Demurrers to counts 1 and 2 were sustained. On the motion for a new trial the court required plaintiff to remit such damages as might have been recovered under counts 3 and 4, the common counts, as a condition upon which the motion would be overruled, which was accordingly done. We are to-consider, therefore, only those questions which arose-under counts 5 and 6.
These counts claimed damages as for the breach of a contract between the parties for that plaintiff was. put to great expense and caused to lose profits which otherwise he would have realized, by reason of the-defendant’s wrong in delaying and interrupting plaintiff in the performance of a contract between them. The general purport of the contract dated on September 12, 1907, is sufficiently shown by the quotation we-here make: “Whereas the party of the second part (defendant below, appellant here) has entered into a contract Avith the city of Decatur * * * for the construction of certain improvements, * * * the parties hereto have agreed as follows: First party contracts and agrees to do all grading second may require-for the execution of its above-mentioned contract at the consideration of forty-five cents per cubic yard."' At the time the parties entered into this contract, de fendant had six several contracts with the city of Decatur, all entered into on September 3, 1907, by Avhich. defendant had agreed to do the work of improvemen I on different streets Avhich had been provided for in six different ordinances. All these contracts between the city and defendant provided that: “The contractors- * * * hereby agree to protect and save the city *564harmless from any and all claims for damages from the obstruction of the street or streets, or from any neglect of the contractors, * * * and to execute bond * * * to indemnify and save harmless, the said city * * * from all suits or actions of every name or description brought against any of them for or on account of any injuries received or sustained by any party or parties, by or from the said contractors, their servants or agents, in the construction of the work, * * * or by or on account of any act of omission of the said parties of the second part, or their agents, in the performance of this agreement.” These contracts refer to the several improvement ordinances, and these ordinances in turn refer to full details, drawings, plans, and specifications of the work, provided for in each case, to be prepared by the city engineer and placed on file in his office. Contracts and ordinances were in evidence; but there was no attempt to prove details, drawings, or any plans and specifications. Plaintiff was permitted, however, over defendant’s objection, without producing plans and specifications, to testify to the amount of éxcavation necessitated by the improvements and the amount done at the time when the first serious interruption occurred. On this state of the case, appellant makes a number of points which were reserved in the court below, and which we think may be properly disposed of on considerations to be stated presently. It contends that the contract with the city was void; that there was no proof that Ingram, by whom, as president, the alleged contracts between defendant and the city purported to have been executed on behalf of the defendant, without the use of a corporate seal, was authorized to execute same; that no one, or all, of such contracts were identified as the contract between defendant and the city referred to in the *565contract between defendant and tbe city ivere erroneously admitted in evidence; that there was no legal proof of the amount of excavation required for the execution of the contract between the parties; and- that for one or the other of these reasons, or all of them, the defendant should have had the affirmative charge.
It may be that certain stipulations of the contracts between defendant and the city constituted an abuse of corporate power, in that they imposed unlawful burdens on the taxpayers, and, for that reason, the contracts might have been avoided in equity at the suit of any one affected; or it may be that the mandatory requirements of the charter of the city of Decatur were such as to render the contract void so that defendant would not have been allowed to recover in a suit brought by it against the city.—Inge v. Mobile Board of Public Works, 135 Ala. 187, 33 South. 678, 93 Am. St. Rep. 20. We have not been at pains to investigate the provisions of the charter for the reason that plaintiff’s contract was collateral to the contract between defendant and the city and referred to that contract for the purpose only of describing the nature and extent of the work to be done; plaintiff took nothing by the obnoxious provision, his contract was, not to perform defendant’s contract with the city, but to perform a certain part of it, lawful in itself, for a lawful consideration. Further, it occurs to us that defendant ought not to have been allowed, on an objection to evidence, to lay the consequences of an unpleaded illegality at the door of plaintiff, who was not a party to the alleged illegal contract. Most of the other errors assigned in this connection are answered by the evidence which went to show, without conflict, that the parties interpreted “a contract” which defendant had with the city to mean in the contract between, and to include *566as one contract, the six several contracts defendant had with the city. “A contract” with the city was, under the circumstances, ambiguous. But “there is no surer way to find out what the parties meant than to see what they have done.”—Brooklyn Life Ins. Co. v. Dutcher, 95 U. S. 269, 24 L. Ed. 410. The parties here from beginning to end of its execution construed “a contract” with the city to mean all the contracts defendant had with the city and so the court on the uncontradicted evidence was authorized to construe it. And the fact that defendant engaged in the execution of the contract by paying to plaintiff from time to time as the work progressed sums of money for work done and receiving payment from the city for the completed improvement is evidence enough that its president acted within his ■ authority when signing defendant’s name to the contracts with the city. If he had not authority at the time, he subsequently acquired it by ratification which related back to the time of the execution of the contracts. As for the objection that the plans and specifications were not produced instead of plaintiff’s estimate of the total amount of excavation required by the contract and of what remained to be done at the time when he suffered the most serious of the interruptions complained of, the thing of importance as affecting the counts upon the breach alleged was to know what then remained to be done as tending to demonstrate the reasonableness of the outfit maintained during the interval in anticipation of a resumption of the work, and so the extent of the recoverable loss suffered by reason of the expense of that maintenance. On this question the production of the plans and specifications would have shed no light.
Plaintiff’s testimony was to the effect — and there was none to the contrary — that after he had entered' *567upon the performance of the work with the understanding and agreement that it Avas to be completed during the then current year, he Avas during considerable periods kept from Avork by the defendant’s order, and that during these periods he suffered losses in maintaining his outfit and in profits he Avould have earned had the Avork been prosecuted uninterruptedly. To defendant’s insistence that plaintiff had Avaived the breach alleged by resuming work under the contract at the end of the interval, plaintiff replied that there has been an agreement that he should not Avaive his right to demand compensation for his loss by reason of the delay. The case made by his testimony Avas that on a certain occasion during the most prolonged intermission defendant had promised to pay him |500 for loss of time and expenses; but, though the question depends upon the testimony of plaintiff alone, it is doubtful Avhether this promised payment Avas to cover the time then past, or Avas to suffice for the future until March 1st thereafter. It seems doubtful also Avhether the sum promised was intended to be taken as in full satisfaction of plaintiff’s claim for damages, or as a credit thereon as upon an unliquidated demand. It is to be noted here, also, that this testimony which was offered and received as relevant to the plea setting up a waiver, later on became immaterial for the reason that, under the court’s ruling, an assignment by plaintiff of funds due him from defendant, alleged in the plea, Avas excluded as evidence relevant to the issues made under counts 5 and 6, and that to this ruling no exception Avas reserved. Defendant having, on this state of the case, failed to get before the jury any proof Avhatever of a material part of its plea, what evidence had been received in proof of other averments became immaterial, and the court without error assumed in charging the jury that the issue *568raised by the plea had been taken out of the case.—Montgomery v. Wyche, 169 Ala. 181, 53 South. 786; Carter v. Chambers, 79 Ala. 223. A different question was presented in Gaynor v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 136 Ala. 244, 33 South. 808, where the trial court assumed to pass upon the weight of the evidence. There remaining then no issue but that of defendant’s breach vel non, and that being proved by plaintiff’s uncontradicted testimony, and the effect of the error in respect to a recovery under the common counts having been definitely measured • by the proof, also nncontradicted, and removed from the case by the ruling on the motion for a new trial, reversible error cannot be affirmed of the court’s action in giving the general charge for the plaintiff with hypothesis.
But the measure of damages was of importance. As we have already stated, plaintiff claimed profits which he would have realized from the continuous and uninterrupted performance of his contract and for losses suffered in maintaining his outfit during the interruption — elements of damage quite different in nature. The defendant requested the court in writing to charge the jury as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence that plaintiff resumed his contract with the defendant in April and continued the work thereunder, plaintiff is not entitled to recover any damages as profits which he would have derived from the continuous and uninterrupted performance of said contract.” This charge should have been given, and the liberal estimate placed by the jury upon the plaintiff’s damages renders it probable that it operated to appellant’s detriment. At least, from this error the presumption of injury arises which we do not find to be clearly rebutted by the record. Whatever may have been the proper rule under the circumstances for the admeasurement of damages *569in the way of actual losses — a question we do not find presented by the record and assignments of error — it seems clear that plaintiff could not recover profits he might have earned. He resumed and completed the performance of the contract, and whatever profit there may have been in it he earned. There ivas a balance due on the contract price, but on the motion for a new trial the court, assuming that this balance had been included in the amount for which the verdict was rendered, properly ruled that on the evidence and the complaint as framed it could not be recovered, and then by a remittitur any error as to that was eliminated.. Under counts 5 and 6 plaintiff could riot recover on the contract nor the value of work done under the contract. Admitting for the argument that he might have recovered prospective profits had he elected to treat the contract as breached when its performance was delayed by defendant, when he resumed the work he waived the breach so far as profits were concerned. The contract, having been performed, became the measure of the profits to be earned thereunder. — 3 Suth. Dam. § 714.
A. J. Harris, Esq., was required by the court to answer whether, in negotiating certain transactions with the contract in question and plaintiff’s execution thereof, he acted as attorney for the defendant. In this there was no breach of privilege. It was competent for plaintiff to prove the fact of the attorney’s employment by the defendant as tending to show that the- contract signed by Ingram was the contract of the defendant.—White v. State, 86 Ala. 69, 5 South. 674; M. & M. Ry. v. Yeates, 67 Ala. 164. There was no proof nor any offer to prove any matter knowledge of which the at- . torney had acquired from his client by virtue of his attorneyship.
*570The case was not such as to call for the application of the doctrine of L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Cofer, 110 Ala. 492, 18 South. 110. In that case counts were joined claiming damages for separate and distinct torts done at different times. The court said: “In respect to costs when there are distinct causes of action laid in different counts, the parties may be protected by having the court to instruct the jury, in the event they find for the plaintiff upon any less than all the causes of action declared, on, to specify in the verdict the counts upon which the finding is based. This done, the court may award to the defendant the costs relating to those causes upon which the plaintiff failed to recover” — citing 1 Chit. Pl. 412. In the case at hand there were counts in common and special assumpsit; but the causes of action counted on all arose out of, and in large part proof of them related to, one and the same transaction. There was therefore no possibility of an exact or even an approximate apportionment of the costs. The charge requiring the jury to designate under which counts they might find for the plaintiff was refused without reversible error.
For the error indicated above our judgment is that the cause must be returned to the lower court for another trial. It is evident that on another trial the issues will be differently presented. We need not, therefore, discuss some questions of minor importance which have been referred to by counsel.
Reversed and remanded.
All the Justices concur.