Wade H. Leonard filed suit against Firemen’s Insurance Company. He alleged substantially that the defendant issued him an automobile insurance policy covering
The plaintiff’s case, as shown by the faсts alleged in the petition, was plainly and simply one arising on a breach of a contract. The relation between the plaintiff and the defendant insurance company was simply a contractual one. However, the petition plainly seeks to assert damages as for a tort. “ ‘The mere breach of an ordinary contract does not constitute a tort; and if there is no liability exсept that arising out of a breach of a purely contractual duty, the action must be in contract, and an action in tort cаn not be maintained.’ There are certain classes of contracts that create a relation froto which the law implies duties a breach of which will constitute a tort, and ‘in such cases an injured party may sue either for breach of the contract, оr in tort’ for breach of the implied duty. This rule applies in certain contractual relations between principal and agent, bailor and bailee, attorney and client, physician and patient, carrier and passenger or shipper, master and servant, аnd similar well-recognized relations; but it is not every contractual relation which involves a public duty the breach of which will support an action in tort.”
Manley
v.
Exposition Cotton Mills,
The petition in the instant case clearly fails to show that there was any special relationship, beyond the mere contractual one, between the plaintiff and the defendant company which would authorizе the plaintiff to maintain an action ex delicto on- account of the breach of the contract. Assuming that the allegatiоns of the petition are sufficient to show an actual breach of the contract by the insurance company by a refusal tо pay a sum of money to the plaintiff under the contract, such a refusal constituted no more than the breach of any other contract obligating a party to pay a sum of money on the happening of a specified contingency and thus creating the mere relation of debtor and creditor between the plaintiff and defendant, and such breach did not involve the violation of a public or private duty resulting in the invasion of any vested right of the plaintiff independent of that created by the contract itself.
L. & N. R. Co.
v.
Spinks,
104
Ga.
692, 697 (
The mere refusal of the defendant insurance company to pay sums due according to the provisions of the policy on aсcount of the loss suffered by the plaintiff did not deprive him of the use of his automobile, and damages alleged on account of such loss of use of his automobile were too- remote to be considered as having been within the contemplation of the parties in making the contract of insurance.
Fain
v.
Wilkerson,
22
Ga. App.
193, 194 (3) (
Damages sought to be recovered by the petition in this case are in the nature of а penalty, which the plaintiff claims the defendant owes him because of its failure to promptly settle his claim. The penalties imposed against insurance companies doing business in this State for their failure or refusal to pay claims within a reasonable time аfter demand has been made
Nothing herein said conflicts with
Francis
v.
Newton,
75
Ga. App.
341 (
It follows that the trial court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer and in dismissing the petition.
Judgment affirmed.
