(After stating the foregoing facts.) The objections raised by the special demurrer could have been cured by amendment. The parties have argued only the controlling question. It would be unprofitable to consider each of the many special grounds of the demurrer. We shall therefore consider only the points which the bill of exceptions indicates were involved in the decision by the trial judge. Moss v. Fortson, 99 Ga. 496.
1. A party is not obliged to set out in his pleadings the evidence on which he relies. The failure to allege that a contract is in writing raises no presumption that it exists only in parol. It is now well settled in this State, that, where proceedings are
2, 3. The plaintiff agreed to sell certain timber to the defendant at a certain price. It also agreed to buy from him lumber cut therefrom at a certain price. The damages arising from the breach of the contract to sell Q|, the breach of the contract to buy were recoverable, and the measure of damages in such cases is clearly defined. But treating the counter-affidavit as pleading, seeking to set up a cause of action for the damages resulting from the plaintiffs refusal to permit the defendant to operate the mill and cut the timber sold for that purpose, it was not demurrable. Anderson was not suing to recover profits which were dependent on some other enterprise entered into because he* happened to have this contract. He sued for the profits which would have been the immediate result of his operating a mill which the plaintiff had agreed he might operate when it stipulated that he should cut the trees and saw them into lumber for purposes of sale. He was suing for damages in contemplation of the parties when the contract was made. Civil Code, § 3798; Stewart v. Lanier Co., 75 Ga. 582; Waycross Co. v. Offerman Co., 114 Ga. 731; Kenny v. Collier, 79 Ga. 744.
4. Of course, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover for the profits and also, the expenses in conducting the business. Moving "the mill to the land or removing the mill from the land were not expenses incurred in carrying out a contract between two parties, such as those included in Civil Code, § 3806. Nor are they expenses to which a party was put by reason of a tort referred to in Civil Code, §3908. But the expenses of moving and removing the mill were a necessary part of the cost of conducting defendant’s business and by the expenditure of which he expected to make the profit for which he sued. They are no more recoverable than would be the expenses of paying his employees while the mill was actually in operation.
5. The mortgage did provide that the property thereby con- , veyed should be security for any advances thereafter made to the defendant by the plaintiff. It is alleged, that an agreement to lend was violated, and that the defendant was damaged by the
Judgment reversed.