A motion for double costs is made in this case by the defendants, on the ground that they are within the provisions of the statute. (2 R. S., 617, § 24, 1st ed.)
The motion is made upon the case and exceptions, on which a motion for a new trial was heard at general term, and denied, judgment being ordered for the defendants on the verdict rendered at the circuit.
The plaintiff’s counsel insists that the case and exceptions are not the proper evidence of the facts therein shown for the purpose of this motion; that being made for another purpose they cannot be used for this.
No objection is taken to any want of specifying them in
After a case or exceptions has been settled it is filed with the clerk, and becomes a record of the court; and I think it may be taken prima facie in the further progress of the action as evidence of the facts therein appearing.
It appears, then, from the case and exceptions which embody the pleadings, that the action was brought to recover damages against the defendants, for breaking the plaintiff’s close, and cutting down and destroying his timber; that the answer denied the allegations of the complaint, and also set up in justification that \he locus in quo was a public highway, and that whatever acts the defendants did therein were done by them as highway laborers, by order of the commissioners of highways of the town.
The principal question litigated on the trial was, whether the locus in quo was a public highway, and the court held that, under the proof given, it was.
It was also proved that the commissioners delivered to the defendant Ackles, who was an overseer of highways, a road warrant, directing him to call out the men in his road district, and work this road; that the other defendants worked under him, and cut the timber for the purpose of opening the highway. Here was a highway duly laid out, through timbered lands, and annexed to a road district, of which Ackles was overseer. He received a warrant from the commissioners, which made it his duty as a public officer to go on and do the acts, for which the action is brought. (1 R. S., 502, §1 sub. 7; id., 503, §6; id., 504, §16, 1st ed.)
The other defendants, in doing the acts complained of, acted under the immediate direction of Ackles, the overseer of highways—strictly “in aid” of him, “touching the duties of his office.” Indeed, it is only because they were so acting, that they were justified in cutting the timber in the highway that belonged to the plaintiff, notwithstanding
The fact that they were working out their highway tax does not change the other fact, that they were doing the act complained of by the command of the overseer, and in his aid, “ touching the duties of his office.” It was their general duty to work on the road under the direction of the overseer; it was their particular duty to cut down the timber at his command; to aid him in the construction of the road, and putting it in proper condition as a road, which it was his duty to do. That they are put under-his direction by the statute, is rather in favor of their right to double costs, than against it.
It seems to me that the defendants are all within, both the letter and the spirit, of the statutory provision.
The motion is, therefore, granted, but without costs of this motion.
This decision was affirmed on appeal by the general term sitting in the fifth district on the first Tuesday in July, 1861.