1 S.W.2d 14 | Ark. | 1927
STATEMENT OF FACTS.
D. A. Brown instituted this action in the circuit court against J. W. Bradford to recover damages for an alleged breach of a rent contract of a farm. According to the allegations of the complaint, the plaintiff rented twenty-three acres from the defendant, to be cultivated in cotton and corn during the year 1926, and was to furnish teams and tools to cultivate the land and harvest the crop for three-fourths of the cotton and two-thirds of the corn. It is also alleged that he took possession *824 of the land, and was unlawfully evicted therefrom by the defendant in 1926, to his damage in the sum of $612.
The defendant filed a motion to require the plaintiff to make his complaint more definite and certain. The court sustained the motion, and granted the plaintiff leave to file an amended and substituted complaint.
According to the allegations of the amended and substituted complaint, the plaintiff was a tenant on the farm of the defendant, and rented from him twenty-three acres of land, to be cultivated in corn and cotton during the year 1926, and he was to pay as rent one-third of the corn and one-fourth of the cotton. He took possession of the land under the rent contract, and the defendant refused to permit plaintiff to work the land, and rented it to another person. The complaint further alleges that, on account of the late time for renting the land, he was unable to procure land for the year 1926 of sufficient amount and of the quality of the defendant's farm. The complaint further alleges that the rental value was fifteen dollars per acre more than plaintiff contracted to pay, or a total amount of $345. It is also alleged that the plaintiff suffered special damages on account of being unable to procure employment for himself and for his two sons during a part of the year 1926. The complaint also alleges the following: "and that he and his sons and other members of his family were worth $5 per day, and that they lost sixty days' work, to his damages in the sum of $300."
The defendant filed a demurrer to the amended and substituted complaint, which was sustained by the court. The plaintiff refused to plead further, and the court dismissed his complaint. The case is here on appeal. (after stating the facts). The judgment of the circuit court was correct.
This court has held that the probable profits to a lessee from the cultivation of demised land is not the *825
true measure of his damages resulting from the breach of a covenant for possession, and cannot be considered in determining the amount of such damages. Rose v. Wynn,
In the complaint the plaintiff also asked for the recovery of special damages. Now, if his complaint had *826 contained any definite allegation that he had suffered special damages in any certain amount on account of the expense he had been put to in moving on and off the place and in preparing the land for cultivation, he would, under the authorities above cited, be entitled to recover such amount. He does not allege any certain amount which he suffered in special damages, and would therefore only be entitled to recover nominal damages. His complaint does contain a definite allegation that he and his sons and other members of the family lost sixty days' work, which was worth $5 per day, but this was not an element of special damages. He should have alleged that he suffered damages in a definite sum on account of the expense he was put to in moving on and off the place and in preparing the land for cultivation. As we have already seen, under the allegations of the complaint he would only be entitled to nominal damages in this respect, and a new trial will not be granted for a failure to assess nominal damages where no question of a permanent right is involved. The reason is that it is the settled rule of this court not to reverse a judgment unless for prejudicial error, and no prejudice could have resulted to the plaintiff in this action. The court gave him permission to make his complaint more definite and certain either in respect to general damages or special damages alleged to have been suffered by him, and he refused to do so.
Therefore the judgment will be affirmed.