53 Ga. App. 547 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1936
Mrs. Walters, the vendee under a conditional-sale contract, sued Hagan, the vendor, for $2500, on account of alleged fraudulent representations, made through an agent, inducing her purchase of restaurant equipment as described in the contract. To the contract was attached an affidavit by the vendor, stating that he was the sole owner of the properties, owed no debts therefor, and had a legal right to sell. The original petition, containing these averments, also alleged that the plaintiff relied on another representation that the vendor had been using the equipment in operating a restaurant at the place where it was then located, and had realized net profits of $300 to $400 a month from such operation during the previous year or longer. It was further stated that all of these representations were untrue; that about the middle of May, 1934, the plaintiff was informed that the stools and silver napkin-holders, all included in the bill of sale, had not been paid for and did not belong to the defendant, as he later admitted; that he took the properties back about June 9, 1934; that ho injured and damaged the plaintiff in the amount of the consideration paid, $600 cash and $151.50 during March and April, 1934, and also in the amount of loss (between $300 and $400 a month) which the plaintiff sustained in operating the restaurant from February 9, 1934, the date of purchase, to June 9, 1934. In an amendment, allowed without objection, it was alleged that in buying the personal property, and in leasing the place of business from the owner, a third person, the plaintiff relied on the defendant’s representations that all debts on the properties had been paid and there were no creditors, and that the defendant had-been operating the business at the stated monthly profit; whereas (as the plaintiff did not discover until the latter part of May, 1934) the stools, napkin-rings, and cash-register had not
The vendee would be permitted to show the falsity of any oral statement of fact by the vendor as to past or existing conditions in the use of the equipment to conduct a profitable business at the place where it was located, if such a misstatement was material in inducing the vendee to buy the equipment. But the vendee could not show that she relied on any such oral misstatement as a warranty or promise by the vendor that the vendee herself would be able to realize a like profit, and would not sustain a loss, in continuing the business. Any damages from a failure to realize such profits or from a loss would be entirely too remote and speculative for recovery. They could not be deemed as having been in the contemplation of the parties as naturally flowing or resulting from the vendor’s alleged statement of past experience. See Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Anderson, 13 Ga. App. 772, 774 (80 S. E. 32); Walker v. Story, 14 Ga. App. 803 (82 S. E. 355); Smalls v. Brennan, 14 Ga. App. 84 (80 S. E. 339).
The fact that the bulk-sales statute, requiring the execution by the vendor of an affidavit as to his creditors and indebtedness (Code, § 28-203), has no application to fixtures such as the restaurant equipment here involved, since they are not goods, wares, and merchandise, within the terms of the law (Martin v. Taylor, 24 Ga. App. 599, 101 S. E. 690), would not preclude the vendee from relying on any false material representations as to his liens or debts, made by the vendor in such an affidavit, which was furnished to the vendee in the sale of the fixtures. While the penalties of the bulk-sales law could not have been invoked, the effect of any such misrepresentations in the affidavit would be the same as if they had been made to the vendee in any other manner.
Under the foregoing principles, the original petition, taken with the first amendment (which was allowed without any objection or demurrer) stated a cause of action in tort, under the alleged fraudulent representations and the rescission, as stated, for the recovery of $751.50 paid on the purchase-price before discovery of the alleged fraud and the rescission. However, the petition failed to state any cause of action for recovery of the lost profits
Judgment affirmed in pari and reversed in part on the mam MU of exceptions; affirmed on the cross-MU of exceptions.