It is insisted on the part of the respondents that the defendants had an absolute right to all the costs in the action subsequent to the offer of judgment, and that this right is secured by section 385 of the Code of Procedure, which declares that “if the plaintiff fail to recover a more favorable judgment he cannot recover costs, but must pay the defendant’s costs from the time of the offer.” It may be conceded that this position is correct in respect of all costs given,by statute. Such costs become by operation of law “the defendant’s costs” in a ease of this kind before us, and it needs no order or adjudication of the court to confer them, nor can such order or adjudication take them away.
That was in substance held by the Court of Appeals in Ayers v. Western Railroad Co., 49 N. Y. 660, wherein it was adjudged that the addition of the words “with costs” or “without costs” to a judgment of that court cannot affect the right of the prevailing party in cases where the costs are not in-the discretion of the court.
Costs under the Code are the mere creature of statute. They are allowed to the prevailing party either absolutely or conditionally; and in both cases when allowed, they are regulated as to amount. Where given absolutely, the statute fixes the right, and the courts cannot annul the statute. But where allowed conditionally, or more properly speaking, in the discretion of the court, there are no costs, unless the court, in the exercise of its discretion, awards them. This latter branch of the subject is regulated by section 306 of the Code, which immediately follows the two sections declaring where plaintiffs or defendants shall be allowed costs “of course.” It provides that “in other actions costs may be allowed or not, in the discretion of the court,” and after providing for the case of several defendants where plaintiff fails to recover against all, it further declares that “In the following cases the costs of an appeal shall be in the discretion of the court: 1. Where a new trial shall be ordered. ' 3. Where judgment shall be affirmed in part and reversed in part.”
*360No costs are allowed by the statute to any party in either of these cases without the express adjudication of the court. Silence is a denial of them; and the addition of the words "without costs to either party,” adds nothing to the legal effect of an omission to award them, but is the customary form of advising the parties that the subject has been considered by the court, which declines to exercise its discretion in favor of either party.
In this case the plaintiffs had recovered $4,600. The defendants had appealed from the entire recovery upon questions of grave importance, affecting equally each of the forty-six penalties. Those questions were decided adversely to them; but upon the point raised by defendants that there could be a recovery in the action for but one penalty, they succeeded in reversing the judgment in part while the plaintiffs succeeded in affirming it in part. It is difficult to see why this is not the exact case in which, under section 306 of the Code, the question whether there are any costs for either party on the appeal did not altogether depend upon their allowance by the court. Nor why, when the court expressly pronounced its judgment “without cost of the appeal to either party,” there could remain a doubt that costs on that appeal had no legal existence.
It is claimed, however, that section 306 is inconsistent with the provisions of section 385, and therefore that the latter must prevail. We think there is no inconsistency. The latter section declares that the plaintiff “must pay the defendant’s costs from, the time of the offer.” But what are “the defendant’s costs?” Clearly the costs allowed by statute, or by the court where the power of allowing them is relegated by statute to its discretion. The former the defendants have, as matter of right, and the latter also when the court uses its discretion in their favor; but when, in respect of the latter, the court adjudges not to allow costs at all, it seems almost a redudio ad absurdum still to insist that there is any such thing as “defendant’s costs.”
The court having unquestionable power to affirm in part and reverse in part, and having exercised that power, the case clearly existed in which no costs of the appeal are given to either party unless the court in its discretion allows them. It is suicidal, therefore, to argue that the court had no power to say any thing on the subject, since it is plain that until the court does speak there is no such thing in the particular proceeding as costs for either party.
The 385th section, in requiring the plaintiff in the case provided *361for to pay “ defendant’s costs,” must be held to mean only such costs as are legally allowed either by statute or in case of discretion by the court, and is not intended to limit or in anywise to interfere with the discretionary power over costs which is conferred on the courts in any of the various steps or proceedings that may be taken in the progress of the suit.
Since the final judgment the question of costs has been twice before the Court of Appeals in forms that incidentally involved the question now before us, and that court, in the order on the appeal from the general term, gave explicit directions as to what costs should be taxed. We think that was a substantial adjudication of the question involved in this appeal. But if it were not, we are of opinion that the respondents have no legal right to tax costs on the appeal from the judgment.
The order appealed from should be reversed, with $10 costs of this appeal, besides disbursements, and the clerk should be directed to strike out the items for costs, etc., of the Court of Appeals.
Order reversed.