Carter v. . Wood

This was a rule which had been served on the defendant to show cause why he should not be taxed with the costs of the plaintiff's witnesses in a case which had been tried between the same parties. The plaintiff had brought an action of trespass vi et armis, in forma pauperis, against the defendant, in which there was a verdict for the plaintiff and judgment for the amount of the verdict only. Some of the plaintiff's witnesses had drawn their tickets from the office, brought suits on them before a magistrate, after the determination of the original suit, and recovered judgments, from which the plaintiff appealed to the Superior Court, when the witnesses recovered *Page 28 judgment. And the present plaintiff prayed an appeal to the Supreme Court, but being unable to find sureties, the cases were not taken up. The plaintiff paid some of his witnesses, (23) and some of the tickets still remain in the office unsatisfied. The rule being argued at this term, his Honor discharged the rule, on the ground that a plaintiff who sues informa pauperis neither pays nor recovers costs.

The plaintiff prayed an appeal to the Supreme Court, which was granted. We have listened with pleasure to the argument submitted to us in behalf of the plaintiff. The case does not, however, properly present the question designed to be raised. That a person suing in forma pauperis, in general, neither pays nor recovers costs, has been considered the established law of this State ever since the case of Clark v. Dupree, 13 N.C. 411. But whether under that rule the attendance of his witnesses is embraced has not been decided. The case before us does not present the point. The plaintiff had been permitted to sue informa pauperis and had recovered a verdict. The case states that judgment was rendered only on the verdict. None was asked for against the defendant for any costs. The notice is to show cause why "an execution should not issue against him, the defendant, for the costs of the witnesses in the case." Under the act of 1777, ch. 115, sec. 90, "the party in whose favor judgment should be given, etc., shall be entitled to full costs," etc. To reap the benefit of this provision, the party must have a judgment, not only on the verdict for the sum awarded him by the jury, but also one for his costs. In general, it is a matter of course for such a judgment to be entered, and, if the case had been silent on the matter, we might have presumed that such was the fact here. But we are not permitted to make any such presumption. We are told none such was asked for and (24) none such rendered. Whether, therefore, the word "costs" in the act of 1836, ch. 31, sec. 47, which is a transcript of the statute of Henry VIII., embraces the attendance of the plaintiff's witnesses, we do not feel at liberty to decide. In order to have brought the question before the court, a motion for a judgment for those costs ought to have been made to the court before whom the cause was tried. The case further states that, after the judgment was rendered, some of the witnesses for the plaintiff warranted him upon their tickets and obtained *Page 29 judgments, which he paid; others he paid without process, and some of the tickets are still in the office of the clerk. The proceedings are had for the purpose of subjecting the defendant to the payment of these several claims by an execution. In addition to the answer already given, why the court cannot order the execution as required, it may be said, the plaintiff, as far as the case discloses, was not answerable for any of those claims, not because he was suing in forma pauperis, but because the original suit was ended. While a suit is in progress the witnesses of the parties have a right to demand, from the party at whose instance they were summoned, the payment for their attendance at the end of each term, or as soon as the suit is disposed of. If they do not choose so to do, they ought to deposit their tickets at each term in the clerk's office, that they may be regularly taxed in the bill of costs. Their claim, after judgment, is not against the person summoning them, but against the person bound by the judgment to pay the costs under the judgment, unless the party so bound is insolvent. Office v. Lockman, 12 N.C. 146; Stanly v. Hodges, 1 N.C. 203. Here, we repeat, there is no judgment for costs; and the judgment of the court below is affirmed and rule discharged.

PER CURIAM. Judgment accordingly.

Cited: Revel v. Pearson, 34 N.C. 245; Morris v. Rippey, 49 N.C. 535, 6; Belden v. Sneed, 84 N.C. 245.

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