83 S.E. 458 | N.C. | 1914
This action was brought to recover damages for an alleged breach of a contract, by which defendant sold to the plaintiffs his retail grocery business in Lexington, with the fixtures and good-will belonging thereto, at cost for the goods, wares, and merchandise, and $1,000 for the fixtures and good-will, plaintiffs paying $200 as a bonus, and defendant agreeing not to conduct the same kind of business (323) in said town for one and a half years thereafter. The breach alleged was that defendant loaned money to Michael Parker, a new grocery firm, and that the telephone number which had been used by the *366
defendant in the old store had been changed and the old number transferred to the phone of the new firm. There were some other minor complaints made against defendant, but we think they are not sufficient to show any breach of the contract. Even if defendant committed the small offenses imputed to him, and they were calculated to cause injury to plaintiff, the damages claimed are entirely too speculative and conjectural to form the basis of a recovery, and, besides, the casual connection between the imputed wrongs, if the latter are of sufficient consequence to be noticed by the law (de minimis non curat lex), and the alleged injury is not shown with any semblance of accuracy. We cannot jump to a conclusion, but the proof must be of such a character as to show with at least some degree of certainty that the alleged wrongs produced an injury, or resulted in a violation of plaintiff's rights. Both wrong and damage must be shown, and it must appear that the latter, was the effect and the former the cause. Byrd v. Express Co.,
We said in Faust v. Rohr,
The difficulty which plaintiff encounters in this case is that he offers no tangible proof of a breach of the contract. There is, perhaps, something from which we may suppose or conjecture that there was a slight interference with the quiet and reasonable enjoyment by plaintiff of the goodwill which he had purchased; but this will not do, and the evidence must be more definite. We thus expressed ourselves in Crenshaw v. StreetRailway, 144 N.C. at p. 320: "The kind of proof which must be forthcoming in order to establish the issues in favor of the plaintiff was considered recently by us in Byrd v. Express Co.,
The defendant may not have acted with due propriety, nor with perfect good faith, but we cannot see that he has committed any legal wrong. The telephone was entirely under the control of the telephone company, and Michael Parker had the right to it if the company consented that they might use it, or did not object thereto, after notice of their doing so. It promised to restore it to the plaintiff, but, it seems, did not do so, for some reason, we suppose, satisfactory to itself.
It may be added that defendant was not required by his contract to see that plaintiff retained all the customers of the old business. He could not do this, as they were at liberty to trade where they pleased; nor does it sufficiently appear how many, if any of them, were lost by plaintiff, (326) whether by any action of defendant or not. We are, therefore, left suspended in the realm of conjecture, without any appreciable *369 thing, either definite, or certain, being proved, and the damages more uncertain than anything else, if there was any wrong.
The case, in its final analysis, seems to have been reduced to the very attenuated matter of a few eggs and a small quantity of butter sold by W. N. Shoaf, a former customer of defendant, to Michael Parker; but Shoaf testified: "I had several places to trade and went everywhere, for that purpose, that I pleased," or words to that effect. Taking all the evidence together, it does not measure up to the standard fixed by the law.
The court nonsuited plaintiff at the close of his evidence, and we see no error in its doing so.
Affirmed.
Cited: Martin v. Vinson,