18 Ga. App. 253 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1916
Burrell Engineering & Construction Company brought suit against the Empire Mills Company to recover a balance of $882.45, on a contract for the erection of a concrete elevator, and the further sum of $150 for furnishing and installing a certain tank, the total amount claimed aggregating $1,032.45, principal. The defendant filed a plea alleging a breach of the contract on the part of the plaintiff, in that the plaintiff had failed to comply with a certain stipulation in the “brief of specifications” attached to and made a part of the contract, the stipulation referred to being as follows: “All gravel for concrete purposes shall be reasonably free from loam and vegetable matter. All gravel for foundation may be screened through a 2 in. ring. All gravel for bin walls, cupola walls, floors, roofs, columns shall be screened through a 1 1/4 ring.” The defendant alleged that the plaintiff had failed to screen the gravel used in the concrete foundation, and thereby had injured and damaged the said foundation in the sum of $1,000, as more particularly set forth in the plea.' The defendant claimed damages also in the sum of $2,500, because the plaintiff had, by improper construction of the said elevator, injured and damaged a brick building, near which the elevator was erected, as set forth in the plea.
The question is definitely settled in Harrison v. Kiser, 79 Ga. 588 (8), 595 (4 S. E. 330), which apparently has never been overruled or doubted, and which’therefore is binding upon this court. In that case the Supreme Court held: “This suit being for an injury to the plaintiff’s house, and not to his land, the true measure of damages would be whatever sum it would require to put the house in the condition in which it was before it was injured.” The point was expressly made in that case, and was expressly passed upon, and the court held that a charge to the effect that the measure of damages was the difference between the value of the property before the injury and its value thereafter was error, though the court further held that the error was not material in that particular case, inasmuch as, from the facts of the ease, the verdict was right, and the plaintiff was not entitled to recover any damages whatsoever. Id. 395. See also Central R. Co. v. Murray, 93 Ga. 356 (4), 257 (30 S. E. 129). Judgment reversed.