12 Ga. App. 830 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
The,plaintiffs, who are alleged to be a firm of contractors engaged in the construction of houses and other buildings, filed a suit against the Southern Railway Company for damages for
The defendant demurred to the petition generally, because no-
Pleadings are always to be construed most strongly against the pleader, and it is true that the 9th paragraph of the petition, if standing alone, would incline us to the view that the plaintiffs were attempting to sue, in the same action, for a tort and upon a contract, but the defendant did not take this view, and has filed no demurrer raising this point, and while the 9th paragraph is somewhat inconsistent with the petition as a whole, it can not be held to detract from or withdraw the allegations in the other paragraphs of the petition, which plainly evidence the intention of the plaintiffs to stake their case upon a tort. We do not consider that the fact of the bill of lading being attached to the petition evidences any intention on the part of the plaintiffs to sue upon the contract; because, as was held in City & Suburban Railway v. Brauss, 70 Ga. 376: “The tort, in such a case, is connected with the contract only as it enabled the tort-feasors to bring the wrong into it. If a contract imposes a legal duty upon a person, the neglect of that duty is a tort founded upon a contract. . . And in such a case, ‘the liability arises out of a breach of duty incident to, and created by, the contract; but it is only dependent upon the contract to the extent necessary to raise the duty. The tort consists in the breach of duty/ ”
The insistence of the defendant was that the damages sought to be recovered were not in the contemplation of the parties; and if the suit could be held to be an action ex contractu, the demurrer should have been sustained, because it is very easy to see that •neither party, at the time of making the contract, contemplated that any of the losses or expenditures claimed by the plaintiffs would probably be necessary. Construing the action, however, as we do, as one in tort, it is entirely immaterial that these matters were not within the contemplation of the parties at the time the contract for shipment was made. The tort-feasor is liable for any damages consequent upon his act and which are directly traceable to it, if they could reasonably have been anticipated as likely to be the result of his neglect or failure to perform his duty. In an action sounding in tort the measure of damages is different from that in an action based upon a contract. In a suit upon a contract no element of damages is recoverable, unless it can reasonably be
Measured by the rule laid down by Mr. Street, in his Foundations of Legal Liability (vol. 1, p. 90), the present action must be treated as one ex delicto, because the law of negligence is “one single homogeneous body of legal principle; and we can not dissever negligence, considered as pure delict, from negligence considered as a breach of positive. imposed duty.” Foresight of 'harm is an essential antecedent condition of liability, but when negligence is shown, a defendant who is charged with the discharge of a duty to the public is chargeable with all the injurious consequences which proximately follow and which are not too remote. Mr. Beven, in his work on Negligence (1 Bev. Neg., 3d ed. 106), says that reasonable foresight of harm supplies the criterion for determining the preliminary question as to- whether negligence in fact exists in a particular case; and that, if negligence be established, the extent of liability is determined by the rule of liability which applies in tort; that is to say, liability for established negligence- extends to all consequences of which that negligence can be considered the legal, natural, and proximate cause. Upon this point see Chappell v. Western Railway of Alabama, 8 Ga. App. 792 (70 S. E. 208), citing Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. v. Daniels, 8 Ga. App. 775 (70 S. E. 203). The rule announced in City & Suburban Railway v. Brauss, supra, has been followed in Head v. Georgia Pacific R. Co., 79 Ga. 358-60 (75 S. E. 217, 11
We have dealt with the measure of damages, in the determination of the nature of the action, because none of the items of damage alleged by the plaintiffs would be recoverable if the action is one upon the contract, since none of them could be said to be properly within the contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was made. On the other hand, construing the contract, as we must, as one in tort—dependent upon the defendant’s breach of duty, as evidenced by the contract, we will next inquire whether any or all of these items of damage are too remote to be the subject-matter of recovery. Of course, what we shall say upon this point is not conclusive, except as a matter of law; for, of course, the plaintiffs will have to prove the allegation that these damages were, as alleged, the necessary result of and directly traceable to the alleged failure to “deliver within a reasonable time.” We think that if the plaintiffs establish the allegation that it was necessary, in anticipation of the daily arrival of the finished inside work of the court-house, to retain the services of Mr. Zobell, and they paid him the sum mentioned, they would be entitled to recover it, upon proof of the allegations as to the cause of the delay. Likewise, it has been ruled more than once by the Supreme Court that the necessary .expense of tracing lost shipments is a proper subject of recovery in an action for damages, such as the present case. We think, 'also, that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover the amount they paid in compromise of the penalty for failing to complete the buildings in time, provided the jury are satisfied that their liability to this penalty was due to the delay in the delivery of the shipment,- set out in the petition. And if, by reason of the delay, the plaintiffs were required, in order to maintain their credit and meet demands when due, to borrow $14,000, which they would not have had to borrow but for the delay in delivery of this shipment, they would be entitled to have judgment, for the reasons stated in the headnote. We think the trial judge properly sustained the demurrer, so far as relates to the alleged value of the time of the two partners composing the plaintiff firm, upon the ground that these items were too remote for recovery, since there are no allegations showing how or why it was necessary for the plaintiffs to lose the time, and it not