leave unpaid bills due the plaintiff; that when the plaintiff was finally driven from his business there remained on his books and due him by the employees of the defendant the sum of $1500, occasioned by the wilful and malicious conduct of the defendant in rendering the plaintiff unable to collect the same; that about the spring of 1933 the defendant actually went into competition with the plaintiff by selling to its employees batteries, tires, auto parts, and accessories, and its employees, at the instance and suggestion of the defendant, would go to Macon and buy goods and charge them to the defendant, and the defendant would make deductions from their pay-rolls and send remittances to competing firms, all of which was done with the design to injure and damage the plaintiff and drive him from business; that the plaintiff earned $333 a month in his business, and since he was forced out of business by the defendant, he has lost seven months profits, or a total of $3331; that by reason of being forced to close his business he lost his credit, and his standing in the commercial world was ruined, all of which was occasioned by the conduct of the defendant, all to his injury and damage in the sum of $35,000. He prayed for damages in that sum, for $1500 in bills alleged to be due him by the defendant’s employees, and [744]*744for $2331 as earnings for a period of seven months since his business was destroyed. The copy of the contract attached to the petition provided that the defendant, for the sum of $5 per month, rented to the plaintiff a certain commissary building at the plant of the defendant, the contract to be determinable at the will of either party by giving to the other party thirty days written notice; that the defendant agreed that the plaintiff might maintain in the building a store for the purpose mainly of selling groceries, supplies, and other merchandise to the defendant’s employees, and the defendant agreed to put into effect a system, under reasonable regulations, under which signed orders from the employees of the defendant for merchandise and supplies furnished by the plaintiff would be recognized by the defendant and deductions made from the pay-roll of the defendant as to said employees; and that the defendant granted to the plaintiff the exclusive right to maintain a commissary on the premises, and that during the term of the agreement it would not- grant a like right to other people.

The defendant demurred 'to the petition, generally and on eighteen special grounds which contain numerous subparagraphs. The main objections urged by the demurrer were misjoinder of causes of action, joinder of actions ex contractu with an action ex delicto, failure to set forth a proper measure of damages, that the plaintiff’s cause of action was solely for a breach of a private contract, that some allegations were indefinite and uncertain and stated mere conclusions, that as. to certain allegations no bill of particulars was set out, that certain of the damages claimed were remote and speculative, and that the plaintiff prayed for damages for breach of the contract and also damages for a tort.

The plaintiff amended the petition by alleging that by deducting the amount of the accounts of his employees with the competitors of the plaintiff, not located on its premises, the defendant breached its duty to the plaintiff by violating that part of the contract in which the defendant agreed to put into effect a system, under reasonable regulations, under which signed orders from the employees of the defendant would be recognized by the defendant, and deductions made from its pay-rolls as to its employees, and as part of said system it was agreed between the parties that the defendant would not make deductions from the pay-rolls of its [745]

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Bluebook (online)
189 S.E. 88, 54 Ga. App. 742, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-kaolin-co-v-walker-gactapp-1936.