The petition, properly construed, alleged a breach of a contract to furnish gas to the plaintiff. We recognize that in some contracts duties arise between the parties the violation of which would constitute a tort. However, such duties do not arise in every contract.
Manley
v.
Exposition Cotton Mills,
47
Ga. App.
496 (1) (
The defendant contends that the general demurrer should have been sustained because the damages alleged, loss of profits, are too remote and speculative to be recoverable. The defendant cites numerous cases to support its contention that prospective profits are too speculative to be a subject for damages. While we will consider those cases more in detail later in this opinion, it is well to note here that those cases preface their statements that loss of prospective profits is too speculative to form a basis for recovery by the words “generally” and “as a general rule,” etc. "As a general rule the expected profits of a commercial business are too uncertain, speculative, and remote, to pennit a recovery for their loss. However, the loss of profits from the destruction or interruption of an established business may be recovered for if the amount of actual loss is rendered reasonably certain by competent proof, but in all such cases it must be made to appear that the business which is claimed to have been interrupted was an established one, that it had been successfully conducted for such a length of time, and had such a trade established, that the profits thereof are reasonably ascertain
*254
able.” 25 C. J. S. 518, § 42 b. It is not the rule in this State that all profits are too remote and speculative to be Recoverable. “The profits of a commercial business are dependent on so many hazards and chances,
that unless the anticipated profits are capable of ascertainment,
and the loss of them traceable directly to the defendant’s wrongful act, they are too speculative to afford a basis for the computation of damages.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Cooper
v.
National Fertilizer Co.,
132
Ga.
529, 535 (
In
Cooper
v.
Young,
22
Ga.
269 (
It is also contended that the damages in loss of profits were not recoverable because they were not within the contemplation of the parties at the time of the contract. The petition, alleges: “That at all times herein mentioned, the defendant by the exercise of ordinary diligence would have known that' any interruption by it of plaintiff’s gas service would result in the shutting down of plaintiff’s said laundries, and in damages to the plaintiff as are hereinabove set forth, and that it was within the contemplation of the plaintiff and of the defendant that the tortious acts of the defendant, hereinabove referred to, would result in damages to the plaintiff as hereinabove set forth.” Where the defendant entered into a contract with the plaintiff to furnish gas with which the plaintiff was to operate his business for profit, it was within the contemplation of the parties that, if the defendant failed to furnish such gas, the plaintiff’s operations would be suspended with a resultant loss of profits. The petition alleged a good cause of action for damages for loss of profits, as against a general demurrer.
Hoffman
v.
Louis L. Battey Post,
74
Ga. App.
403 (
The plaintiff seeks to recover, in addition to lost profits, his expenses of operation, such as salaries, rent, etc. He can not recover his lost net profits and also the expenses of operation in earning such net profits.
Anderson
v.
Hilton & Dodge
*256
Lumber Co.,
121
Ga.
688 (4) (
While the plaintiff sufficiently alleges his damages for loss of profits, as against a general demurrer, he does not sufficiently allege how such figures were arrived at to withstand a special demurrer pointing out such defect and calling for allegations of facts showing how the profits were computed. The plaintiff does allege items of expense of operation, but they are alleged as measures of damages and not as facts showing how the figure of net profits sued for was arrived at; and, as they now stand alleged, they are not sufficient to meet the defect pointed out by the special demurrer. The court erred in overruling such special demurrer.
The defendant contends that, under the rules and regulations of the Georgia Public Service Commission, it was authorized under the facts alleged to interrupt its service to the plaintiff. This court can not take judicial notice of such rules. Code § 93-504;
Shurman
v.
City of Atlanta,
148
Ga.
1 (3) (
The court did not err in overruling the general demurrer.
The court erred in overruling the special demurrers treated in the opinion.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
