It is conceded that the Compiled Statutes of 1887 are controlling on this appeal. Sections 502, 509 and 825, Code of Civil Procedure, of the statutes, are as follows :
“Section 502. In all cases of appeal from the judgment of Probate Court or justice of the peace, when the j udgment of such Probate Court or justice of the peace shall be wholly affirmed or reversed, the party succeeding shall recover from the opposite party his costs, not only in the District Court, but before the Probate Court or justice of the peace, and shall have his execution therefor. When the judgment of the court below shall be affirmed in part, then the court shall divide the costs between the parties according to the justice of the case.”
“Section 509. If any party shall include in such memorandum any item to which he is not entitled, or if any clerk, sheriff, referee or other officer shall include such item in the taxed costs, and a motion to retax the same shall be made by the party against whom the same is taxed, and if such motion to retax shall prevail, there shall be taxed, as a part of the cost of such motion, a docket fee of twenty-five dollars, and judgment therefor, with the other costs allowed by law, shall be entered against the party, sheriff, referee, cleric or other officer who so unlawfully taxed the same, and the same may be offset against any costs or judgment in favor of the party or officer so improperly taxing such costs, and against the party making such motion; or if no judgment exists the court may direct that the party making such motion' have execution therefor.”
“Section 825. If the party appealing fail to reduce or enlarge the judgment appealed from ten dollars or more, or re*63verse the same in the District Court, he shall not recover any of the costs of the appeal. ’ ’
Section 507 of the same code requires the party in whose favor the judgment is rendered to file with the clerk, within two days after verdict, a memorandum of costs and disbursements verified by oath.
The appellant relies chiefly upon Hibbard v. Tomlinson, 2 Mont. 220, for a reversal of the action of the lower court. In that case the court simply held, under what is now section 325, quoted above, that the taxing of costs was a discretionary matter with the court. ” The other sections quoted in the statement above do not appear to have been referred to in Hibbard v. Tomlinson.
Section 502, supra, provides that, when the judgment of the court below shall be affirmed in part, the court shall divide the costs between the parties according to the justice of the case. Under this section, it became the duty of plaintiff to apply to the court for an order dividing the costs between the parties, instead of including all the costs incurred in both courts in his memorandum of costs and disbursements, and having them entered as part of the judgment. By so doing, he included in his memorandum costs to which he was not entitled.
This action compelled defendants to take the necessary steps to retax the costs, and, the court having properly retaxed the costs, the plaintiff became amenable to the provisions of section 509, supra. The court, having held that plaintiff had included, in his memorandum and judgment, costs he was not entitled to, acted properly in taxing a docket fee of $25 against him.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Affirmed.