Georgia Power & Light Co. v. Fruit Growers Express Co.

190 S.E. 669, 55 Ga. App. 520, 1937 Ga. App. LEXIS 414
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 20, 1937
Docket25816, 25863
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 190 S.E. 669 (Georgia Power & Light Co. v. Fruit Growers Express Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia Power & Light Co. v. Fruit Growers Express Co., 190 S.E. 669, 55 Ga. App. 520, 1937 Ga. App. LEXIS 414 (Ga. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinions

Guerry, J.

The Georgia Power and Light Company brought suit against the Eruit Growers Express Company, to recover damage for breach of a contract requiring and obligating the defendant to accept and pay for a minimum of 20,000 tons of ice during each year of 1932 and 1933, at a price fixed by the contract. The defendant admitted its failure to accept and pay for such ice, and raised only the issue as to the amount of damage to which the plaintiff was entitled. By agreement the matter was submitted to an auditor to pass upon all questions of law and fact. To the report of the auditor both parties filed exceptions of law and exceptions of fact. The exceptions were heard by the judge without intervention of a jury. All of the exceptions of the plaintiff, both of law and of fact, were overruled, and the defendant’s exceptions were sustained. The plaintiff assigns error on that ruling. The defendant took a cross-bill of exceptions.

The contract sued on was made in July, 1926. Performance was to begin May 1, 1927. The contract required the plaintiff to build and maintain at Waycross, Georgia, a plant fully equipped with modern appliances for the manufacture, storage, and distribution of ice, according to plans and specifications approved by the Fruit Growers Express Company. It was to have a daily manufacturing capacity of not less than 150 tons of ice, and a storage capacity of not less than 6000 tons. The plaintiff was also to construct buildings, runways, machinery, platforms, and other facilities necessary for the loading and handling of such ice, and delivering the same to the defendant in its cars, and was to [522]*522load said ice into cars of the defendant at its own expense. The contract further provided that on six months written notice the plaintiff was to enlarge its plant to sufficient size to meet all requirements of the defendant. The defendant agreed to take, each calendar year during the continuation of said contract, which was to run for a period of fifteen years from May 1, 1927, a minimum of 20,000 tons of ice and to pay therefor $3.25 per ton, which payments were to be made during each calendar year. During the calendar year 1932 the defendant accepted and paid for only 9427 tons of ice, and failed and refused to pay for the minimum amount it had agreed to accept and pay for. In 1933 it accepted and paid for 8300 tons, and failed and refused to accept or pay for the minimum number of tons agreed on. The plaintiff sued for the contract price of $3.25 per ton on the ice undelivered, less the cost of manufacture, including labor and materials and services incident to icing and reicing cars in the manner provided in the contract, which amount was alleged and shown to be $1.29 per ton. The aggregate amount sued for was approximately $45,000.

By its answer the defendant denied that plaintiff could have manufactured the undelivered ice at the cost named in the petition, and that any damage resulted to the plaintiff; and alleged that the profits lost by the plaintiff, if any, must be measured by applying to the number of tons of ice the defendant is alleged not to have purchased and received the per ton profit, if any, the plaintiff would have realized had it manufactured and delivered the full amount agreed on under the contract; and that the difference between the total contract price and the complete cost of manufacturing and delivering the entire minimum amount would disclose the net profits. It was further alleged that the contract was an entire and indivisible contract for the purchase and sale, each year throughout its life, of a minimum amount at a fixed price; that the profits lost by the plaintiff in the years 1932 and 1933, if any, must be measured by applying to the number of tons of ice which the defendant failed to accept and pay for in each of said years the per ton profit, if any, that the plaintiff would have realized each year had it manufactured and delivered the.ice, called for under the contract; that the difference between the total contract price and the complete cost of manufacturing [523]*523and delivering the entire twenty thousand tons would disclose the net profits for each year, and such profit could be determined only in that way.

The evidence of the plaintiff showed that the cost of manufacture and delivery to the defendant of the undelivered ice would have amounted to $1.29 per ton, and that no other items of expense would have accrued. It disclosed also the total cost to the plaintiff of the plant, and the operating revenues and the operate ing expenses. This estimate did not include the cost of manufacture and delivery of the ice and of superintendence, insurance, taxes, maintenance of buildings and grounds, depreciation, etc., because, as the plaintiff contended, such items would not be affected by the manufacture of additional tonnage, and these amounts would not have been changed by the manufacture of the additional tonnage under the contract. The defendant introduced a table of what it termed omitted costs incurred in the carrying on of the business by the plaintiff, which included maintenance of buildings and grounds, superintendence, ice inventory, taxes, insrrrance, and depreciation, which, if said items were included in the cost off manufacture, would amount to another $1.49 per ton, and contended that said sum and the $1.29 cost of labor, materials, and delivery represented the actual cost of manufacturing the ice, and that the difference between these two sums and the contract price of $3.25 per ton was the damage per ton that plaintiff had suffered. It was shown by the evidence for plaintiff, that these sums of maintenance, taxes, insurance, and depreciation would have been present whether the plant was operated or not.

The question for determination is, what is the proper measure of damages applying to the particular situation? This is the controlling issue. The auditor, whose findings were approved by the court, found that the damage accruing to the plaintiff was the difference between the contract price of the ice not manufactured by the plaintiff or accepted by defendant and the manufacturing costs thereof, and that this manufacturing cost included not only the $1.29 per ton which was the amount which would have been expended by plaintiff in making the ice, but also the proportionate part of the overhead expense listed under the items cited above. The parties were in accord as to the number of tons of ice [524]*524accepted and paid for by the defendant during each of the years 1933 and 1933. The Code declares: “Damages are given as compensation for the injury sustained.” § 30-1403. “Damages recoverable for a breach of contract are such as arise naturally and according to the usual course of things from such breach, and such as the parties contemplated when the contract was made, as the probable result of its breach.” § 30-1407. In White & Hamilton Lumber Co. v. Lynch, 159 Ga. 383 (135 S. E. 473, 44 A. L. R.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.E. 669, 55 Ga. App. 520, 1937 Ga. App. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-power-light-co-v-fruit-growers-express-co-gactapp-1937.