The counsel for the appellant insists that the pendency of the certiorari suspends the right of the referees to collect their fees from the appellants until its determination, and cites in support of the position authorities showing that a certiorari stays the execution of-orders in certain special proceedings.
The statute (Latos of 1847, chap. 455, § 9), provides that when the order appealed from shall be affirmed, the fees of the referees shall be paid by the appellant, and in case of a reversal, by the county.
*462The affirmance of the order by the referees, gave them a prima fade right to recover their fees of the appellant, and the enforcement of this right is not in any sense the execution of the order. Consequently, this right is not suspended by suing out, the certiorari. The referees had the right to assign this demand, the same as any other, and the assignee can maintain an action for its recovery in his own name.
It appears from the opinion of the general term, that the court held that the referees could only recover two dollars a day each, for time spent in hearing all the appeals, and were not entitled to recover this sum from each appellant. In this conclusion I think the court was clearly right. The language of section 9 (supra) is, that each referee shall be entitled to receive two dollars for every day employed in the hearing and decision of such appeal or appeals. The only compensatibn the referees are entitled to is that given by statute, and it is manifest that the statute only gives to a referee two dollars for each day employed in hearing the appeals.
If this required any additional argument, that would be found in the fact that all these appeals presented the same question, and must all be decided in the same way, and that nothing was or could be pertinent to the determination of one, that was not equally applicable to all. The same referees must of necessity dispose of all the appeals. As above remarked, the general term so decided, but further held, that each appellant was jointly and severally bound, under the facts of this case, to pay the entire fees of the referees, • and that, therefore, the judgment of ninety-six dollars in favor of the plaintiff, must be affirmed, notwithstanding the appellant in his answer had set up the nonjoinder of the other appellants.
In this latter conclusion I think the court erred. It was undoubtedly consistent for the referees to give each appellant a separate hearing, in which event each would be liable for the time occupied in the hearing of his particular appeal, although the question was the same in all.
It will be seen from the statute, that an appeal is given to *463any one conceiving himself aggrieved by the determination of the commissioners. The appellants may be very numerous.
The language of the statute is, that the referees shall, in case the determination of the commissioners be affirmed, be paid by the parties appealing.
In the present case, where all the appeals were heard as one, I think the construction of the statute is, that all the appellants are to be regarded as the party appealing, and all jointly liable to pay the fees.
The general term must have adopted this conclusion, for they held that all were jointly liable. The result would be the same if the joint liability was deduced from the fact that by the assent of the appellants, all were heard together as one appeal.
„This would make ah jointly liable. But how is á several liability for the whole fees created ? Glearly not upon the latter ground; for when several unite in employing the services of others, where they have a common interest, a joint but not several liability to pay the compensation is created, whether the amount of compensation is fixed by law or not.
A several liability for the payment of all the fees cannot be based upon the statute, for that makes each appellant liable for the payment of the fees of hearing his own appeal, but no liability for the hearing of the appeal of any other.
It cannot, I think, be held that all the fees accrued for • hearing the defendant’s appeal, and none for hearing the other three, for this would place it in the power of the referees to compel any one of the four to pay all the fees, without any .remedy against the others. My conclusion is, that in the present case the appellants were jointly but not severally liable for the fees, and that, therefore, the nonjoinder of the others was an available defense.
If wrong in this, and there is any several liability, that can only extend to the proportion devolving upon each, which in the absence of proof "would be one quarter.
It will be the proper time to determine questions arising *464when separate appeals form portions of the order have been taken, when such a case is before the court.
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.