123 Ga. 850 | Ga. | 1905
(After stating the facts.) 1-5. Assuming the allegations of the declaration to be true, as we must do in considering the demurrer, each of the contracts evidenced by the two scholarships was entire, and when the defendant repudiated them the plaintiff had the right to treat his action as a rescission and bring suit for the amount which had been paid by him. Supreme Council v. Jordan, 117 Ga. 808. Or he might sue for a breach of the contract. Ala. Gold Life Ins. Co. v. Garmany, 74 Ga. 51. In the latter event that decision holds that in some cases the amount paid by the plaintiff may be considered in fixing the amount of the damages. In 8 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (2d ed.) 632 it is said: “As has been said more than once, the fundamental principle of damages is compensation to the injured party. This rule in the present connection is simply the application of the principle stated to contracts — that is, the measure of damages in such cases is the value of the bargain to the complaining party, or a loss which the fulfilment of the contract would have prevented or the breach of it has entailed. Or, as it has been said, the general intent of the law which gives damages in actions for breach of contract is to put the injured party, so far as it can be done by money, in the same position as if the contract had been performed. According to this principle the measure of damages for breach of a contract is not,sas a general rule, the consideration paid, but rather the value of the thing contracted for; unless, indeed, the plaintiff has, under the circumstances, a right to disaffirm the contract, and sue to recover the consideration paid.” The plaintiff can not in the same action both treat the contract as rescinded and rely on it. Harden v. Lang, 110 Ga. 392.
It was argued that there was a misjoinder of causes of action; but the demurrer does not make this objection to the entire declaration. It attacks the effort to recover the money paid by the plaintiff to the defendant, on the ground already considered. It then attacks other parts of the declaration, on the ground that, the action being one based on a rescission of the contract, the items of damage claimed could not be properly joined with the suit for the money paid. This contention, if sustained, would result in striking those particular items, but nob in dismissing the entire action for a misjoinder of causes of action. It is not the same thing to say that a declaration contains two inconsistent causes of action, and to put the plaintiff on his election to dismiss one 'bf them or have the entire suit dismissed, and to say that the action is of a particular character, and that certain other claims can not be added to it.
6. From what has been said it is evident that the claim for expenses in attending school, expenses pending the suit, and delay in being prepared for business can not be joined with the action for the return of the purchase-price, based upon a rescission of the contract. Moreover, the allegations of the declaration with respect to those items are quite vague and general, and a part of the damages would not be recoverable even in an action based on a breach of the contract. The dismissal of the entire case was erroneous. The claim to recover the items of damage just referred to should have been stricken, and the case left to stand on the suit for the return of the price paid for the scholarships.
7. It does not affirmatively appear that there was a written
Judgment reversed, with directions.