Rule 82 declares that applications of this description can only be made to the court before which the trial is had, or the judgment rendered. This does not mean that if the trial is in the Supreme Court, the application, must be made in that court. Such a provision would be quite unnecessary, for no lawyer would think of applying to any other than the Supreme Court for such allowance. It was intended by the rule that the question of extra allowance should be determined by the judge who tried the cause, who must necessarily be most competent, from his knowledge of its character, to decide upon the propriety of the application, and the extent to which the allowance should be made, if made at. all. It was also a leading object of the rule to prevent the abuse which had already been attempted, of attorneys running around to inquire out and select a judge for the application, in the hope of finding one who might prove to be more facile than his brethren, in yielding to these too ■ often extravagant demands for extra allowance. It was hoped that by this restriction some of the evils growing out *32of this most objectionable provision of the Code, might be guarded against, though it is certain that no uniformity of practice, or of opinion, can ever he attained under it.
The language of the rule sufficiently indicates the object above stated. If a cause he tried at a circuit court in Schoharie, the successful party can not apply at a circuit court in Albany for an extra allowance. Nor can such application he made at a special term or at a subsequent circuit, even in Schoharie, but “ only to the court before which the trial is had;” that is, it must be made at the circuit or court at which- the cause was tried (Dyckman agt. McDonald, 5 Plow. Pr. R. 121).
In this case no application for an extra allowance was made to Justice Harris, by counsel on either side at the time the cause was submitted, nor did the counsel ask to have' that question reserved by the judge for subsequent argument or further consideration, and the application can be made at no other court.
In The People vs. Clarke (11 Barb. R. 337), an extra allowance was made by Justice Willard, in a cause which had been previously decided by Justice Cady. But no objection appears to have been taken, and no reference made to the rule, and the question may have been submitted to Justice Willard, by the consent and for the convenience of counsel.
The last clause of the rule was designed to enable a party who had succeeded in a cause tried before a referee,'to apply for an extra allowance at a special term of the court (Sackett agt. Bull, 4 How. Pr. R. 71). This was necessary for the reason that no such application could he made to the referee. The motion must be therefore denied.
I am inclined to think there is another good answer to the motion. The action is said to have been brought for the purpose of setting aside a voluntary assignment. An additional allowance is not given under the first clause of the'308th section, except when the action is brought for the recovery of money, or of real or personal property. In .an action purely equitable, no extra allowance can be made, unless it comes under the latter clause of the section, which is clearly inapplicable to this case. But this point was not raised on the argument, and the motion is denied on the other ground, but without costs.