Lewis v. Collier

DENSON, J.

— There can be nothing available to the defendants (appellants) in the grounds of error which challenge the correctness of the trial court’s action in overruling the motion to quash the service and striking the plea in abatement. The summons and complaint and the sheriff’s return were all amended, and the amendments cured the supposed defects. —S. A. & M. Ry. v. Buford, 106 Ala. 303, 17 South. 395. According to the complaint, this action is based upon an alleged breach of the conditions of an injunction bond. Two items of damages are alleged to be consequent upon the breach, viz.: Liability incurred for attorney’s fees in securing dissolution of the injunction, and loss of profits upon “being kept out of the running of plaintiff’s business as a restaurant keeper for a period of two weeks.” *535The injunction was issued to prevent plaintiff from carrying on the business of keeping a restaurant, and was served on him between the hours of 6 and 7 p. m., November 14, 1906.

. The plaintiff’s undisputed testimony, in respect to his conduct after service of the injunction was perfected upon him, and as to his disposition of the property, is as follows: “I at once got Mr. Meeks, who happened to be in the restaurant at the time, to telephone to one of my lawyers, Mr. Goodhue. * * In the course of a half hour, Mr. Goodhue came into the restaurant. I showed the writ of injunction to him, and he advised me to cease doing business at once. I told him that I owed Messrs. Herzberg and Stephens for the outfit of the restaurant, that previous to this time they furnished the money to me to bay the restaurant, and to secure them I had given them a bill of sale. I asked Mr. Good-hue if the injunction prevented me from turning the outfit over to Herzberg and Stephens. He told me, ‘No,’ that I had a perfect right, in good faith, to turn the restaurant over to these gentlemen, who would have the right to accept it in payment of their debt or to hold it under the bill of sale, and do what they saw7 fit with it, provided it wTas not operated in my name and I had no interest in, and I had nothing to do with the operation of the restaurant. In about 40 Minutes after the injunction was served, Messrs. Herzberg and Stephens came into the restaurant, and I turned the property over to them, and went out of business, and stayed out of business until the injunction was dissolved by the decree of Judge Disque on the 26th day of November, 1906. After the injunction was dissolved, Messrs. Herzberg and Stephens turned the restaurant back to me. This occurred in about an hour after I received notice of the dissolution of the injunction. They did not ac*536count to me for the profits made while they ran it. I had no interest in the restaurant while they were running it. I boarded at the restaurant Avhile they were running it, and paid board to them. I had been engaged in the restaurant business in Gadsden for about six years. I had been operating the restaurant which I waits operating at the time I was enjoined for about two months before I was enjoined.” If this testimony is worthy of credence, it shows that, when the injunction was served, the plaintiff voluntarily parted with all title, claim, and control to and over the restaurant, and had no further interest in it until it Avas “turned back” to him after the injunction Avas dissolved. Under what contract or arrangement it was turned back to him is not disclosed by the evidence, and it not deemed material here. Notwithstanding he parted with his interest in the business, and it Avas operated by others, the plaintiff Avas alloAved to prove and recover for profits which, he contended, would have accrued to him during the two Aveeks the injunction was in force. We cannot see upon what principle a person may be accorded damages in the form of profits which might have arisen from a business Avhich he voluntarily parted with and did not OAvn during the period in which he claims the profit® would have accrued. To entitle himself to such profit» (if under any circumstances they are recoverable), he should have retained the property — the business. There Avas no compulsion to dispose of it on account of the injunction, but he might do so of his OAvn volition; and, having so done, profits Avhich might have accrued during the period he did not OAvn the property are not recoverable.

But, Avaiving the foregoing principle, Ave come to the contention of the parties in respect to the subject of damages. Profits Avere allowed to be proved and recovered for the tAVo Aveeks during which plaintiff did *537not run the restaurant upon the theory that the plaintiff’s business as the keeper of a restaurant was an established one, and, therefore, that the objection that sueh damages were conjectural and speculative was inapplicable. What is the testimony upon which the theory of “established business” is rested? The plaintiff, in addition to his evidence set out above, testified that he “did not during all seasons of the year and at all times make a profit in the restaurant business; that the best times for profit in the restaurant business were when the jury terms of the court were being held in Gadsden; that there Avere some periods in the restaurant business when it lost money; that.he Avas enjoined on Monday night of the first week of a four Aveeks’ jury term of the city court of Gadsden; that the said jury term continued during the time while he was enjoined and for about two weeks thereafter; that this jury term brought a great many jurors, witnesses, and litigants from the surrounding country to Gadsden.” On the foregoing evidence, against the objection of the defendants, plaintiff was allowed to testify: “At the time I was closed up the average receipts of my restaurant were from $50 to $60 per day and my aA^erage expenses Avere from $20 to $30 a day.” Tt is clear to the court that the evidence does not show an established business in that lega] sense Avhich makes evidence of profits unobjectionable on the grounds that they are speculative and conjectural. While plaintiff testifies that he had been in the restaurant business in Gadsden six years, he does not shoAV that he had established his business at any particular place; and the evidence shoAvs that he ceased to do business in July, 1906 (ha.Adng sold ou.t to Mrs. Lewis, .one of the defendants), and resumed it only two months prior to the injunction and manifestly at a different place in Gadsden from where he had carried on the busi*538ness theretofore. Furthermore, even upon evidence given by plaintiff, it clearly appears that profits in the business, if any there were, were extremely precarious. We do not hesitate to decide that the court erred in overruling defendant’s objections to the evidence as to profits, and in refusing, to charge that the profits testified to, were not recoverable. —Southern Ry. Co. v. Coleman, 153 Ala. 266, 44 South. 837; Metzger v. Brincat, 154 Ala. 297, 45 South. 633; Montgomery, etc., Co. v. Harwood, 126 Ind. 440, 26 N. E. 182, 10 L. R. A. 532.

The . judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

Tyson, C. J., and Anderson, J., concur. Simpson, J., concurs in the conclusion.