79 Ga. 743 | Ga. | 1887
The action was not in any regular technical form, either common law or statutory. The declaration simply stated facts and prayed for process. It annexed, by way of exhibit, a contract under seal, executed in May, 1885, by which the defendant “rented and leased” to the plaintiff a certain store-room and basement, for the term of one year, commencing on the first of October thereafter, at fifty dollars per month, payable monthly in advance. It alleged readiness to perform, and a virtual offer to perform, on plaintiff’s part, and a breach of tbie contract on defendant’s part in letting the premises to other parties and refusing to admit the-plaintiff into possession. It laid the damages at ten thousand dollars, and averred that the plaintiff waited at great expense until the first of October, relying upon the contract, and believing that he would be put in possession and be permitted to conduct on the premises the business for which they were leased, and in the meantime was offered by a third person $500.00 to yield up his right to the property, which he declined. It alleged that the defendant, knowingly, willfully and without cause, violated his contract, and thereby subjected the plaintiff to
The declaration was demurred to as setting forth no cause of action, and because the alleged damages were too remote, not susceptible of exact computation, and consisting of a claim for profits from a collateral enterprise; which claim the demurrer insisted should be stricken, as well as the claim for $500.00 offered the plaintiff by a third person. To so much of the declaration as. referred to loss and expenses incurred while waiting for the term to begin, the defendant also demurred because they were not subjects of recovery nor pleaded with sufficient clearness.
The plaintiff abandoned his claim for the $500, and for loss and expenses incident to his waiting. The court not only sustained the demurrer as to the claim for profits, but dismissed the action. Both these rulings are drawn in question by the bill of exceptions.
Judgment reversed.