Gordon v. Beck & Gregg Hardware Co.

40 S.E.2d 428, 74 Ga. App. 566, 1946 Ga. App. LEXIS 588
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 7, 1946
Docket31386.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 40 S.E.2d 428 (Gordon v. Beck & Gregg Hardware Co.) 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
Gordon v. Beck & Gregg Hardware Co., 40 S.E.2d 428, 74 Ga. App. 566, 1946 Ga. App. LEXIS 588 (Ga. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinions

Parker, J.

(After the above statement of facts.) We do not think that the petition showed that no contract of sale was made because there was no unconditional acceptance of the defendant’s order; or that the petition showed that the suit was barred by the statute of frauds. These two contentions will be treated together. All of the correspondence between the parties must be considered. Briefly, it appears therefrom that the plaintiff wrote the defendant offering to sell the two kinds of gymnasiums subsequently ordered by the defendant, one at $12.75 each and the other at $13.40 each, and shortly thereafter the defendant ordered, accepted, and paid for 50 of the No. WLS gymnasiums, at $13.40 each, before placing the similar order now involved in this case. When the defendant’s last order was received, the plaintiff accepted it promptly, and in doing so notified the defendant that it was accepted “at the very same prices we have been making these sets for you per last billing, namely No. 7SW at $12.75 and No. WLS at $13.40.” The other recitals and statements in the letter of acceptance were unnecessary and immaterial explanations of what the plaintiff had to do in furnishing the goods, and they did not have the effect of making the acceptance conditional. Thereafter the defendant in a letter admitted the placing of the order, and sought to cancel it because “better values at lower prices are being offered and will be offered soon.” This letter shows that a price had been agreed upon and the defendant knew what it was. In several other *572 letters the defendant referred to the “cancellation of our order,” to “this cancellation,” and to “our cancellation,” thereby admitting the placing of the order and its acceptance. We think that this correspondence clearly shows the making of a contract of purchase and sale between the parties to this case.

“The statute of frauds does not contemplate that the contract between the parties shall necessarily be made originally in writing, but requires only that, as against the party to be charged, it shall be evidenced sooner or later by a writing, signed by him or by some, person legally authorized to act in his behalf. It is not necessary that the writing by which the contract is to be evidenced should have been executed simultaneously with the making of the contract; any writing, contemporaneous or subsequent, in which the party to be charged admits, over his signature, all the terms of the contract insisted on by the opposite party, is sufficient.” Capital City Brick Co. v. Atlanta Ice &c. Co., 5 Ga. App. 436 (63 S. E. 562). This case holds that the requisite written evidence of a contract may be supplied from a letter written by the party to be charged, or from a course of correspondence between the parties, and any signed writing or series of writings internally connected, intelligible without parol aid, and showing or admitting an agreement coextensive with the stipulations of the alleged contract is sufficient. “The statute of frauds does not require that all the terms of the contract should be agreed to or written down at one and the same time, nor on one piece of paper; but where the memorandum of the bargain is found on separate pieces of paper, and where these papers contain the whole bargain, they form together such a memorandum as will satisfy the statute, provided the contents of the signed paper make such reference to the other written paper or papers as to enable the court to construe the whole of them together as containing all the terms of the bargain.” North & Co. v. Mendel, 73 Ga. 400(2) (54 Am. R. 879). “There may be various writings, provided they refer one to another, but they can not be correlated and connected together by parol evidence.” Lester v. Heidt, 86 Ga. 226 (12 S. E. 214, 10 L. R. A. 108). Under these authorities and others that could be cited, we think that the writings executed by the parties, consisting of written orders and a number of letters written in connection with the orders, each of which letters referred to the orders or to the other letters, were *573 sufficiently correlated and connected to show a contract of purchase and sale in writing as required by the statute of frauds. Code, § 20-401 (7).

The defendant relies on Turner v. Lorillard Co., 100 Ga. 645 (28 S. E. 383, 62 Am. St. E. 345), as authority for its contention that the suit was barred under the statute of frauds, because the' price of the articles was not stated in the written order sent by mail from the defendant to the plaintiff. If nothing else appeared in the instant case except the written order, the decision relied on by the defendant might be in point; the holding therein being that the defect in a written order for goods which stated no price could not be supplied by parol testimony showing the establishment of a price, by dealings between the parties extending over a number of years. Clearly that ruling is not applicable here, because parol evidence is not necessary in this case to show the price of the goods. The letters exchanged between the parties, each definitely tied in with the others and with the written order under consideration, when considered together, show the price to be paid and a completed contract in writing. It was held in Foster v. Leeper, 29 Ga. 294, that letters of the defendant contained a sufficient acknowledgment of the contract to satisfy the statute of frauds; and in Georgia Refining Co. v. Augusta Oil Co., 74 Ga. 508, that the case was not within the statute of frauds, because the contract was recognized in writing in many letters of the defendants; and in Pitcher v. Lowe, 95 Ga. 423 (22 S. E. 678), that letters written by one of the parties to the other acknowledging the making of a parol contract previously entered into between them are sufficient to take the ease out of the statute of frauds; and in Erwin v. Harris, 87 Ga. 333 (13 S. E. 513), that evidence of correspondence between the parties by mail and by telegraph, the letters and telegrams showing the price of the oats and terms of the contract agreed upon, showed that the contract was in writing and was not void because in violation of the statute of frauds.

The defendant’s third contention under its demurrer is that the plaintiff had elected a remedy different from the one sought to be enforced in the suit, and after an unreasonable delay had attempted to elect another remedy. This contention is based on the Code, § 96-113, which gives the seller three different remedies on the default of the buyer: (1) the seller may retain the goods and *574 recover the difference between the contract price and the market price at the time and place of delivery; or (2) he may sell the property, acting for this purpose as the agent of the vendee, and recover the difference between the contract price and the price on resale; or (3) he may store or retain the property for the vendee and sue him for the entire price.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.E.2d 428, 74 Ga. App. 566, 1946 Ga. App. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-beck-gregg-hardware-co-gactapp-1946.