It is undisputed that the plaintiff’s attorney procured the costs to be adjusted and inserted in the judgment by the clerk, without notice thereof to the defendant’s attorney. By the order appealed from, the entire judgment, as well as the adjustment of the costs and all subsequent proceedings, are set aside, with costs of the motion. In order to arrive at a proper decision of the questions raised upon this appeal, it is necessary to recur to the provisions of the code regulating the proceedings in an action upon the recovery of a verdict a t the circuit.
The first step to be taken after verdict rests with the clerk of the court. His duty is to make an entry in the minutes, specifying the time and place of trial j the names of the jurors and witnesses ; the verdict, and either the judgment rendered thereon, or an order that the causé be reserved for argument or further consideration. If a different direction be not given by the court, the clerk must enter judgment in-conformity with the verdict. (Code, § 264.) The judgment to be thus entered by the clerk he is required to enter in the judgment book, which it is his duty to keep among the records of the court. (Id. §§ 279, 280.) Immediately on entering the judgment, unless the party or his attorney shall furnish the clerk a judgment roll, he is required to attach the summons, pleadings, and copy of the judgment, with the verdict, together, and file the same, which shall constitute the judgment roll. (§ 281.) A strict compliance with the foregoing provisions of the code would seem to make it the duty of the clerk to enter a judgment on the verdict and make up and file a judgment roll immediately on receiving the verdict, unless otherwise ordered by the court. This however - is not so regarded, and such is "not the .practice. In practice the judgment roll is not *660usually made up and filed until the costs are adjusted, and the party is prepared to have the judgment perfected and docketed.
We do not consider the provisions of the code regulating the mode of entering the judgment, and the making up and filing a judgment roll, as imperative, but as merely directory. Previous to actually docketing the judgment, the prevailing party may have his costs inserted in the judgment, upon two days’ notice to the other party. The language of the code is, “ that the clerk shall insert in the entry of judgment, on the application of the prevailing party, upon two days’ notice to the other party, the sum of the charges for costs, including the fees of officers and necessary disbursements, &c.” (§ 311.) The language of this section clearly indicates that the judgment has previously been entered. The clerk is directed to insert the costs in the entry of the judgment: not to insert the costs, and then enter the judgment. On a careful examination of the provisions of the code, it seems to contemplate the entry of the judgment, in the judgment book, and the making up and filing the judgment roll, prior to the adjustment of the costs, and the insertion thereof in the judgment. In conformity with this view of the law, a provision is made for the interest which may accrue on the verdict from the time it is rendered until judgment is finally entered thereon; and the clerk is required to compute the interest and add it to the'costs of the party entitled thereto. (§ 310.) The code also directs that on filing a judgment roll upon a judgment it may be' docketed with the clerk of the county where it was rendered. (§ 282.) This section is entirely in harmony with the preceding sections; it does not require that the judgment shall be docketed at the time of filing the judgment roll; it merely provides that it may be done. Nothing appears in the papers on which the motion was founded, going to show any irregularity in the entry of judgment, or'in making up and filing the judgment roll. So far the proceedings on the part of the plaintiff appear to have been entirely regular. It follows therefore that the order setting aside the entry of judgment is. unauthorized and should be reversed. As to the next question raised upon ¿his appeal, there is no- doubt that the costs were irregularly *661adjusted and inserted in the judgment. No notice of the application to the clerk to insert the costs in the entry of judgment was given to the defendant’s attorney, as required by § 311 of the code. If however the judgment was properly entered and is allowed to stand, then there is no possible necessity or excuse for setting aside the docket of the judgment and subsequent proceedings. Ample justice may be done, and the defendant’s rights fully protected, without taking that step. If the docket is set aside, the plaintiff will be deprived of the security which he may have acquired by that proceeding. Unless the irregularity is such as to partake of the essence of the act of docketing the judgment, it should not be regarded as affecting its validity. It is undoubtedly the duty of the party entitled to costs, to give the other party two days’ notice of the application to the clerk, to have such costs inserted in the entry of the judgmeiit. It is equally the duty of the clerk not to adjust or insert the costs in the entry of judgment until such notice has been given. The plain language of the code requires the clerk to insert in the entry of judgment on the application of the prevailing party upon two days’ notice to the other, the sum of charges for costs, &c.
The essence of the thing required to be done is the insertion of the costs in the entry of the judgment, and not the notice of the application to have it done. The statute in such a case should be regarded as merely directory, and not as imperative. A statute which directs a thing to be done in a certain time, without any negative words restraining its being afterwards done, will as a general rule be regarded as directory, and not as a limitation of authority. (Smith’s Com. § 670. Pond v. Negus, 3 Mass. Rep. 232.)
There are no negative words used in the provisions of the code, restraining the clerk, or rendering void his acts, in case the costs are adjusted and inserted by him in the entry of judgment, without the required notice to the other party.
It is an obvious principle that prevails in the construction of statutes, to carry into effect the intent of the legislature and to secure the object intended to be secured by the statute. The substance of the thing to be done by the clerk is the insertion *662of Jhe costs in the entry of judgment; the notice to the other party is merely collateral to the principal act. The object' of the notice is to protect thé party against thé allowance of illegal and unjust charges ; but if the notice is omittéd to be given it does not affect the essence of the act required to be performed . by the clerk, to wit, the insertion of the costs in the entry of judgment. The clerk is substituted by the code, in the placé of the taxing officer under our former system; if he finds illegal items in the bill of costs presented for adjustment, it is his dirty to strike them out. (Belding v. Conklin, 4 How. Pr. R. 199.) Justice Bakctjlo holds in this case that the clerk is substituted in thé place of the taxing officer, and although the word" tax” is no longer used, the substance of the duty remains thé same as before the code. Under our former practice an irregular taxation never was allowed to affect the regularity of the judgment. - (7 Cowen, 412. 2 Wend. 244. Grah. Pr. 2d ed. 238.) If the clerk irregularly adjusts the costs and inserts the same in the entry of judgment, no good or wéll founded reason can be discovered why it should any more affect the regularity and validity of the docket of judgment now than it formerly did. If the statute directing the notice of adjustment to be given, is merely directory, (and not imperative,) as we have no doubt it must be, it then follows that the act of adjusting the costs by the clerk does not depend for its validity on the giving of the notice, by one party to the other. The power or authority of the clerk to perform the act is not conferred by the notice, but by the law itself. The remedy of the party entitled to have the notice of adjustment and insertion of the costs in the entry of judgment, may safely rest, in the right to compel a re-adjustment, at the expense of the party who shall obtain such insertion and adjustment without giving the notice required by § 311 of the code.
Justice Gridley,in the case of Richards v. Sweetzer, (4 How. Pr. R. 414,) decided that a judgment is not irregular, or liable to be set aside, because the two days’ notice of the application to the clerk to enter the costs in the judgment were not given. Also the same learned jurist, in the case of Dix v. *663Palmer and others, (5 How. Pr. Rep. 234,) comes to the same conclusion on a review of the cases.
We are aware that in the case of Mitchell v. Hall, (7 How. Pr. Rep. 490,) it was held by Justice Barculo that the clerk had no authority to adjust the costs, until the notice of two days was given. This case holds that it is the notice which confers authority on the clerk. It is remarkable if the legislature intended to attach so much potency to the giving of the two days’ notice, that they did not indicate it by some express words in the act. If it was intended that the authority of the clerk should depend upon the giving of notice to the opposite party, proof of its having been given should be made to the clerk; otherwise he ought not to insert the costs in the judgment. We do not concur in the opinion of the learned justice, that the clerk derives his authority to insert the costs in the entry of judgment from the giving of the two days’ notice. Before the code was made, the taxation of costs without notice was an irregularity, because it violated a standing rule and the practice of the court. The adjustment of costs and the insertion in the entry of judgment by the clerk without notice, is now an irregularity, because it violates the requirements of § 311 of the code. We are of opinion that the clerk’s authority is not derived from the act of giving the notice. If'the clerk adjusts the costs and inserts the amount in the entry of judgment without notice to the other party, it can only be regarded as an irregularity of the party, not affecting the authority of the clerk or the validity of the judgment. The only consequences arising from such irregularity are, to order a re-adjustment of the costs at the expense of the party omitting to give the notice, and to compel such party to pay the costs of a motion to obtain a re-adjustment. It is obvious that many times a delay of two days in docketing a judgment will entirely defeat the party recovering a verdict from collecting any portion of it; ample time will thus be given, to create liens and shifts of property, by which the vigilant creditor may be entirely defeated in obtaining the fruit of his litigation. If the party obtaining a verdict desires to enter and docket his judgment without delay, for the purpose *664of reaching the property of his adversary and thereby securing the demand, we are unable to discover any prohibition in the code taking away the right to' do so. The former practice allowed the party to enter a judgment, and give notice of a re-taxation of the costs. We see no good reason to change the practice in that particular.
[Chenango General Term, January 10, 1854.Crippen, Shankland, Gray and Mason, Justices.]
On the whole case, therefore, we are of opinion that the order of the special term must be reversed, but without costs to either party.
Justice Gray gave no opinion.