The plaintiff sued for $475. The defendant admitted the debt, and pleaded a counter-claim of $146, the existence of which was disputed by the plaintiff. On the trial, the jury allowed the counter-claim, and gave the plaintiff a verdict for the difference between it and the claim. The clerk taxed a full bill of costs in favor of the plaintiff, under defendant’s objection, and refused to tax the defendant’s bill, which claimed costs from the time the answer was served. The clerk was right. The counter-claim was used substantially as a payment pro tanto, and, if the,defendant intended to stop the running of costs, he should have served an offer to allow judgment, under section 738 of the Code. The plaintiff did not apply for a severance of the admitted part of the claim, (Code, § 511,) and what might have resulted if he had, need not be considered now. Both parties went to trial on the pleadings as originally framed, and it is nothing more nor less than a case where the plaintiff sued on contract, and recovered more than $50, and became entitled as of course to a full bill of costs. Id. § 3228. It does not fall under any of the exceptions to this rule. Taxation affirmed.