122 Ga. 407 | Ga. | 1905
On December 12, 1898, Mrs. Alice L. Garwood, A. C. Lampkin and others interested in certain pending litigation, entered into a written agreement, the purpose of which was to settle all differences of the parties and to make division amongst them of a fund in controversy, as well as to determine their respective interests in certain city lots in Macon. Under the terms of this agreement, Mrs. Garwood was to receive a deed to the land in Macon, free from encumbrances, and Lampkin agreed to pay to Steed & Wimberly, a firm of attorneys who had been employed to bring a suit to recover the land, a fee for the services which that firm had rendered in that suit. The amount of this fee was not stated in the contract. It appears, however that W. P. Calhoun and Steed & Wimberly, as attorneys for the plaintiffs in the suit, had filed a lien against the land for $250 attorney’s
Certain other allegations, against which the same objection was urged, ought, however, to have been stricken. Besides stressing the fact that the defendant was her brother, which was wholly immaterial, the plaintiff alleged that during the fall of the year, when she was trying to perfect a sale of the land and desired to leave the State, “'her bad health and nervous condition was very greatly aggravated by the matter and the refusal of said Lampkin to assist her in it, which in equity and good conscience he should have done.” Granting that this was true, it neither gave rise to any cause of action against the defendant nor illustrated any point or issue in the case. Such allegations, in a suit for a breach of contract, not only have no place in legitimate pleading* but are calculated to mislead and prejudice the jury, if read in their hearing or commented on in the argument of the case by the plaintiff.
Nor was the plaintiff entitled to recover the item of $12, which represented the amount she had expended in railroad fare in going to Macon to attend to the matter of freeing her land from that lien. ' It could not be recovered under the section of the code above cited, for the reason that she did not set forth facts upon which to base her charge of bad faith; and certainly this was not an item which was recoverable under the contract sued on, not being within the contemplation of the parties thereto. On the contrary, the measure of damages for the alleged breach of covenant was the ¿mount of money necessary to-discharge the interest of Steed & Wimberly in the lien on the land, with interest on that amount from the date of payment.
Judgment reversed.