Gullett Gin Co. v. Seagraves

176 S.E. 922, 49 Ga. App. 850, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 575
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 29, 1934
Docket23396
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 176 S.E. 922 (Gullett Gin Co. v. Seagraves) 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
Gullett Gin Co. v. Seagraves, 176 S.E. 922, 49 Ga. App. 850, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 575 (Ga. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinions

MacIntyre, J.

The Gullett Gin Company sued L. C. and A. E. Seagraves on two promissory notes given for the balance due on certain machinery purchased under a sale contract, a copy of which was attached to the petition. The first of these notes is for the principal sum of $1207.76, and is dated August 2, 1930, and payable November 15, 1931. The second note, which is for $469 principal, is dated August 15, 1930, and due December 15, 1931. The sale contract bears the date of May 23, 1930, and shows that [851]*851the machinery was a ginning outfit, including four gins with accessories. Under the terms of this contract, it was to be binding when accepted by the seller at its main office at Amite, Louisiana, and was not subject to countermand without the written consent of the seller. The contract also provided that it was the entire contract and could not be varied. It appears that' this contract was duly accepted by the seller on May 27, 1930. The warranty clause of the contract is as follows: “Said machinery is warranted to be of good material and to perform well if properly operated by competent persons. Upon starting, if the purchaser at any time within ten days is unable to make the same operate well, telegraph or written notice stating wherein it fails to conform to the warranty is to be given by the purchaser to the Gullett Gin Company at Amite, La. (and not verbally to any of its traveling men), and reasonable time shall be given the Gullett Gin Company to remedy the defect, the purchaser rendering all necessary and friendly assistance, and in case trouble be caused from a clearly defined original defect in the machine itself. The Gullett Gin Company reserve the right to replace any defective part or parts, without charge, but such defective part or parts shall not condemn the machine to which it belongs. If on trial the machine can not be made to fulfill the warranty, and the fault is in the machine itself, the purchaser, when instructed to do so, agrees to load and ship the machine where instructed, and the amount of the purchase-price of same is to be credited on the notes pro rata, or money paid thereon refunded pro rata; the purchaser in such case [not?] to have nor m&ke any claim for any damages of any nature or character whatsoever against the Gullett Gin Company by reason of the failure of said machine to fulfill the warranty, but the pro rata diminution of purchase-price aforesaid to be the sole and only element of damage for breach of this warranty. Failure of any article named herein to comply with this aforesaid warranty shall in no way affect this contract, nor the notes and chattel mortgage and trust deed given in accordance therewith as to the other articles named therein. Failure to make such trial, or to give such notice, or use after ten days without such notice, or use for any ten days without notice, shall be conclusive evidence of the fulfillment of the warranty. The Gullett Gin Company shall at the request of the purchaser render assistance of any kind in operating said machine, or any part [852]*852thereof, or in remectying any defect at any time. Said assistance shall in no case be deemed an acknowledgement on its part of a breach by it of this warranty, or a waiver of or excuse for any failure of the purchaser to fully keep and perform the conditions of this warranty. The purchaser agrees to properly put up and operate the machinery according to the directions furnished by the Gullett Gin Company, and that if the fault be traceable to not putting up or operating according to directions, purchaser agrees to pay all expenses incurred in rectifjdng it. Any failure on the part of the purchaser to comply with this contract releases this warranty entirely.”

In their original answer the defendants admitted a prima facie case, and then pleaded at great length their affirmative defense. In order to show the nature of this defense we shall quote from some of the paragraphs of the answer as follows:

9. “Defendants purchased four seventy, 4/70 saw gins from the plaintiff, and agreed to pay the purchase-price of $3150.” These gins were located at Eeynolds, Georgia, and plaintiff was to dismantle the same and load them on railroad-cars or trucks, and defendants were to pay the freight or themselves haul the same by truck.

11. “Defendants show that they are not bound by said contract of purchase and on said notes sued on, because the same was procured by fraud. The defects in the machinery, although known to the plaintiff at the time the contract was signed, were latent and concealed, and were known to be of such a character as could not be ascertained within ten days allowed by the contract, during which time notice of such defects was reported to T. V. Phillips, and to the Atlanta Office of Gullett Gin Company.

12. “Plaintiff sent blue print with machinery, and the same was put up by a competent gin man, T. M. Pittman, and plaintiff’s agents. Davis and Phillips, both inspected the machinery after it was put up and stated that the job was good . . and that the job was a good one. . . The machinery was started around September 15, 1930, and the machinery would not operate from the very beginning satisfactory. Defendants immediately got in touch with T. Y. Phillips, the plaintiff’s agent, and Davis, manager of Atlanta office by telephone and requested that they come at once, and this was within the ten days from the time that the machinery [853]*853started. Davis and a gin expert by the name of Taylor came in response to the notice, and ginned three bales of cotton, which was not satisfactory, and not np to the standard of ordinary ginning, for these reasons, to wit: 1. The gin saw gave trouble in not cutting the lint clean from the seed. 3. There was back lancing of the cotton on the saws, which clogged the machinery and caused it to stop. 3. Seed-cotton collected and clogged in the belt passages leading through the elevator, stopping the belt, and failed to distribute the cotton properly to the gin. 4. The condensor became congested with cotton and the machinery had to be stopped that same might be relieved.. 5. All of said troubles caused repeated stoppings of the entire gin system and loss of time to entire gin crew. 6. Defendants had to stop the machinery for some such trouble several times a day, so that the defendants were able to run said ginnery outfit not a full day during the entire gin seasons.

13. “Said machinery would not do satisfactory work, in that the general construction of the machinery was such as to cause choking of cotton as hereinbefore stated, and the failure to clean the seed from the lint, and that the same would not perform the services for which it was contracted for, on account of defects in same, and finally, when every effort failed to make the machinery perform, and after complaint and complaint, Herbert B. Davis, the plaintiff’s agent out of the Atlanta office, stated to L. C. Sea-graves, one of the defendants: H don’t-give a- dam whether it gins cotton or not, I am looking to the contract;’ that his company was worth a million dollars and had the money to win it with, and that he would bet a new hat that if the matter got in a law suit that the company would win.

14. “Plaintiff knew that the gin outfit . . would not give satisfactory service when they sold it to the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.E. 922, 49 Ga. App. 850, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gullett-gin-co-v-seagraves-gactapp-1934.