Code § 20-704 (7) provides as follows: “When a contract is partly printed and partly written, the latter part is entitled to most consideration.” So construed, the lease, which provides that the lessor “will pay the cost of the remaining portion of the duct” not “inside the premises leased,” does not show on its face: (a) that the lessor was merely called upon to install the outside portion of the duct after it had been purchased by the lessee, or (b), in connection with the printed provision, that the lessee should have done this work because the same was demanded in compliance with a governmental order. If there was in fact an ambiguity in the lease as to the party upon whom the duty devolved of doing the outside construction work to eliminate kitchen fumes, then the court properly overruled the general demurrer on this ground and left the construction of the lease agreement to the jury.
Swanson
v.
Mobley,
33
Ga. App.
791 (
Error is • assigned in the amendment to the motion for a new trial on a charge of the court as follows: “The measure of damages if the plaintiff is entitled to recover in this case is the cost that he necessarily expended in installing the special plumbing fixtures and features in connection with this restaurant, and the depreciation in the market value in his equipment that he purchased.” The grounds of objection here are directed solely to that portion of the charge relating to the' plumbing fixtures. In this connection, the original petition alleged that, “in relying on the terms of the lease [plaintiff] installed plumbing in the premises in the sum of [$322.93], and that the labor installation ran [$225.16], all for which your petitioner sues.” The
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trial court sustained a special demurrer to this item of damage with leave to amend, on the ground that “it is the conclusion of the court that this work added value to the lease and would be a part of the evidence tending to show the loss of value in the leasehold interest resulting from defendant’s alleged breach.” Acceding to this ruling, the plaintiff amended to allege that it was essential for the plumbing to be installed in order that he might begin operation of the business in accordance with the lease agreement, that the expenditure added value to the lease agreement and was in contemplation of the lessee remaining in possession of the premises for five years, and that as a result of the breach the leasehold was damaged in this particular in the sum of $558.09. It thus became the law of the case that the amounts expended on the plumbing were not proper amounts to be considered as special damages, although evidence of such expenditures would be proper in arriving at the value of the leasehold.
Cromer
v.
Dinkier,
82
Ga. App.
227 (
From the evidence adduced upon the trial of the ease ifi appears that the Smoke Abatement Bureau of the City of At-lanta had furnished to the parties a sketch of the work to be done to eliminate cooking odors, which sketch showed an exhaust fan connected into the duct at a point on the top of the kitchen roof, at a point where the lessor had agreed to install the duct, and it also appears that the lessor made no such installation. Whether or not the lessor’s agreement to “pay the cost of the remaining portion of the duct” would include the cost of a ventilation fan in the portion of the duct it had assumed to provide, and whether or not failure to install the duct proximately caused the discontinuance of the plaintiff’s business, were questions for the jury. As to the general grounds of the
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motion for a new trial, “the verdict of a jury should not be set aside upon the assignment of error that it is without evidence to support it, if there is any evidence to support it, unless it be further made to appear, (a) that some ruling of the court improperly withheld evidence from the jury, (b) or illegally permitted the jury to consider testimony which should not have been submitted to them, or (c) that the court’s instructions, as applied to the evidence, were erroneous, inapplicable or misleading.”
Bush
v.
Fourcher,
3
Ga. App.
43 (1) (
Judgment affirmed on condition that the plaintiff write off $225.16 from the amount of recovery; otherwise reversed.
