DocketNumber: 3291
Citation Numbers: 9 Ga. App. 814, 72 S.E. 280, 1911 Ga. App. LEXIS 339
Judges: Hill
Filed Date: 10/10/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/8/2024
The Elyea-Austell Company brought suit against the Whitehurst Drug Company on an account with -itemized bill of particulars, based upon the following written order: “Elyea-Austell Company. Atlanta, Ga. Date April 16, 1909. Ship to F. M. Harp, Dublin, Ga. One 24-in. frame Fleo Bicycle, Kelley bars 1906 Corbin Duplex brake l-% clincher tires Troxel saddle black. One girhs b^cle, 18-in. frame, 26-in. wheels, with a good grade of tires, black. One 22-in. Fleo Bicycle, with Atherton brake collar, black. 1 dozen W. P. W. inner tubes, 28x1%. 300 12-in. spokes. 3 dozen rubber cement. 5 pairs Winner single tube tires 28x1%, Fleo trade mark. O. Tv. Whitehurst Drug Company. Terms 2 per cent. 10 days, or net 30 days.” The defendant admitted the written order, admitted that the goods as ordered were shipped by the plaintiff to F. M. Harp in accordance with the terms of the order, and that he received them and had not paid for them. The defendant refused to pay the account, on the ground
The written order for the goods, given by the defendant was an original undertaking by it, and made it primarily liable to the plaintiff. -There was no evidence whatever in support of the plea that the letters “0. K.” meant that the goods were to be shipped to F. M. Harp, while the invoice was to be- sent to the Whitehurst Drug Company, or that there was any understanding between the plaintiff and the drug company that unless this was done, the drug company would not be liable.
The evidence discloses the following facts: Harp was insolvent and unable to buy any goods from the plaintiff on his own credit, and he induced, the Whitehurst Drug Company to order the goods from Elyea-Austell Company directly for him. The credit was extended to the Whitehurst Drug Company and expressly denied by the plaintiff to I-Tarp, and this fact was known to the defendant when the order was given for the goods. There is no commercial or legal reason why the Whitehurst Drug Company was entitled to an invoice for the bill of goods which it had ordered sent to Harp, but it was proper that an invoice should accompany the goods, in order that the party receiving them might verify th-' shipment. But, even if no invoice had been sent either to Harp or to the Whitehurst Drug Company, this would constitute no reason why the goods which had been ordered hv a written order by the, Whitehurst Drug Company, and which had been sent to Harp in compliance with this written order, on the faith of which credit was extended, not to Harp, but to the Whitehurst Drug Company, should not be paid for, in view of the fact that the goods as ordered were admitted to have been received by Harp, and the only complaint made is that the invoice was sent to Harp, and not to the
■Judgment reversed.