Dresser v. Jennings

Birdseye, J.

Section 309 of the Code provides that the rates of the allowance which, by the previous section, the court may make to a successful litigant shall he upon the value of the property recovered, or claimed, &c., and that such amount .or value must be determined by the jury, court or referees, by whom the action is tried, or judgment rendered, &c. This provision, taken in connection with the percentages established in the preceding section, puts a limit upon the power of the court to compensate for the labors and expenses of difficult and extraordinary cases, or to discountenance the bringing of unfounded suits, or to .punish unreasonable or unfair conduct in the prosecution or defence of suits properly brought or defended. For such, I apprehend, were the objects of the legislature in vesting the court with this new and singular power of adjusting to a great degree the costs of a suit, according to the particular circumstances of the case disclosed at the trial. This limitation, it is clear, was introduced for the benefit of the unsuccessful party. Though willing to trust much to the discretion of the court, the law has wisely laid down certain bounds for the exercise of that discretion.

But any person may waive the benefit of whatever rule the law has established for his protection. Instead of going into proof before the jury to assess the value of the property by which the allowance was to be fixed, it was competent for the *242parties to have agreed upon the value and had the jury find accordingly: or to have had the court act upon such an agreement, even without the intervention of the jury. The same might as well be done by tacit, as by express, agreement. And- that, no doubt, was the fact here.

It sufficiently appears that the objection now raised was not taken at the trial; for the moving affidavit is entirely silent on the subject. Had it been, it would at once have been corrected. But, as 'is obvious, when the allowance was applied for, the main question discussed by the parties and considered by the court was merely,—What is a proper allowance under the circumstances of this case ? The amount allowed by the court was so clearly within thé limit the law had prescribed, that no person, not even the party who was himself to pay this allowance, thought of requiring the court to go through the useless formality of an assessment.

It seems to me that the plaintiff is as clearly estopped by such silence, as he would be by a direct agreement. It is to be observed that he does not claim to have suffered any injury from the omission of the assessment: nor allege that the amount given is greater than could have been given, after an assessment. I feel bound to hold, therefore, that in such a case as this, the failure to urge such a merely technical objection at the time when it dan be corrected, and the defect supplied, is a waiver of it. As the courts would never arrest judgment, for the want of a material allegation in the declaration, if it were such that without proving it at the trial the plaintiff could not have had a verdict, and there was a verdict for the plaintiff, so here when such an allowance could not have been granted, without the court had had sufficient evidence of the value of the premises, and it has made the allowance, that order must stand. It may be true as stated in the affidavit, that no assessment was had. But I must presume that the court acted on some other and sufficient grounds. And on this point the plaintiff is silent.

Such, I think, would be the rule, even if this application did not concern a matter which has been uniformly held to be within the discretion of the court making the allowance. It is peculiarly proper to apply-the principle here. By rule 81, *243application for an additional allowance, can only be made to the court before which the trial is had, or the judgment rendered. When the application has been decided, that decision cannot be reviewed by appeal, whether the allowance be granted or refused. (Dickson v. McElwain, 7 How. Pr. R., 138; Cook v. Dickinson, 5 Sandf. S. C. R., 663; Dana v. Fiedler, 1 C. R. N. S, 224.)

If the proper appellate tribunal will not examine an order which is the exercise of a judicial discretion, much more should not a single judge collaterally review, upon a mere special motion like this, the exercise of such a discretion on the part of a brother judge of the same court, who had before him the whole case, and whose decision is incorporated in the judgment, and becomes a part of it.

The motion of plaintiff is denied, but without costs, as the question is new.