(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. Upon a former hearing of the case, the petition was dismissed on general demurrer, but this ruling of the trial judge was reversed by this court. Goodrum Tobacco Co. v. Potts-Thompson Liquor Co., 133 Ga. 776 (66 S. E. 1081). The written motion made by defendant, during the last trial, to dismiss the petition, was to the following effect: (a) The action was for the recovery of four months’ rental and for damages for a breach of the same contract under which the rental was alleged to be due, “such remedies being inconsistent, and mutually exclusive;” (b) “that plaintiff in the same suit and in the same count is seeking to recover on its contract, treating the contract as existing and binding; and also seeking to recover for a breach of the same contract, treating said contract as breached and ended;” (c) “that while plaintiff claims damages for breach of contract, it nowhere sets up any facts showing any basis for measuring the damages;” (d) “that, the market rental value of the property leased not being alleged, plaintiff shows no right of action for any damage;” (e) '“that so far as the plaintiff’s suit is brought to recover on the contract, its recovery must be limited to the contract amount due and accrued prior to the filing of this suit.” These grounds of the motion did not make it one in the nature of a general demurrer which could be made on the trial, but they were in the nature of special demurrers, which could be filed only at the appearance term.
2. The contract contained the following stipulations: “This lease [is] for a term of five years, commencing on the first day of October, 1906, and terminating on the last day of September, 1911,' for the sum of $37,500, payable monthly in advance, to wit: $625,
It must be conceded, of course, that the employment of legal proceedings for the collection of rentals that are due and unpaid, or for redress of breaches of the contract on the part of the tenant, will not necessarily affect the relation of landlord and tenant, or excuse the tenant from further performance of his obligations according to the contract under which he holds. A distraint for rent past due would not be a violation of the covenant for quiet enjoyment; nor would an action predicated upon a default or a violation of the contract by the tenant have that effect. In other words, it must be true, as a general rule, that a landlord may pursue the same legal remedies against his tenant, without prejudicing himself, as he could use if the relation of landlord and tenant did not exist. In Upton v. Townsend, 17 C. B. 51, it was said that the term “ eviction” “may now be taken to mean this — not a mere trespass and nothing more, but something of a grave and permanent character, done, by the landlord with the intention of depriving the tenant of the enjoyment of the demised premises.” Practically the same definition of “ eviction ” was adopted by this court in Fleming v. King, 100 Ga. 449 (28 S. E. 239). In the present case it .can not be said that there was an actual expulsion of the defendant from the rented premises by the plaintiff itself. Was the appointment of a
3. In this same casa (Goodrum Tobacco Co. v. Potts-Thompson Co., 133 Ga. 776), it was held: “Though a lease contract provided ‘ that the purpose of this lease is for the operation by second party of a general retail liquor business/ the lessee is not absolved from paying the rent agreed to be paid because since the commencement of the lease the legislature enacted a law prohibiting the sale of alcoholic, spirituous, malt, or intoxicating liquors, and thus the demised tenement can not be thereafter used for the conduct of a liquor business, in the absence of a stipulation in the lease contract relieving the tenant from payment of rent accruing after the happening of such contingency.” Of course, therefore, the court did not e,rr in striking so much of the answer as sought to set up the same defense as had been previously ruled was not good.
4. In the amendments disallowed, the defendant set forth damages alleged to have been sustained by it on account .of the plaintiffs maliciously filing the petition for injunction and receiver, and falsely and maliciously and without probable cause alleging the insolvency of defendant. Such amendment was properly disallowed, the present action being purely one ex contractu, and the damages sought to be pleaded in the amendment being for an alleged independent tort on the part of the plaintiff against the defendant could not be set up in the absence of an allegation of the insolvency or non-residence of the plaintiff. Civil Code, § 5521; Harden v. Lang, 110 Ga. 392 (36 S. E. 100); Ray v. Anderson, 119 Ga. 926 (47 S. E. 205)
5. There was no effort whatever on the part of the plaintiff in error to brief the evidence. The so-called brief of evidence contains all the questions propounded to the various witnesses and their answers thereto, as well as colloquies between counsel and between them and the court, as well as entire copies of documents put in evidence. It follows, under numerous decisions of this court, that the assignments of error dependent for solution upon a consideration of the evidence will not be decided.
6. The above rulings control the case, and none of the assignments of error is sufficient to require a reversal.
Judgment affirmed.