Reeves v. Maynard
Decision Date | 17 May 1924 |
Docket Number | 15449. |
Citation | 123 S.E. 181,32 Ga.App. 380 |
Parties | REEVES v. MAYNARD ET AL. |
Court | Georgia Court of Appeals |
Syllabus by the Court.
5 R.C.L. 1091, § 41. Woodruff v. Hughes, 2 Ga.App. 361 (1), 58 S.E. 551; Wall v Seaboard Air-Line Railway, 18 Ga.App. 457 (2), 89 S.E. 533, National Bank of Savannah v. Evans, 149 Ga. 67, 99 S.E. 123; Id. 23 Ga.App. 736, 99 S.E. 393.
A complaint for tortious acts committed in pursuance of a conspiracy, as in other tort actions, must show both damage and causal connection between the wrong and the injury. 12 C.J. 631; 1 Sutherland on Damages, §§ 30, 33. "The most generally accepted theory of causation is that of natural and probable consequences." Gillespie v. Andrews, 27 Ga.App. 509, 108 S.E. 906. Although the damages claimed may be traceable to the original act, if they are not themselves legal or material consequences they are too remote to be recovered. Civil Code 1910, §§ 4509, 4510.
A corporation being an entity apart from its stockholders and officers, and its credit, or commercial good name, being, in a legal sense, likewise separate and distinct from theirs acts alleged to have been done by two officers of a private trading corporation and others, such as the misapplication and misappropriation of its credit and assets, in pursuance of a conspiracy to wreck the company's business and thereby to upbuild the business and assets of a rival concern which some of the conspirators had organized, and alleged to have had the intended effect, could not be said to have resulted in injury to the plaintiff's credit and standing in the commercial world merely because he was a stockholder in and the president of the company whose financial ruin was the aim and accomplishment of the unlawful combination. Such is the effect of the plaintiff's petition in this case construing it most strongly against him, as must be done on dem...
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