132 Ga. 529 | Ga. | 1909
In January, 1907, J. C. Cooper purchased 1504 tons of fertilizers from the National Fertilizer Company, of Nashville, Tennessee. The contract was in writing, and provided that the Fertilizer Company agreed to sell to Cooper certain brands of fertilizers at stated prices, which were to contain a certain percentage of fertilizer ingredients, and that Cooper was to sell the fertilizer, take notes from the purchasers, payable to the company, and deliver to the company these notes as collateral for the notes which
Is the Fertilizer Company liable on its breach of warranty for injury to the plaintiff’s business because the quantity of one of the ingredients of two brands of the fertilizer fell slightly below the seller’s guaranty, under all the circumstances of the case? One of the brands of the .fertilizer was guaranteed to contain phosphoric acid 9%, nitrogen 3.47%, potash 3%. The fertilizer ingredients actually found by the State chemist were phosphoric acid 1-0.55%, nitrogen 3.10%, potash 3.35%. The commercial value of this brand as claimed by the manufacturer was $31.13, and as actually found by official analysis was $31.09; the difference in commercial value being four cents per ton. Another brand was shown to be deficient in phosphoric acid .75%, and in commercial value twenty-three cents per ton. Of the 1,504 tons purchased, 117 tons were shown to be deficient in commercial value four cents per ton, and 75 tons were shown to be deficient in commercial value twenty-three cents per ton; the deficiency in neither brand amounting to as much as three per cent, of the commercial value. Section 3 of the act approved December 18, 1901 (Acts 1901, p. 65), is as follows: “If any commercial fertilizer or fertilizer material offered for sale in this State shall, upon official analysis, prove deficient in any of its ingredients as guaranteed and branded upon the sacks or packages, and if by reason of .such deficiency the commercial value thereof shall fall three per cent, below the guaranteed total commercial value of such fertilizer or fertilizer material, then any note or obligation given in payment thereof shall be collectible by law only for the amount of actual total commercial value as ascertained by said official analysis, and any person or corporation selling the same shall be liable to the consumer, by reason of such deficiency, for such damages, if any, as may be proven and obtained by him on trial before a jury in any court of competent jurisdiction in this State.”
There is no common-law duty to brand sacks of fertilizer. This is purely a statutory requirement. The act of 1901 provides that
There is no contention by the plaintiff that his customers refused to pay for fertilizers because of the variance in the percentage of a fertilizing ingredient, or that the variance between the guaranteed.
A plaintiff who seeks reparation in damages to his business, from a breach of contract, is limited to the recovery of damages which are the natural and material consecprence of the act' from which the damage flows. Loss of prospective profits is ordinarily too remote for recovery. 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 baáís for the computation of damages.
Where no fact is pleaded .to reduce the recovery on a note for fertilizers, other than a variance in fertilizer ingredients between the guaranteed and official analyses, and it appears that the total commercial value of the ingredients as ascertained by official analysis comes within three per cent, of the commercial value of the ingredients as guaranteed and branded on the sacks, the vendor may recover the contract price. The law as embodied in the act of 1901 becomes a part of the contract of sale, and such a small discrepancy is declared by the legislature as unavailing to impair the contract of sale. In view, therefore, of the facts before the judge, ho was authorized to find that the alleged damages to the defendant’s business were neither contemplated by the parties in the sale and purchase of the fertilizers, nor were they the legal consequence of the immaterial variance between the guaranteed and official analyses of two brands of the fertilizer, -but that, if the plaintiff’s business was injured, the proximate cause was the sale, knowingly made by Cooper, of fertilizer of short weight and in defective sacks.