Newton v. Sweet

Harris, Justice.

By the 37th section of the act relative to the duties of executors and administrators, (2 R. S. 89,) it is provided that when a el aim against an estate is referred pursuant to the provisions of that act, it is to be regarded in all respects as a suit commenced by ordinary process, and the court may adjudge costs as in actions against executors. The rights of the parties, then, in respect to costs, are the same as if an action had been brought by the plaintiff upon his claim against the executors. By the last clause of the 317th section of the code, it is declared that the provisions of that section shall not be construed to allow costs against executors and administrators, where they had, by the 41st section of the act above referred to, been exempted therefrom. Under that section, no costs could be recovered against executors or administrators, unless allowed by the court upon special application. Such application has been made in this case, and denied. The plaintiff is, therefore, not entitled to recover costs as a part of his judgment.

But what are the costs of which, by the operation of the last clause of the 317th section of the code, the plaintiff, though the prevailing party, is deprived? Previous to the adoption of the code, the compensation allowed by law to attorneys, solicitor and counsel, as well as other officers, was called fees. Such fees, when brought together and liquidated by an officer authorized to tax the same, were denominated costs. It was also provided by law, that in addition to such/ees, certain disbursements might also be allowed in the taxation of costs. (2 R. S. 634, § 20.) So that the term costs embraced all fees of officers, including the attorney or solicitor and counsel, and such disbursements as were allowed by law to be taxed; but by the code, the meaning of the term costs is changed. The 303d section abolishes all fees of attorneys, solicitors and counsel; and in lieu of such fees, declares that certain allowances may be made tó the prevailing party, which allowances are termed costs. Thus we have a definition of the term, as it is used in the code. It embraces merely the allowances made to a prevailing party, as a substitute for the fees of attorneys and counsel. The next two sections declare in what cases costs, as thus defined, shall be recoverable as a matter of right. The 306th section declares the cases in which such costs shall be recoverable or not, in the discretion of the court; and then the 307th section proceeds to fix the amount of such allowances when recoverable. The 308th and 309th sections provide for an increase of such allowances in certain cases. Then the clerk is required by the 311th section to insert in the entry of judgment, upon the application of the prevailing party, “ the sum of the charges for costs, as above provided and also “ the necessary disbursements and fees of officers *136allowed by law, including the compensation of referees, and the expense of printing the papers upon any appeal.” These disbursements, and fees of officers, are to be included in the judgment, in addition to the costs which the party is entitled to recover.

Were it not for the last clause of 317th section, the plaintiff would, I think, have been entitled to the costs prescribed by the 307th section, as well as necessary disbursements and fees of officers, as of course. It is an action of which, according to the 54th section of the code, a justice of the peace has no jurisdiction, and is therefore embraced in the third subdivision of the 304th section, which declares in what cases costs shall be allowed of course. But the operation of the last clause of the 317th section is confined to costs; and'its effect, if I am right in the meaning I have attached to the term costs, as used in the code, is to deprive the plaintiff as the prevailing party, of such costs as he would otherwise have recovered under the 304th section. It prohibits the clerk from entering in the judgment “ the sum of the charges for costs,” but not “ the necessary disbursements and fees of officers allowed by law” These he is yet to insert in the judgment as required by the 311th section. Indeed, as I understand that section, the prevailing party in every instance, recovers necessary disbursements and fees of officers. This construction of the section is certainly commended-by the manifest justice of such a provision.

Iam aware that the framers of the code do not seem, in all cases, themselves to have had in view the change which they have made in the signification of the term costs. Thus in the 304th section it is provided, that when several actions are brought for the same cause of action, against several parties who might have been joined in the Same action, “no costs other than disbursements” shall be allowed, &c. The language here used, would seem to imply that disbursements were to be regarded as embraced, in the term costs, and that it was intended by that provision that no costs except disbursements should be recovered in the cases specified; but construed in connexion with the other provisions to which I have referred, I think it should be held to mean that disbursements only, and no costs, should be recovered in the cases to which it is applicable. So, also, the security to be given under the 182d, 230'th, 334th, and perhaps some other sections of the code, is to the effect that the party giving the security shall pay all costs and damages which may be awarded against him. The construction above given to the term costs, may have the effect to exempt the sureties in such cases from liability for disbursements and officers’ fees as not embracedin their undertaking, unless, as perhaps they *137might be, they are recoverable as damages. On the other hand, there are other provisions, as the 301st and 371st sections, which plainly recognize the distinctions between allowances for costs and fees and disbursements.

I have already had occasion to decide that the provision which declares that in certain cases a plaintiff shall recover no more costs than damages, is not applicable to disbursements and fees of officers, (Taylor v. Gardner, 4 Howard, 67.) The correctness of this decision, so far as I have understood, has not been questioned. The same principles of construction which led to that conclusion, in this case entitles the plaintiff to his necessary disbursements and the fees of officers'paid by him, although he does not recover costs. The motion must therefore be denied, but without costs.