56 So. 588 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911
The appellant filed a bill in chancery to enjoin, appellees “from selling, leasing, •or disposing of, and from attempting to sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of,” certain lands described in the hill. A temporary injunction was granted, and, as a preliminary thereto, appellant was required to execute a bond to appellees in the sum of $300, conditioned “to pay all damages and costs which any person may sustain by the suing out of such injunction if the same is dissolved.” The bill was demurred to by the appellees, •and a motion to dissolve the injunction was also filed by them in the cause. The chancellor overruled the demurrer and refused to dissolve the injunction, but, upon appeal to the Supreme Court, this bill was held to he without equity and was dismissed for that reason, and thereupon an order was made dissolving the injunction. This suit was brought by appellees against appellant for the damages sustained by them by reason of the suing out of said injunction.
The complainant sets out the bond, and then charges as follows: “And the plaintiffs say the condition of said bond has been broken by the defendants, in this: that the said injunction has been dissolved, and the defendants have failed to pay the plaintiffs all such costs and damages as they have sustained by the suing out of said injunction, and the plaintiffs aver that they have been put to great expense in employing counsel, in attending court, etc., in procuring a dissolution of said injunction, and defending against the same, all of which is to the great damage of the plaintiffs, in the said sum of $300.”
Having assigned the failure to pay counsel fees and the expense of attending court as the only damages suffered by reason of the breach of such bond, the appellees, under their complaint, were only entitled to recover such damages. It follows, therefore, that the court, committed error in permitting appellees against the objection of appellant to offer any evidence as to any losses incurred by them on account of any rents lost by them, or on account of a failure to sell the lands or any part of them, by reason of said injunction.
There was sufficient evidence in the case for the jury to have found that the appellees were entitled to- the amount ascertained by their verdict to be due them for their counsel fees and costs incurred by them in obtaining the dissolution of the injunction, but this court does-not know that in arriving"at that verdict the jury did not consider the evidence which the court had permitted to go before them tending to show some loss on account of the depreciation in'the value of the real estate, loss of rents, etc. When error is shown, the law presumes that injury thereby resulted, unless the entire record shows affirmatively that no injury was done there
For the error pointed out, this cause is reversed and remanded.
Reversed and remanded.