Malsby & Company brought suit against A. E. Gore, in Randolph superior court, upon a promissory note dated February 14, 1898, due December 15, 1898, for $600.00, with interest at 8% per annum from maturity, and 10% attorney’s fees, payable to plaintiffs, and given “ for balance or difference due on one forty-horse Erie City Iron Works engine, one No. 9 forty-five-horse return tubular Erie City Iron Works boiler,” a copy of which note was attached to plaintiffs’ petition. To this petition the defendant filed the following answer:
“ 1st. He admits he is a resident of Randolph county.
“ 2nd.- He denies that he is indebted to the petitioner in the sum of $600.00, besides interest at 8% from maturity, and 10% on amount due as attorney’s fees; but he admits that he signed, with his mark, the note described in plaintiff’s petition; but he says that said note does not set forth the true contract made at the time the same was signed.-
“ 3rd. He says, that the signature to said note was secured by fraud, and that the fraud was perpetrated upon him in this way: He is illiterate, unable to read or write, and ignorant, and did not know, until long after said note was signed, that the same was made payable to Malsby & Co., nor did he make with said Malsby & Co., that he knew and believed at the time, any contract whatever as to the articles described in thePage 895note sued on, or as to any other thing; nor did he know that the said note failed to set forth the true contract made by him with the person hereinafter named, but on the contrary, by false and fraudulent representations of the said party that the same contained the contract, was induced to sign the same, believing at the time that he was signing a note payable to the Northington-Munger-Pratt Co. Before and at the time said note was signed, one P. H. Baker came to his residence in Randolph County, Georgia, and where at the time he owned and was running a public gin, and represented himself as the agent of the said Northington-Munger-Pratt Co., and proposed to sell to him what is known as the Munger System of Ginning, furnish all the necessary machinery, including the boiler and engine named in the note sued on, and all necessary attachments and fittings, and to put up the same in good running order, and to take in part pay therefor defendant’s old engine, boiler, and some other old machinery, and for which he was to pay the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars additional, in several payments, and the whole •of the machinery was to be shipped to Weston, Ga., by the first day of June, 1898, this defendant to pay' the freight on said machinery, and to haul the same from Weston, Ga., to his home place; and this defendant and the said P. H. Baker, representing himself as the agent of the aforesaid Northington-MungerPratt Co., did enter into a contract thereto in the terms proposed, and the said P. H. Baker prepared and drafted all the papers in reference thereto, including the note sued on; and falsely represented to this defendant that the said papers so drawn, including the note sued on, embodied the contract .as hereinbefore set forth, and, knowing that the defendant •could not read or write, fraudulently took advantage of his ignorance, and failed to put in the said note the terms of said •contract, and the same, by said fraud, does not contain all of the said contract, nor show all of the consideration therefor, nor the obligation that the said Baker, as agent, entered into with reference to the matter; and especially as to the said engine and boiler, the obligations to ship them to defendant by the first day of June, 1898, with all necessary attachments for both engine and boiler, and to put up the same and connect it with otherPage 896machinery of the said Hunger System, and to furnish a machinist to run the same until it was fully proved that the whole was in good running order, and also put in the said note name of plaintiff as payee instead of the said Northington-MungerPratt Co. The defendant never knew of these fraudulent acts perpetrated on him by the plaintiffs until the Northington-Munger-Pratt Co. had sent a machinist to put up the ginning machinery, and he had almost completed that part of the work, and defendant called his attention to the fact that he would have to put up the engine and boiler, and make all the necessary attachments to the machinery, when he declined to do so, saying that it was not part of his company’s contract, and then for the first time he was led to suspect that a fraud had been committed by the said P. H. Baker, and examined the papers left with him by the said P. H. Baker, and he ascertained that the engine and boiler, ‘ with all attachments,’ was ordered from the plaintiffs. And he alleges that although the said plaintiffs shipped not from Atlanta, whence defendant was to pay freight, but from Erie, Pa., the said engine and boiler, they did so to Richland, Ga., and not to Weston, Ga., and also shipped another engine and boiler to defendant, in the same car, that was intended for one W. O. Barbse, and before the railway company would deliver the machinery to him it required him to pay the extra freight from Richland to Weston on all the car contained, and in consequence of said wrongful shipment he paid out in freight the sum of twenty-seven dollars and seventy cents more than he would have had to pay had the same been first shipped to him at Weston, Ga., and he was required to pay freight from Erie, Pa., and not from Atlanta, Ga., and he alleges that this was more than he ought to have paid, the amount not yet ascertained, and he asks that he may hereafter insert the same. The plaintiffs having failed to send him the necessary attachments agreed to be furnished, he was compelled, as the ginning season was approaching, to buy at Columbus and Dawson, Ga., the same at an expense of fifty-seven dollars and forty-one cents for the same, and expenses going and sending therefor [a full statement of which is annexed as an exhibit to this answer]. The-plaintiffs having failed to send any machinist to put up saidPage 897boiler and engine, and make the attachments to the other machinery aforesaid and delay in attempting to get the one suggested by the said P. H. Baker, the defendant hired another, and proceeded to have the said engine and boiler put in place and all attachments made, and the same put to work at an expense of ninety dollars and sixty cents [a full statement of which is also annexed as an exhibit to this answer] ; and, in consequence of the said fraud committed by the plaintiffs through their agent, said plaintiffs should not recover against him any sum whatever on said note, the same being void on account of the fraud before alleged; and because of the said fraud, and the failure of the plaintiffs to carry out the obligations of the true contract entered into, the consideration of the said com tract has failed in part, to the amount of one hundred and seventy-five dollars and seventy-one cents, and the extra freight paid hereafter to be ascertained, and said amount ought to be deducted from the amount agreed to be paid under the true contract.
“4th. Bor further answer the defendant says, that the plain-' tiffs are indebted to him in the sum of one hundred and seventy-five dollars and seventy-one cents, for attachments, fittings, work and labor in and about the putting up the engine and boiler named in the note sued on, and extra freight and expenses paid on account of the failure of plaintiffs to carry out their obligations under the true contract as set forth in paragraph 3 of this answer [full particulars of which are set forth in the exhibits], and he prays that the amount may be set off against the plaintiffs’ claim.
“ 5th. Further answering the defendant says, that for the reasons that the plaintiffs did not comply with the cross-obligations and independent covenants arising under the contract made as to the matters in their petition alleged, and set forth in paragraph 3 of this answer, and the great delay occasioned thereby, by which the defendant was unable to commence ginning for the public at the beginning of the cotton season, August 1, 1898, and not until the 7th day of September, 1898, which he would have been able to do had plaintiffs complied with their obligations under the contract, plaintiffs have injured andPage 898damaged this defendant in the sum of two hundred dollars over and above amount claimed as set-off, etc., and defendant prays that said amount of two hundred dollars may be deducted from plaintiffs’ claim, by way of recoupment.”
To this answer the defendant filed an amendment alleging that, before he could get possession of the engine, boiler, fixtures, etc., he was required to pay the freight from Erie, Pa., to Rich-land, Ga., and then local freight from Richland to Weston, Ga., while the true contract between the parties required that said ■■freight should either be shipped from Atlanta, Ga., or from Birmingham, Ala., and that the amount he paid for freight was much larger than under the contract he ought to have been required to pay, by the sum of eighty-five dollars and cents, and plaintiffs damaged him to said amount by improper shipment of> the goods. Defendant asked that this amount be deducted from the true amount due by him to plaintiffs. Defendant further amended his plea by adding to the third paragraph thereof the following: “The note described therein nor the contemporaneous order and papers also described therein were never, before the signing of said notes or said contemporaneous papers, read over to him by the said P. BE. Baker, nor by any one else, except the order to Northington-Munger-Pratt Go., which was read, and upon objection of defendant that it did not contain former statement that the company was to pay wages of man to put up machinery, he represented that he had stricken that out, nor were any of the same read over to him until long afterwards, and after the Munger System was being put up at his place.” Also, by adding to the fifth paragraph the following: “BEad the said engine, boiler, etc., been delivered at the ■time agreed upon, he would have been able to gin two hundred bales of cotton more than-he did from the opening of the cotton season until he was able to do so, and would have received therefor one dollar per bale; that he did gin in the cotton season the year before 175 bales of cotton and received therefor $175.00 ■during the same time, with an inferior outfit, and in the year 1899, during the same time,'201 bales of cotton at one dollar per bale, and he would have ginned the same number in 1898, if the machinery had arrived as agreed to be delivered.”
1. The judgment of the court below in sustaining the demurrer to the answer of the defendant was doubtless based mainly, if not entirely, upon the idea that the defendant was seeking to vary the terms of an express written contract by parol evidence. We think this view is founded upon an entire misconception of the defense sought to be established by this answer. It does not seek to vary the terms of a contract that the answer alleges was really entered into between the parties. It attacks the written instrument sued upon, as having been fraudulently procured by misrepresentation of its contents. In the first place, it is claimed by the defendant that he had never made any contract with the plaintiff, or with any one who pretended to be acting as the plaintiff’s agent in this case; that he thought he was giving the note payable to the Northington-Munger-Pratt Co.; that he did not know Malsby & Co. at all in the transaction; and that'
2. The answer also claims damages in the nature of expenses necessarily incurred because of the breach of the contract which it alleges was actually made between the parties. Attached to the answer in the record is an itemized statement of these ex
3. The only remaining ground in the demurrer is that “the matters of defense set up in paragraph 5th of defendant’s plea, setting up damages, are too remote and consequential, and not set forth with sufficient particularity to put plaintiffs upon notice of what particular damages were claimed, or how and in what manner defendant was damaged.” We think the amendment allowed to that paragraph of the plea fully meets all the objections set forth in this ground of the demurrer. This amendment specifically sets forth how the damages were sustained in consequence of the defendant being delayed in commencing his ginning operations. The length of this delay was specified, and the amount of cotton that he was thus deprived of ginning for the public was specifically set forth. When the parties entered into a contract for the purchase of this machinery, defendant was then engaged in the business of ginning for the public, and had been for years previous. It was clearly contemplated that he desired this new machinery for the purpose of engaging in this business, which was to start at the time designated in his answer, and delay in furnishing and properly fitting up the machinery for service during the ginning season would necessarily result in loss to him, which must have been in contemplation of the partiesatthetimetheircontractwasmade. We do notthinlc the provisions of the Civil Code, § 3798, which declares that remote or consequential damages are not allowed whenever they can not be traced solely to the breach of the con
4. From the above recital of facts it will be seen that the court sustained the demurrer as to all the portions of the defendant’s answer embodied in the foregoing opinion, and practically deprived him of any defense whatever to the action upon the note. For the reasons above given, we think these portions thus stricken contained valid matters of defense, and that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the same, and in directing a verdict for the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed.