The original petition sought to *164 recover for the breach of a contract allegedly entered into in February, 1952, the terms of which called for the plaintiff to be entitled to 5% of the gross rental on described apartment units until May 1st, 1985, in return for the plaintiff performing described services. The original petition sought to recover for the entire period of time covered by the contract after the alleged breach by the defendant while the petition as finally amended sought only to recover for the period after the alleged breach until the suit was filed.
The petition nowhere alleges whether the contract was oral or written, and under numerous decisions of this court and the Supreme Court, “When a contract within the statute of frauds is declared on, the court will presume that it was in writing, and no averment to that effect is necessary.”
Coleman v. Woodland Hills Co.,
The petition as finally amended alleged a breach by the defendant corporation of the contract between it and the plaintiff corporation entered into by the agents of the respective corporations in the scope of their authority. The damages sought are from the date of the alleged breach until the suit was filed, and the judgment of the trial court overruling the demurrers to the petition as finally amended was not error.
Prior to the filing of the present action the plaintiff sought a temporary restraining order to enjoin the defendant from the further breach of the contract. Such injunction was denied and the plaintiff dismissed such petition before the present action was filed. The plaintiff filed a special plea in the present case wherein it was claimed that the plaintiff had previously sought to recover on an inconsistent remedy (bill in equity), and the plaintiff’s demurrer to such plea was sustained.
*165 The bill in equity, attached as an exhibit to the defendant’s special plea, sought to restrain the defendant from the further breach of a contract entered into in July, 1951, while the present action is based on the alleged breach of a contract allegedly entered into in February, 1952. Under the allegations of both petitions the plaintiff was to manage described apartments until May, 1985, for a consideration of 5% of the gross rentals. Both actions sought redress because of the defendant allegedly breaching an agreement whereby the plaintiff would manage the apartments; both actions were based on the alleged breach by the defendant.
In the case of
Peterson v.
Lott,
The plaintiff, in the cross-bill of exceptions, assigns error on the judgment sustaining certain demurrers interposed by the defendant to the plaintiff’s petition.
The petition as originally filed had attached thereto certain letters from McDonough Construction Co. of Georgia, signed in its name by its president, addressed to D. L. Stokes in which the writer outlined a proposed contract for the purchase of the property on which the apartments referred to in the instant suit were later built. The terms provided in the letters were accepted by D. L. Stokes. The demurrers addressed to such exhibits and the allegations in connection therewith were sustained. The plaintiff contends that under numerous cases of this court and the Supreme Court such allegations were proper as the history of the case. While allegations of the history of a transaction which are pertinent to the alleged cause of action are proper matter and not subject to demurrer
(Bryant v. Atlantic C. L. R. Co.,
The allegations of the plaintiff’s petition with reference to the cost incurred in the performance of the contract and dealing with what its cost would have been had it not relied upon the promises of the defendant were properly stricken on demurrer, inasmuch as such allegations sought to charge the defendant with fraud and breaching the contract in general terms only and only because of the alleged broken promise by the defendant. See
Thigpen v. Harbison-Walker &c. Co.,
The allegations as to the plaintiff waiving and relinquishing its claim to a percentage of the first month’s rent on each apartment for a smaller percentage over a long period of time was a conclusion not supported by well pleaded facts and was properly stricken on demurrer since the petition failed to allege on what basis it was entitled to such higher percentage.
One ground of the demurrer sustained by the trial court attacked allegations of the petition to the effect that on a certain date W. C. Lea, officer and agent of the defendant corporation, went to the plaintiff’s office and stated that the defendant desired to break the contract and suggested that the plaintiff and the defendant undertake to arrive at a price to be paid the plaintiff by the defendant as a substitute and in lieu of performance by the plaintiff. The demurrer attacked the allegations as attempting to allege a compromise in violation of the provisions which forbade the introduction of evidence of compromise.
‘“A
paragraph of the petition which substantially alleges that the defendant admitted a material fact contrary to its interest is not subject to demurrer.’
Zapf Realty Co. v. Brown,
The sole remaining question to be decided relates to the *168 damages recoverable under the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition. The petition, as originally filed, sought to recover the estimated lost profits for the full term of the contract; to wit; until 1985. After demurrer by the defendant the plaintiff amended and sought such profits through the dates such amendment was filed, and finally the plaintiff, after additional demurrers, amended to seek such lost profits from the time of the alleged breach until the original petition was filed.
“Code
§ 105-2009 provides in part, that damages which are the legal and natural result of the act done, though contingent to some extent, are not too remote to be recovered. ‘A plaintiff who seeks reparation in damages to his business, from a breach of contract, is limited to the recovery of damages which are the natural and material consequence of the act from which the damage flows. Loss of prospective profits is ordinarily too remote for recovery. The ¡srofits of a commercial business are dependent on so many hazards and chances, that unless the anticipated profits are capable of ascertainment, and the loss of them traceable directly to the defendant’s wrongful act, they are too speculative to afford a basis for the computation of damages.’
Cooper v. National Fertilizer Co.,
Judgment affirmed on the main bill, and judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part on the cross-bill of exceptions.
