delivered the opinion of the court.
The only question in this case that calls for our consideration is the measure of damages adopted by the trial court. The theory of the complaint was that one element of damages was the loss of interest upon the full amount of indebtedness represented by the notes at the rate therein fixed, from the time the injunction was issued until dissolved, and another element of damage was the counsel fees paid *467by the defendants in the original suit and necessary expenses incurred by them in securing a dissolution of the injunction. There were other elements of damage relied on in the complaint, but the evidence which is brought up in the record was directed only to these two elements.
The only evidence in the case was that of Costigan, one of the obligees in the bond, from which it appears that he paid out the sum of $500 as counsel fees and expenses necessarily incurred to obtain a dissolution of the injunction. In addition to this sum, the only testimony as to any damages or loss sustained by the obligees was the claim that during the pendency of the injunction (which was three months and five days) the defendants were deprived of interest upon the full amount of the indebtedness secured by the trust deed, which at that time was $125,966.10.
From this evidence the court found that the damages to the obligees resulting from the issuing of the injunction were the amount paid by them as counsel fees and expenses, and the interest upon’the full indebtedness as claimed; but as the penalty of the bond was only $3,000, judgment in this action was rendered only in such sum.
Under the decision of this court in Tabor v. Clark, 15 Colo. 434, it was proper to award as damages the amount paid as counsel fees for services rendered in dissolving the injunction, and the evidence in this case supports the finding of the court in that respect. At the sale, subsequent to the dissolution of the injunction, the holders and owners of the notes bid in the property, but the amount of the bid does not appear from the record, except that it was a sum much less than the face value of the notes. There was no testimony tending to show that had not the injunction been issued, the property would probably have been sold at the time fixed in the advertisement of sale for a sum equal to, or any greater than, that for which it was sold when advertised the second time.
In a suit upon an injunction bond, where the holders of a note (the obligees in said bond) have been restrained from *468selling real property under a trust deed given to secure the payment of the note, interest — or rather that which is equivalent to interest — may be a proper element of damages. In some cases, such sum may possibly be the only element, while in other cases it may be much less or much more than the actual damages sustained. City of St. Louis v. Alexander, 23 Mo. 520; Hill v. Thomas, 19 S. C. 230.
The true rule of measure of damages in such cases seems to be simple compensation for the actual loss sustained. High on Injunctions, sec. 1665.
The granting of the injunction does not, in a case like this, necessarily prevent the collection of money, and the rule of damages in the latter case would not, therefore, necessarily be the same as in the former.
Under the evidence in this case, the court erred in computing’ as an element of loss interest on the full amount of indebtedness represented by the notes; for there is nothing in the evidence to show that had the sale been made as first advertised, there was a reasonable probability that it would have been sold for as large an amount as it did bring when actually sold, or that it would have brought more, — which actual selling price, as we have said, the record does not disclose. For aught that appears in the evidence, the property, sold when the injunction was dissolved, brought as much as, or more than, it would have brought had not the injunction been granted; and if so, obligees suffered no such damages as were here awarded. Bearing upon the probabilities as to what would have happened had the sale not been interfered with by the obligors, there is only the evidence of Costigan, one of the obligees, to the effect that his intention at that time was to purchase the property, when sold, for the amount of the notes, if others had not bid a like sum, and then to take possession of the property and work it.
Had not the injunction issued, we may assume, in the absence of evidence tending to show that others would probably have bid a like sum, that such purchase by the owners of the note would have been carried out. The indebtedness *469of the maker of the notes would then have been canceled, and the obligees (the payees of the notes) would have been entitled to the possession of the property. This indebtedness would have been wiped out, not by the payment of any amount of money, but by the taking of the property by the payees of the note in satisfaction of their debt. By the injunction, however, they were kept out of possession three months and five days. When they did buy the property, so far as we are advised, it was worth to them as much as it would have been had they bought it when first offered for sale. Their injury, therefore, if meanwhile the property had not depreciated in value, would have been compensated for by the payment to them of the rental value of the property, or the value of the possession of the mine.
In any event, interest would be an element of loss only in case it should appear that a certain amount of money would probably have been received by the owners of the notes, had not the act of plaintiffs stopped the sale; and it could not be reckoned on any sum greater than what the evidence fairly shows would have been realized.
At the sale it appears that they did bid in the property, but the amount of their bid is not shown, nor is there any effort to show depreciation in the value of the property during the pendency of the injunction, or the value of the possession, so that it is difficult to perceive how the court could ascertain the amount of damages upon the evidence. In the absence of a showing that the proceeds of the sale were less than they would have been had not the obligors delayed the sale, or that less was realized therefrom than might, and probably would, have been received had not this unlawful interference taken place, there could not be awarded interest, or its equivalent, upon a larger sum than that actually realized when the property was sold. But, as has already been said, as there is nothing in the record showing for what amount the property was sold, there is no basis upon which the court could determine the amount of interest lost to the obligees.
*470We may add that ordinarily an element of damage in a case like this, and which might be the only element, would be the difference between what was actually realized from the sale and what would or might probably have been realized had not the act of the wrongdoer delayed the sale. Whether this would, or would not, be-the same in amount as the interest upon the sum realized from the sale, the evidence does not enable us to determine.
For the error in respect to the awarding of interest as an element of damage, the judgment of the court should be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed.