One ground of the motion for new trial complained that the court erred in holding and finding, in effect, that the contract of sale was not modified, as to the time expressed in it for its completion, by the following words in red lines on the heads of the letters by which the contract was made: “All agreements are contingent upon strikes, accidents, and other delays beyond our control.” If a contract in writing is plain and clear and unambiguous in its terms, it is not subject to modification by a statement in a letter-head printed at the top of the paper, which is not incorporated into the contract and is inconsistent with it. Even where a printed form of contract is used but terms are written into it which are at variance with the printed matter, the writing will control. As stated in the Civil Code, 1895, §3675, par. 6, “when a contract is partly printed and partly written, the latter part is entitled to most consideration.” The expression, “latter part,” as here used, means the written part. If printed matter which forms a part of the contract, then, must yield to written terms inconsistent with the words printed, a fortiori a-mere printed statement in a letter-head, which does not form an integral part of the contract at all, can not override or -modify distinct terms of the contract with which it conflicts.
In Summers v. Hibbard, 153 Ill. 102 (38 N. E. 809, 46 Am. St. R. 872), a contract was made for the delivery of certain bundles of sheet-iron at specified times and prices. The vendors failed to deliver at the times agreed upon. The vendees at a later date bought other iron for which they were compelled to pay a higher price, and brought suit for damages against the vendors. The contract was made by letters passing between the parties. At the top of the letter-heads of the vendors were the printed words, “All -sales subject to strikes and accidents.” It was held: “Printed matter in a letter-head forms no part of the written letter on the sheet, and will not qualify an absolute contract which results from an acceptance of an offer by such letter. . . If a party contracts, unconditionally, to sell and deliver, at a specified time, goods to be made in his mill, the breakage of his mill will not excuse performance or bar a *509suit for damages.” Mr. Justice Baker in. delivering the opinion said: “The mere fact that appellants wrote their acceptance on a blank form for letters, at the top of which were printed the words, ‘All sales subject to strikes and accidents,’ no more made those words a part of the contract than they made the other words there printed, ‘Summers Bros. & Co. Manufacturers of Box-annealed Common and Befined Sheet-Iron,’ a part of the contract. The offer was absolute. The written acceptance which they themselves wrote was just as absolute. The printed words were not in the body of the letter or referred to therein. The fact that they were printed at the head of their letter-heads would not have the effect of preventing appellants from entering into an unconditional contract of sale.”
In the present case the defendants wrote to their broker in New Orleans, authorizing him to sell 200,000 yards of sheeting, of two kinds described, to be delivered “25,000 yards weekly of each, commencing Feb. 1st, delivery in New Orleans.” He was instructed to give defendant’s letter to the plaintiffs and say to them that they might write an acknowledgement, and that would be all the contract defendant required. It was alleged by the plaintiffs and admitted by the defendant that the former did duly acknowledge the letter, and thus complete the contract for the goods at the prices named. This closed a distinct and unambiguous contract. It fixed the time and place of delivery. It needed no aid from circumstances to construe it or arrive at its meaning in those respects. Neither was there any question of bringing home notice of some fact by means of printed statements. A positive statement that goods sold shall be delivered at a time specified in the written contract is not in harmony with a statement that “All agreements are contingent upon strikes, accidents, and other delays beyond our control.” One declares definitely that delivery shall be at a time mentioned; the other, that delivery shall not necessarily be at a definite time, but shall be contingent, not only upon strikes, but also upon accidents and other delays beyond the control of the vendor. The written agreement was specific; the printed notice declared that the time of delivery might be contingent and indefinite. This is not construction; it is modification. If the written statement of the time of delivery is to he made subject to modification by other writing or printing, at least the modifying statement should be embodied *510or referred to in the contract itself, and not be made to depend upon mere printed matter forming part of a letter-head. Sturm v. Boker, 150 U. S. 312, 326 (14 Sup. Ct. 99, 37 L. ed. 1093).
2. Another ground of the motion for a new trial alleged that the court erred in holding, in effect, and rendering a judgment accordingly, that the expressed time for the completion of a contract was of the essence of the contract, it being contended that the evidence showed that the defendant had not abandoned the contract, but was preparing to carry it out in a reasonable time when the plaintiffs withdrew from it. To this contention we can not assent. Where-a contract for the sale of personal property states a time when delivery is to be made, it is matter ■of construction as to whether the time for delivery is of the essence of the contract so that damages may be recovered for a failure to comply therewith. If the contract is clear and without ambiguity, latent or patent, the construction is for the court. In proper cases where there is a question of fact involved, it is for the jury. Civil Code, 1895, §§3675 (1, 8), 3672. In this case the judge acted both as judge and jury. Did he err in deciding that time was of the essence of this contract? The contract was for the sale of 200,000 yards of cotton goods by a factory to purchasers in a distant city. It was specified that 50,000 yards should be delivered ■each week, commencing February' 1st, at stated prices, with payment at 30 days, or 5 per cent, discount for cash. It might well be inferred that it was important to a purchaser of such a quanta of cloth to have it arrive as specified, both in order to prepare for its reception and storage or use and to provide for payments in the time and manner stated; and that this was in contemplation of the parties. It might make a very material difference whether a merchant should receive and be prepared to handle 50,000 yards of cloth ordered perhaps for some special purpose each week, and commencing at a specified date, or whether he should have 200,000 3rards of the cloth delivered to him in one bulk a month or more thereafter, or in installments commencing some six weeks after the proper time and delivered according as the vendor found himself able to meet the contract. It may also be that a merchant desires, during the season when certain goods are salable, to have them ready for delivery to his customers, or that he may have contracts to make deliveries. If such were the case, it would ill suit his purpose to *511have goods suitable to or salable during a certain season only, and ordered to be delivered in installments at fixed times during that season, delivered to him in a single lump or shipment at a much later period or after the entire season was over. If recourse is had in the .case before us to the correspondence between the parties, the possible injury from extended delay which has thus been hypothetically stated would apparently have resulted to the plaintiffs. In one of their letters to the defendant it was said that these goods were not bought from the defendant to be sold in cloth as dry goods people do, but were sold manufactured into bags for a sugar refinery, and that, as the refinery operated night and day, it was compelled to have the goods. And in another letter they stated to the defendant that the latter had not complied with their request to' make the shipments, although the plaintiffs had tried to make it clear to the defendant that these goods were sold to the refinery at the place of delivery, and that the latter were obliged to have them for bags for shipment of their product, and that it was not material to be put on the shelf and sold in lots. See, in this connection, Savannah Ice Co. v. American Refrigerator Co., 110 Ga. 142 (35 S. E. 280); Branch v. Palmer, 65 Ga. 210; Henderson Elevator Co, v. North Ga. Milling Co., 126 Ga. 279 (55 S. E. 50); Gude & Walker v. Bailey Co., 4 Ga. App. 226 (61 S. E. 135); Norrington v. Wright, 115 U. S. 188 (6 Sup. Ct. 12, 29 L. ed. 366); Cleveland Rolling Mill Co. v. Rhodes, 121 U. S. 255 (7 Sup. Ct. 882, 30 L. ed. 920); McGrath v. Gegner, 77 Md. 331 (26 Atl. 502, 39 Am. St. R. 415). The cases in which contracts for purchases of real estate have been held not to be forfeited because of failure to pay the purchase-price at the date named therefor, in the absence of anything in the contract making time of the essence thereof, and where the pajunent of interest has been held, under the circumstances of different cases, to be a sufficient compensation for the failure to pay on the exact date when due, are in no way in conflict with what is here ruled. “Time is not generally of the essence of a contract; but, by express stipulation or reasonable construction, it may become so.” Civil Code, §3675 (8). But under the facts in this case the judge did not err in finding that time was of the essence of the contract involved. The statement in the opinion of ■Mr. Justice Gray in Norrington v. Wright, supra, that, “In the contracts of merchants, time is of the essence,” was not laid down as *512an absolute rule regardless of what the contract itself might show the intention of the parties to be. This clearly appears from the headnote, in which it is stated that, “In a mercantile contract, a statement descriptive of the subject-matter, or of some material incident, such as the time or place of shipment, is ordinarily to be regarded as a warranty, or condition precedent, upon the failure or non-performance of which the party aggrieved may repudiate the whole contract.”
3. If it were not clear that time was originally of the essence of the contract, nevertheless the judge was authorized to find that the vendees from time to time urged compliance and finally fixed a time, after that specified in the contract, within which they insisted that delivery of the goods should be made, stating the necessity therefor, and that if delivery should not be made within that time, they would be .compelled to buy material in lieu of that which the vendor had contracted to deliver. If time was not of the essence originally, still the vendor did not have the right indefinitely to postpone compliance, and when the vendees, after a considerable delay, fixed a definite time in advance within which delivery would have, to be made, and notified the vendor of that fact, if the time set was reasonable, it was incumbent on the vendor to meet such reasonable demand; and if it failed to do so, the vendees were authorized to treat such failure as a breach of the contract. In Parker v. Tharold, 16 Beavan, 59, Sir John Romilly, Master of the Rolls, said (on p. 71): “It is, I consider, the undoubted law of this court, that although time was not originally an essential part of the contract, still that either party may, by a proper notice, bind the other to complete within a reasonable time to be specified in such notice; and if the party receiving such notice do not complete within the time so specified, equity will not enforce a specific performance of the contract, but leave the parties to their remedies and their liabilities at law.” See also Ellis v. Bryant, 120 Ga. 890, 894 (48 S. E. 352); authorities cited in note to Johnson v. Evans (Md.), 50 Am. Dec. 678-9, and in note to Jones v. Robbins, Id. 600. The judge, in passing on both law and facts, could well have found that the time so fixed was reasonable, and that the failure of the vendor to make delivery was a breach. By the terms of the original contract delivery was to commence on February 1st, and 50,000 yards of the cloth were to be delivered each week. No delivery was *513made. On February 26th the vendees urged compliance, stating the necessity for promptness. On February 28th the vendor replied somewhat vaguely that “we are going to start to work on your goods either the latter part of this or the first of next week, and will do the best we can to make deliveries as rapidly as possible;” also referring to the anxiety of the vendor to make deliveries and the hope that labor trouble and sickness of operatives would then have ceased to interfere with the work. On March 2d the vendees replied, stating the time which the contract specified for delivery, and stating that while they had granted to the vendor an extension until the next week, it must be thoroughly understood that they must receive at least 100,000 yards of the cloth the next week and 100,000 yards the following week in order to comply with their contract, and insisting that the vendor must ship accordingly. Still no shipments were made, the vendor merely replying in effect, on March 6th, that they were going to start to work on the goods “this week,” and would make a shipment the next week, and then continue to ship “as-fast as we can.” On March 9th the vendees gave notice by telegram that they could not wait longer, but immediate delivery must be made. To this the vendor replied in a telegram, calling attention to the red lines on its letter-heads, and stating that it would commence delivering goods “next week.” The evidence showed that the mills had 36,048 spindles, and that at no time were more than 9,275 of them stopped. Other evidence was also introduced, tending to show what the producing capacity of the mill was each week. Under all the evidence there was no error in deciding that the defendant had committed a breach of its contract, and that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover.
Judgment affirmed.
All the Justices concur.