132 Iowa 14 | Iowa | 1906
The defendants with others as members of an unincorporated association were about to construct a rural telephone line along the highway in front of the plaintiff’s premises. The plaintiff objected to such construction and threatened to remove the poles and wires. Thereupon an injunction was sued in behalf of the promoters of the enterprise restraining the plaintiff from interfering in any manner with the construction of the line and from removing or disturbing the poles and wires erected in front of his land. The defendants herein signed the bond for said injunction. It further appears that, at the first term of court after the issuance of the writ, the court found that the telephone line could not be lawfully erected upon the highway in front of the plaintiff’s land without his consent except by condemnation proceedings, and, on motion of the plaintiff herein, dissolved the injunction. Suit is now brought upon the bond and the principal question presented is whether the plaintiff may recover damages sustained on account of the injunction including attorney’s fees properly expended in procuring its dissolution.
I. Upon this subject the trial court instructed the jury as follows:
These instructions are excepted to by the appellant because they are based upon the idea that to enable him to recover damages upon the bond the jury must find that he suffered some material or substantial pecuniary injury by reason of the issuance of the writ. After considerable reflection we are constrained to the view that this exception is well taken. It is true that we have held that the dissolution of an injunction against the exercise of a technical right which the defendant had no desire or intention to exercise gives rise to no cause of action upon the bond. Bank of Monroe v. Gifford, 70 Iowa, 580. The case of Hibbs v. Western Land Co., 81 Iowa, 285, also cited by the appellee herein, decides nothing in point. It appears in that ease that the party had been enjoined from trespassing on certain land, and the injunction had been dissolved. It does not appear whéther the person so enjoined was the owner of the land, nor upon what grounds the writ was sued out, nor is it shown what was in issue touching the land, nor whether he
In the present case an junction, temporary and permanent, was the sole relief sought in the original action. It involved a substantial right of the plaintiff herein, i. e., the right to object to and prevent the burdening of the highway bordering his premises by the poles and wires of the telephone line until the right of way therefor had been condemned and damages paid or secured. True, the damage may have been small, but the right to insist upon having a clear and unincumbered highway was none the less complete, and plaintiff’s title to protection of such right by the courts none the less -perfect or imperative than it would have been had the damage been many times greater. The appellant, as the court found, was the owner of the. land affected, and as such had the right to prevent the erection of the telephone line, or to remove it if already erected. This right was disputed, and he was by'the injunction prevented from exercising the same. He was not required to submit to this assumption of dominion over his property, and, to vindicate his right and relieve his property of the burden wrongfully imposed upon it, he properly appeared to the proceedings and denied the authority of the plaintiff’s therein to proceed without condemnation of the right of way, and sought a dissolution of the injunction. Under-the circumstances, where injunction is the sole relief sought, we have often held that its dissolution, either by interlocutory order or upon the final hearing, entitles the party enjoined to recover his attorney’s fees in resisting the writ. We think, therefore, that the right of the plaintiff herein to recover does not depend upon the simple fact whether he sustained substantial injury by being prevented from mowing his grass along the road side (as the instruction seems to suggest), but upon whether he was enjoined from the exercise of the lawful and substantial right to prevent the erection of the telephone line and to re
The contention of the appellant that there is no evidence on which this issue should.have been submitted to the jury is not well founded.. The matter pleaded constituted a good defense, and under the evidence, which we need not recite, it would have been error to withdraw it from the jury.
. Other points made in behalf of the appellant are not well taken or relate to matters not likely to arise on a retrial.
Por the reasons above stated, a new fanal mtist be ordered, and the judgment of the district court is therefore reversed.