(After stating the fore’going facts.)
1. There was no unequivocal statement in the contract as to the time when the purchaser was to be put in possession of the land. In the stipulations regulating the time of making the j)ayments of purchase-money, it appears that the second payment of $400 was to be made on January 1, 1908, or “as soon thereafter as delivery of said lands can be made free from all leases or encumbrances,” and the final payment was due “12 months after the date of the delivery of the land, which delivery shall be from or at the time the attorneys pass on the title.” From these stipulations it seems that the parties contemplated that the vendor was to put the vendee in possession as soon as the title had been passed on by the attorneys, that is, the legal title was found to be in the vendor; and that all leases or incumbrances were to be removed before the second installment of $400 was to become due. Inasmuch as this installment was made payable on January 1, 1908, or “as soon thereafter as delivery of said lands can be made free from all leases and encumbrances,” and in view of the other provisions as to the delivery of the land, it is fair to impute an intention on the part of the seller to free the land of leases and encumbrances by January 1, 1908, or within a reasonable time thereafter. The vendee had the right to demand of the vendors that on January 1, 1908, or within a reasonable time thereafter, the vendors clear the title of encumbrances. According to the petition it was in contemplation of the parties, at the time the contract of sale was made, that the vendee was purchasing the land for the purpose of dividing it into lots and selling the same. _ The contract of sale was made about four months before the second installment was to fall due, by which time it was contemplated by the parties that all encumbrances were to be removed. In the meantime the titles were to'be examined, and, when passed on by the attorneys, the purchaser was to be put in possession, so that he might make the preliminary preparations for the sale of lots. ' Construing the contract as evincing a mutual intention of the parties that the vendors were to clear the *445title of encumbrances by January 1, 1908, or within a reasonable time thereafter, we are confronted with the proposition whether, under the facts alleged, the time transpiring before the plaintiffs renunciation of the contract was so short as to deny the defendants .a reasonable time within which they were to rid the land of encumbrances. When the time of performance of a covenant of contract is not fixed therein, but depends upon extrinsic facts known to both parties at the time of the execution of the contract, it is for the jury to determine, in the light of such facts, what a reasonable time is. When we consider the nature of this transaction as alleged in the petition, and the allegation that the defendants could not comply with their covenant to remove encumbrances, we can not say as a matter of law that the vendors had not breached their contract at the time the vendee notified them of his intention to abandon it because of their failure to remove the encumbrances.
If'the jury should find from the attendant circumstances, that, at the time the vendee wrote to his vendors that he would not further perform his contract, 'a reasonable time had elapsed within which the vendors could have removed the encumbrances, then the failure of the vendors to remove the encumbrances from the land within such time would be an unreasonable delay, and the vendors’ dereliction in this .respect would be a breach of the contract. But if at the time the vendee wrote to the vendors that he would abandon the contract the vendors had not breached it,-in that they had a reasonable time after January 1, 1908; to remove the encumbrances on the land, which had not expired, the renunciation of the contract by the vendee, accepted by the vendors, would bar the vendee of an action for its breach. Where both parties to a contract abandon it, one can not recover for its breach by the other. Eaves v. Cherokee Iron Company, 73 Ga. 459.
It is true that the petition does not allege that a reasonable time had elapsed when the plaintiff notified the defendants of his intention to abandon the contract. It is a rule of pleading ■ that where time for the performance is not specified in an agreement, it should be averred that it was to be done within a reasonable time and that such reasonable time had elapsed when performance was required. Osborne v. Lawrence, 9 Wend. 135. But where all the facts of the case are pleaded, the failure to specifically denominate the time appearing from such facts to be a reasonable time does *446not render the petition open to general demurrer on that ground. The plaintiffs case as stated is, (1) an executory contract for the sale of land, by the terms of which the vendors are to remove all encumbrances therefrom within a reasonable time after January 1, 1908; (2) a breach of that contract by failing to remove the encumbrances by January 4, 1908, under circumstances authorizing an inference that a reasonable time had elapsed by that date, within which the defendants ought to have removed the encumbrances; and (3) special damages resulting from the breach. The plaintiff alleged compliance with his contractual obligations, and it was error to dismiss the petition on general demurrer.
2. The amendment which the court disallowed alleged matters variant with the theory of the plaintiffs case as originally pleaded. The petition alleged a contract and its breach, and claimed resultant damages. The proffered amendment alleged, that, ten days after the execution of the contract, the vendee discovered that the vendors did not hold title to'the land, but held under a bond from the Claxton Bank, and that the vendors assured him that they would pay the indebtedness to the bank by the 15th of December, 1907; and that, acting on such representation, the vendee made the expenditures the value of which was sought to be recovered in the original action. These assurances and the vendors’ representations as to their title were fraudulently made to deceive, and did deceive the vendee. It was further alleged that it was the intention of the parties in making the contract of sale that actual possession of the land should be delivered to the vendee by January 1, 1908, and that the words, “as soon thereafter as delivery of said lands can be made free from all leases or encumbrances,” were intended to apply to such persons occupying buildings on the land to move therefrom, in the event sickness or weather should prevent their removal by January 1, 1908. The amendment was properly rejected. The amendment contained no prayer to reform the contract. Where a written contract is unambiguous, it will be construed according to its plain meaning, without reference to extrinsic parol proof of the intention of the parties in making the instrument. Nor would allegations of false representations made to induce the plaintiff’s conduct, pleaded as a ground of rescission of the contract, be appropriate to a petition claiming damages for its breach.
3. The defendant demurred specially to the paragraph of the *447petition claiming attorney’s fees as damages because of the defendants’ bad faith and fraudulent conduct in refusing to comply with their contract. “The expenses of litigation are not generally allowed as part of the damages; but if the defendant has acted in bad faith, or has been stubbornly litigious, or has caused the plain-. tiff unnecessary trouble and expense, the jury may allow them.” Civil Code (1910), § 4392. The allegations of the petition, taken in connection with the paragraph directly attacked, were sufficient to bring the ease within the cited section.
Judgment reversed.
All the Justices concur.