July 27, 1925. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an appeal from an order of Hon. C.C. Featherstone, Circuit Judge, dated November 13, 1924, refusing to allow attorney's fees to the defendant upon the dissolution of an injunction; the same being claimed as damages under the bond which had been given by the plaintiff. The refusal was based upon the ground that the dissolution of the injunction was only partial.
The situation is peculiar and requires a somewhat detailed statement of the proceedings.
On April 30, 1924, the plaintiff instituted an action against the defendant for injunction and damages. The complaint is not set forth in the record for appeal, nor is its substance. On the same day, April 30, 1924, the plaintiff, without previous notice, applied to Hon. E.C. Dennis, Circuit Judge, for and obtained an order enjoining the defendant, until the further order of the Court, "from entering upon and trespassing on the premises described in the complaint and hereinafter described, and from committing any other damages on or upon the premises described in the complaint." Then follows in the order a description of the premises as containing ten acres, more or less, with the boundaries, "including that strip of land twenty-five (25) feet wide, on the west side of said premises, extending from the public highway above described, towards the south on the west side of the lot of land owned by the defendant and joining the lot of said defendant." The plaintiff was required by the order to give bond in the sum of $250 as provided for by Section 486 of the Code, which he did.
It appears that all controversy as to a trespass upon the ten acres subsided, as there is nothing on the record to show that this matter received any further consideration; the controversy appears to have continued with reference *Page 181 solely to the 25-foot street which was separated from the adjoining ten acres.
The defendant thereafter, upon due notice, made a motion before Judge Dennis to dissolve the injunction, in so far as it restrained him from entering upon and using the 25 feet as a street. Upon the hearing, as appears from the order of Judge Dennis dated May 6, 1924, it developed that the parties were at cross-purposes, misunderstanding the motives of each other. The order states:
"It is claimed by the plaintiff that the defendant had undertaken to take exclusive possession of the 25 feet, and it is claimed by the defendant that he had not undertaken to use this strip of land exclusively, but only in going to and from his adjoining lot. It appearing from statements made by counsel representing plaintiff and defendant that plaintiff has no objection to defendant's use of this strip of 25 feet for the purpose of going to and from and upon his lot and that the defendant claims no other right." It was, therefore, ordered that the injunction order of April 30, 1924, be dissolved "in so far as it prohibits the defendant from going upon said strip of land for any purpose, and it is ordered and adjudged that the strip of land 25 feet wide and be, and the same is hereby, ordered to be kept open for the use of the defendant for the purpose of going in and upon his lot, and also for the purpose of allowing the plaintiff, his tenants and agents, to go upon the lands of the plaintiff, and that neither the plaintiff nor the defendant shall cultivate or obstruct said strip of land in any way that will interfere with the use of the same in accordance with this order."
The order of April 30, 1924, enjoined the defendant from entering upon the strip for any purpose whatever. If he claimed the right to use it as an approach to his lot, in order to get relief he was compelled to move for a dissolution of the injunction. It appeared that this was all he claimed and the order accorded that right to him. Assuming *Page 182 that the right of the defendant to the exclusive possession of the strip was at issue, we have been cited to no authority and know of none that requires the injunction to be dissolved in toto before the obligee of the bond shall be entitled to damages. The Code provision for the bond is that the "plaintiff will pay to the party enjoined such damages * * * as he may sustain by reason of the injunction, if the Court shall finally decide that the plaintiff was not entitled thereto." The Court did decide that the plaintiff was not entitled to the injunction as contained in the order of April 30, 1924, and clearly the defendant is entitled to the damages sustained by him in consequence of it.
That an attorney's fee for the dissolution of an injunction may be recovered as damages, under the bond, is settled by the cases of Livingston v. Exum, 19 S.C. 229.Hill v. Thomas, 19 S.C. 230. Britt v. McCormick, 117 S.C. 8;108 S.E., 179; 14 R.C.L., 486.
The judgment of this Court is that the order appealed from be reversed, and that the case be remanded to the Circuit Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this judgment.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and MESSRS. JUSTICES WATTS and MARION and MR. ACTING ASSOCIATE JUSTICE R.O. PURDY concur.