TMs is an action upon an injunction bond. The bond is set out in the complaint, and contains the conditions prescribed by the statute. The complaint avers in what the breach consisted, with claim for resulting specified damages. The cause was tried by the court below on the plea of the general issue, without the intervention of a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants, from which the plaintiff appeals.
The undisputed evidence shows that the plaintiff here was made a defendant in the injunction suit; that he employed counsel and defended against said injunction, and thereby incurred counsel fees; that, after answer filed by him in the injunction suit, the bill in that proceeding, on the complainants’ own motion, was dismissed. The value of counsel fees defending against the injunction was to be $150. The 'bill for injunction was purely for injunctive relief. The dismissal of the bill by the complainant necessarily dissolved the injunction. The condition of the bond was thereby breached, and right of action on the bond arose. What was said in the case of Bush v. Kirkbride, 131 Ala. 405—410, 30 South. 780, 782, is apposite here: “We have then in this case every constituent of liability on the bond sued on: The suing out of the writ, evidence of damages sustained by plaintiff by the suing out of it, and its dissolution.” The case of Bush v. Kirkbride, just cited, in principle is sufficient authority upon which to rest the determination of the case under consideration.
We think on the undisputed facts the trial court should have rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and for the amount of damages proven, viz., $150. The judgment appealed from will be reversed, and one *239will be here rendered in favor of plaintiff as above indicated.
Reversed and rendered.
Simpson, McClellan, and Mayfield, JJ., concur.