Ervin v. Collier

Wade, C. J.

This case was first tried at the August term, 1875. At the ensuing term in January, 1876, a motion fora rehearing was granted and the ease has been argued and submitted at this term. A statement of the facts is necessary to present the questions which are involved. The action is an application for an injunction to stay waste, and a temporary restraining order was issued. Afterward, the appellants applied to the court for the appointment of a receiver, and alleged as a cause therefor, that the respondent continued to work the mining ground in dispute contrary to the restraining order. After testimony had been taken regarding the propriety of appointing a receiver, the parties stipulated that a receiver should be appointed. The receiver made a report of the receipts and expenses of the property and retained *607for bis services $812. There were no exceptions to this report. The cause was tried and a decree was rendered in favor of the appellants, giving them the possession of. the mining ground and taxing the costs against the respondent, which included the amount of the receiver’s services. The respondent made a motion to modify the decree by striking therefrom the part relating to the costs of the receiver. The court sustained the motion, and the appellant excepted and appealed from the decree, as modified, to this court.

The motion to modify the decree says that this motion is based on the papers filed in this cause, and records and papers in the case of Barkley v. W. M. Ervin and W. H. Metcalf, and the papers and records in the case of C. T. Collier v. W. M. Ervin and W. H. Metcalf and M. C. Page, and the judgments therein rendered and the affidavits on file.”

None of the papers in these cases appear in the transcript, except the papers belonging to this action. The decision at the first hearing of this appeal was rendered upon the presumption that the papers in the other cases named in the motion, were used on the hearing of the motion, and that they controlled the discretion of the court in sustaining the motion. This position is wrong. The presumption is that the papers which are mentioned in the motion and do not appear in the transcript, were not used in the court below in determining the motion. Hidden v. Jordan, 28 Cal. 301; Smith v. Athern, 34 id. 506.

This is a motion after final judgment. On the appeal from its determination, it is the duty of the appellant to cause the record to contain all the papers used on the trial of the same. Glidden v. Packard, 28 Cal. 649. The same rule applies on an appeal from a final judgment, and the statute requires the appellant to perform this duty. Civ. Pr. Act, § 379. We presume that this duty has been performed in this ease because .the respondent has not made a suggestion that there is a. diminution of the record. He can compel the appellants to bring to this c6urt a perfect record, and being satisfied with the record, cannot, upon the argument, claim that some papers are missing.

The action of the court below must be reviewed on the papers in the transcript. This is a case in equity and the taxation of the *608costs rests in tbe sound discretion of the court. In the first decision this principle was announced and this court then held that this discretion is limited. It is a legal, not capricious, discretion. "When this discretion is exercised outside of established limits, courts will review the same and. decide that there has been an abuse thereof, or error, tinder the old chancery practice, the general rule is the same as at law, and the winning party recovers his costs. The rule under our practice should be the same in equity cases.

There are no exceptional facts in this case which require the court, in the exercise of a legal discretion, to tax the costs of the receiver against the party in whose favor all the equities were found. It does not matter how or why the receiver was appointed. He is entitled to his costs, which were taxable in this action. No application was made for his removal and no exception was taken to his report and we presume that he was appointed legally and performed his duty faithfully. His compensation should come from the party whose wrongful acts made his appointment necessary in order to preserve the property during the litigation. The record shows that this party was the respondent, and the court found.that the appellants were entitled to the possession of the mine. Therefore the costs of the receiver should have been taxed against the respondent. Hnder the facts appearing in the record the refusal of the court to tax these costs in favor of the appellants was an arbitrary ruling and not the exercise of a legal discretion.

Judgment reversed.