Case ID: abb-pr_12/html/0183-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "White, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

BRONNER a. FRAUENTHAL.
    
      New York Superior Court;
    
      Special Term, April, 1861.
    Costs.—Right of Party testifying in his own behalf to recover Witness-Fees.
    A party, upon making the necessary proof that he attended the trial only as a witness, and not in any respect as a party, should be allowed witness-fees for . his travel and attendance.
    The affidavit of the party claiming witness-fees for his own attendance as a witness in his own behalf, should be required in all cases, in addition to any other proof, that he attended solely as witness, that may be offered ; for no one but the party himself can swear positively or conclusively to the fact that he was not attracted by his interest in the cause to attend at the trial. His own affidavit should be deemed sufficient; but that ought not to be dispensed with.
    Appeal from adjustment of costs.
    On the trial of the action, two of the plaintiffs were sworn, and testified as witnesses in behalf of the plaintiffs, and this appeal was taken from the decision of the clerk in respect to their right to witness-fees for such attendance.
    
      F. S. Stallknecht, for the appellants.
    
      Hull & Conable, for the respondents.
   White, J.

—This is an appeal from the taxation or adjustment by the clerk of the plaintiffs’ costs in this action. Two of the plaintiffs, Seckel Bronner and Bernhard Bronner, attended and were sworn on the trial of this action, as witnesses for the plaintiffs; and the plaintiffs claimed to he allowed, in their bill of costs, nihe dollars for the attendance of Seckel Bronner, and fifty dollars and eighty-eight cents for the attendance of Bern-hard Bronner, including his travel fees in coming from Syracuse to New York, to attend the trial, and returning.

The objection is taken, on the part of the defendant, that fees as for a witness cannot be allowed to a party who is sworn and testifies in the action in his own behalf. This, I believe, is the first time that this question has been presented to this court. It has been several times before the Supreme Court, in different judicial districts of the State, and the decisions upon it have been conflicting. In Cornell a. Potter (15 How. Pr., 278), Justice Balcom, at a special term of the Supreme Court, in the sixth district, decided that a party sworn and attending on a trial, in his own behalf, should not be allowed fees for himself as a witness. He places his decision, in principle, upon the theory that a witness, within the meaning of the statute, is only a person whose attendance cannot be compelled except by service of subpoena, &c.; and he also places it upon a general principle, that his character as party ought to be deemed sufficient to exclude him from claiming compensation as a witness, even when he attends the trial solely as a witness, and not in any respect as a party. Parties, the learned judge fears, would be tempted to commit perjury, and swear that they attended only as witnesses, if they had the temptation of witnesses’ fees presented to them. This apprehension, however, the Legislature has not recognized, when allowing a party to be a witness in his own behalf; and I think, when it is not deemed sufficient to exclude a party from testifying in his own favor upon the merits, it should not prevail upon this minor question of costs or disbursements in the action.

To the same effect with the above authority is the decision of Justice Smith, at special term, in the seventh judicial district of the Supreme Court, in Case a. Price (9 Abbotts’ Pr., 111); and .in giving his decision on that occasion, Judge Smith stated that it had been so held in another case in which the same question was presented, at a general term of that district. But it does not appear from the report of this case in the seventh district, that it had been shown that the party attended only as a witness, and not as a party.

Contrary to the above decisions, I find several reported cases in favor of the allowance of witness-fees to the party sworn in his own behalf. I shall merely refer to them by citation. They are: Querissle a. Hilliard (3 Abbotts’ Pr., 31), in the first judicial district of the Supreme Court; Logan a. Brooks (8 Abbotts’ Pr., 127), in the third judicial district, same court; Walker a. Russell, reported in a note (7 Abbotts’ Pr., 452), Supreme Court, special term, sixth district; Rogers a. Chamberlain (7 Abbotts’ Pr., 452), in the New York Common Pleas; and in Logan a. Thomas (11 How. Pr., 160). The rule contended for by the plaintiffs on the present motion is not denied; and in England, in Howes a. Barber (10 Eng. Law and Eq., 465), the same rule was established; that is, that a party, upon making the necessary proof that he attended the trial only as a witness, and not in any respect as a party, should be allowed witness-fees for his travel and attendance; and this, in my judgment, is the correct rule. I think, however, that the affidavit of the party himself should be required in all such eases, in addition to any other proof that may be offered; for no one but the party himself can swear positively or conclusively to the fact that he was not attracted by his interest in The cause to attend at the trial. His own affidavit should be deemed sufficient; but that ought not to be dispensed with.

In this case, Bernhard Bronner does not furnish his own affidavit that he attended only as a witness. When he does so, the charge of fifty dollars and eighty-eight cents should be allowed for his fees as a witness; and upon the present papers, the charge of nine dollars for Selleck Bronner should be allowed. I will only further remark, that the establishment of the rule above stated, in this court, will also have the effect to render the practice on this subject uniform in all the courts in this city.