Appellee sued appellant for breach of an oral contract for the purchase and installation of certain materials during the construction of appellant’s house. Appellee was awarded $5,000 by a jury. For reversal of the judgment appellant asserts the jury’s award of damages was based upon speculation and conjecture. We must agree that appellee did not sufficiently prove his damages or loss of potential profits with reasonable certainty.
The proof of lost profits must be shown by evidence which makes it “reasonably certain” what the plaintiff would have made. Farmers Cooperative Assn. v. Phillips,
Lost profits, which are the basis for the award of damages here, are determined by the formula: contract price minus cost of performance equals profit. The profit in this case, a cost plus contract, rests upon 15% of certain materials purchased and whatever profit ap-pellee would make on the $12 per hour labor for installation.
The actual labor cost consists of the cost of a tile setter and helper. The helper was to be paid at the rate of $2.75 per hour, leaving $9.25 per hour in labor cost. Appellee was to be the tile setter and there is no testimony as to what his hourly wage was worth. Without evidence as to the value of appellee’s individual time, we have no way of ascertaining how much profit was to be made on the remaining $9.25 an hour of labor cost. Without that figure, damages are speculative.
Appellant next contends that appellee failed to prove a contract. The uncontradicted testimony of appellee (appellant did not testify) is that when he asked appellant if $12 per hour for labor plus 15% of the cost of certain materials would be satisfactory, appellant said “yes.” Ap-pellee also testified that when they completed their negotiations appellant said “[V]ery good, this is the way we will do the job.” There was also an understanding as to the time and method of payment. A factual dispute as to the existence of a contract properly presents a question for the jury. Bush v. Wofford,
Appellant next contends that the contract would be prohibited by the statute of frauds, Ark. Stat. Ann. § 38-101 (Repl. 1962), since it could not be performed within one year. However, there was evidence that by employing additional help, appellee could have completed the job in six months. Since the contract was capable of performance within one year, it was not prohibited by the statute of frauds. Frieder v. Schleuter,
Appellant next cites Ark. Stat. Ann. § 85-2-201 (
Appellant’s final contention for a directed verdict is that “the damages alleged by the appellee could not have been in contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was made, or that such damages were the proximate result of appellant’s wrongs.” This contention is meritless. In the case at bar, loss of profits is naturally the proximate result of a breach of contract. Appellee’s loss of profits is also the type of a foreseeable loss that would be within the reasonable contemplation of the parties at the making of the contract.
Reversed and remanded.
