Court Opinion

ID: 3654196
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:07:53.425623+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:23:33.550582
License: Public Domain

Upon the trial, at LINCOLN, on the last circuit, before Settle, J., it appeared that the injunction had been dissolved; but it was objected by the defendants that the plaintiffs could not recover without showing an order of the court of equity, allowing the withdrawal of the bond from that court, and permitting a suit to be brought upon it. Secondly, that an action of debt would not lie against the principals in the injunction bond until the damages sustained by reason of suing out the injunction had been ascertained in an action on the case. The court intimated an opinion against the plaintiffs upon both points; in submission to which they suffered a nonsuit and appealed.
The Court entertains an opinion different from that of his Honor upon both of the points made at the trial.
There was no necessity for another action to ascertain the plaintiffs' damages, before bringing debt on the bond, as the words of the condition are, if the obligors "shall well and truly indemnify" the obligees "for all damages they may sustain by wrongfully suing (140) out said injunction." The language of the contract, therefore, plainly authorizes this action in the first instance. This case is not like Davis v. Gully, 19 N.C. 360, in which the condition of the bond was for the payment of "such damages as shall be recovered" of the complainants in equity. The decision turned on the word "recovered" as contrasted with "sustained," as is stated in the very beginning of the opinion. The present case, therefore, falls within the distinction *Page 110 
there expressed, according to which this action will well lie to recover such damages, if any, as the obligees may be able to show they did sustain.
As to the other point, it is clear that is between the obligees and the court of equity, and that the court of law can take no notice of the means by which the obligees obtained possession of the bond. It is the ordinary case of an action of debt on a bond with collateral condition, by the obligees against the obligors; and the declaration need contain no averment of leave to bring the action being given by the court of equity; and, consequently, it need not be proved. The declaration must, no doubt, state such proceedings in the suit in equity as put an end to the injunction and no longer left it in force; but it need not set out an order to deliver the bond to the obligees. It is sufficient for the court of law that the plaintiff there has the bond, of which he makes profert.
PER CURIAM.                                             Reversed.
(141)