Court Opinion

ID: 4935630
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:14:46.831354+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:40.217041
License: Public Domain

Haskell, J.
The municipal officers of Rockport had been enjoined, pending suit, upon bond filed, from constructing a sidewalk across the plaintiff's lawn, claimed to be within the limits of a street. The defendants moved that the injunction be dissolved, and the justice who heard the motion, declined to act upon the-motion until final hearing on the bill. On final hearing the bill was dismissed. The present action is upon the bond. Damages are claimed for the expenditure incurred on motion to dissolve and on final hearing, upon the ground that further hearing upon motion to dissolve was adjourned to the final hearing on the bill.
The condition of the bond is, that plaintiff shall pay all damages sustained "if said injunction is finally dissolved.” The statute required the condition to be, "to pay all damages and costs caused thereby, if he is finally not entitled to such injunction, unless a single justice, on motion to dissolve the same and hearing on the merits thereof, refuses to dissolve it.” R. S., c. 77, § 32.
The bond filed was not a statute bond, but, nevertheless, a binding obligation according to its terms. It enabled the plaintiff to procure his injunction, and there is no reason why he should not respond to the condition he voluntarily entered into as a pre-requisite in that behalf.
The condition calls for the payment of all damages sustained, not including costs, if the injunction be finally dissolved ; andit has been dissolved by a dismissal of the bill. The only question, then, is to assess the damages. The only damages shown are the defendants’ expenditure for counsel fees in the suit. Are these damages within the meaning of the bond? We think not. Damages mean pecuniary loss arising from the restraint imposed by the injunction, not the expenditure in the defense of the suit. This is the doctrine of Thurston v. Haskell, 81 Maine, 303. It is not an open question in this state. The object of the bill was a permanent injunction. The expenditure was 'incurred in resisting the prayer of the bill — in defending the suit. This is not damages within the meaning of the bond. No damages have been shown, therefore there is no breach of the condition of the *188bond. Had the bond been a statute bond, and had the injunction been dissolved on motion, either in whole or in part, and had it restrained action other than that sought by the prayer of the bill, the case might have been different; but of this, we have no occasion to express any opinion.

Plaintiffs nonsuit.