In the justice of the peace court, where the case originated, the appellant, as plaintiff, sued the appellee railroad company for $45 damages for the negligent killing of a cow by striking it with a train. The defendant pleaded the general issue and a plea of tender of $35. The justice found against the defendant on the general issue and in its favor on the plea of tender, and rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant for $35, and taxed the costs accordingly, i. e., against the plaintiff. From this judgment the plaintiff prayed for and obtained an appeal to the county court of Shelby county, and when the case came on for trial in that court amended his complaint so as to claim $50 instead of $45 as claimed in the justice court. The case was tried before a judge and jury in the county court and the jury returned a verdict in the following language: “We, the jury, find the issue for the plaintiff and assess his damages at $35.00.” Upon this verdict a judgment was entered up in the county court in favor of the plaintiff for the $35, and, under the provisions of section 4724 of the Code, the plaintiff was taxed with the costs. Thereupon the plaintiff moved the court to amend the judgment nunc pro tunc so as to tax the defendant with the costs, contending that the case was tried in the county court only on the defendant’s plea of tender, and was decided adversely to defendant, carrying the costs as a proper charge against the defendant.
The bill of exceptions does not contain the evidence or any of the proceedings had in the county court on the trial of the case proper, but only the evidence offered on the hearing of plaintiff’s motion to amend nunc pro tunc. Set' out in the bill of exceptions are certain written charges given at the request of the plaintiff on the original trial, in which the jury were instructed that if they *528believed certain facts to exist, they should find against the defendant “on its plea of tender,” and also certain charges given at the defendant’s request, that the jury on the facts hypothesized in the charges should find in favor of the defendant under the issue of its plea of tender. But we are left entirely without knowledge as to what evidence was before the court on the trial of the main case. The pleadings show that the plaintiff amended his complaint so as to entitle him to recover a larger amount, and by the appeal the judgment in the justice court had been vacated, and the case in its entirety was in the county court for trial de novo. — Harsh v. Heflin, 76 Ala. 499. Such trial involved an ascertainment and finding of the amount of damages — the recovery to which the plaintiff might show himself to be entitled. The defendant’s appearance was tantamount to a plea of the general issue.
No separate finding on the defendant’s plea of tender is shown by the recitals in the transcript. The only finding of the jury shown is a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the same sum for which the justice rendered judgment in his favor; and, as it was not a recovery for “more than the amount for which the justice rendered judgment,” under the operation and effect of section 4724 of the Code, the costs were properly taxed against the plaintiff.
As stated, it deos not appear that there was an affirmative finding or verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant in the county court on the latter’s plea of tender, but, if so, and the damages assessed by the jury were not greater than the amount for which the justice rendered judgment, then the plaintiff’s recovery would not be for “more than the amount for which the justice rendered judgment.” — Code, § 4724. And under the requirements of this special statutory provision, the *529costs were properly adjudged against plaintiff, and Ms motion to amend the judgment and have the defendant taxed with the costs could not prevail without doing violence to the mandate of the statute, providing that a plaintiff who does not recover more on his appeal must be taxed with the costs. The statute malíes it a prerequisite that the plaintiff, to be allowed costs, must recover more on the appeal than he recovered in the primary court, and the costs of the case could not, in any event, be included and added to the amount of the finding or judgment for the purpose of increasing the amount of the plaintiff’s recovery as fixed by the jury, to make it more than the amount found by the justice. It is universal to refer to the recovery of a successful party as the amount of the finding in his favor exclusive of costs. Costs are not generally, properly or technically speaking, a part of the recovery itself, but only an incident to it — something that follows or flOAVs from it as an allowance imposed and to be taxed and collected under statutory authority in the nature of a penalty.
The plaintiff not having recovered a judgment for more damages in the trial de novo on appeal, but only for the amount tendered, the defendant was entitled to a judgment against the plaintiff for the costs of the suit. —Schuessler v. Simon, 100 Ala. 422, 14 South. 203.
Affirmed.