Court Opinion

ID: 6667410
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:07:08.245907+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:00:22.854739
License: Public Domain

Eairle, J.
delivered the opinion of the court. We fully concur in the opinion pronounced by Baltimore, county-court in the bill of exceptions in this record. They refuse ed, on the prayer of the defendant, to direct the jury, that the plaintiffs were only entitled to nominal damages, and in this they were undeniably right The judgment by default is an admission of the cause of action, and the defendant’s liability to the amount of the note, which must be produced on tbe trial, that it may be seen whether any part of it has been paid, hut which need not be proved. This admitted liability to the plaintiffs’ action might also.be considered an answer to the appellant’s objection to the affirmance of the judgment, that the plaintiffs endorsed away f he note by a blank endorsement, and are therefore net entitled to a recovery. But this ansvver need not be here insisted on, inasmuch as it has been several times adjudged in this court, that an endorsement in blank does not trausferthe interest in the note or bill, without some further act done by the bolder. The act of filling it up may be done by him at *286any time, even at the time of the trial. If the holder filis up the blank endorsement, and makes it payable 1° himself» he must sue as endorsee: but if it is not filled up, he may gue in the name of the endorsor. See Clntly on Bills, 149, and the cases.there cited; and see also Gray and Biddle vs. Wopd, in this court, . The plaintiffs endorsed to' The Franklin Bank of Baltimore, .as it is said, for collection» But the note was not transferred, let the motive have been, what it might. It was in blank, and transferred no interest, and being subsequently in their hands, it was in their power to do with it as they pleased — to fill up the .endorsement, or to erase it, or to make any other disposition whatsoever of- it in their yolitióji. There is then no error íix this part of the cas.e.
The two objections made on the argument to the,record» we will now proceed to consider. It was objected, that, the. order in nature of a writ of inquiry does not charge, the jury to inquire of the damages and costs sustained by the pla.intiffs in the action; and that the inquisition found, is uncertain and erroneous, in. finding qbout ten dollars, current money, for the plaintiffs’costs of-suit. That these., are in themselves errors, all must admit; but whether they, are of a character to reverse the judgment,^ is the question. to engage the attention of the court. If they, are mere. formal defects, they might have been amended in the,court, b.elbw, and may be amended here under the act. of-1809, ch. 153, s. 2. Ou,r inquiry, then, is into,.the character o tithe se defects in the record.
Costs .were never given at common law eo nomine, yet they were in reality always considered and-included in the. quantum of damages, in such actions where damages were recoverable. The jury were found to be inadequate, judges of the amount of costs incurred by the plaintiff, and. their inadequacy ledto the introduction of the statute of Gloucester, 6 Edw. I, ch. 1, which gave costs’in all cases where the party is to recover damages. Vide Hullocks Law of Costs, 2. A gross su,m was assessed by the juries» in their verdicts, for damages and costs, the word damna, in its largest sense, including costs, they being a damage to the plaintiff; but the almost universal mode after the statute, as may be seen by the old books'of entries, was to .assess damages, to a certain amount beyond the plaintiff’s costs and charges, and for his costs and charges to a cer*287lain oilier sum, which was usually a nominal sum. Heneé the origin of the judgment for costs de incremento, wt>ich appears, from a recent authority, to be the accustomed entry in Great Britain to this day. Bale vs. Hodgetts, 1 Bingham, 182, (8 Serg. & Low. 288.) Sayer’s Law of Costs, 382. As it was the office of the jury to find and assess the damages, so after the statute of Gloucester, it became the unquestionable province of the courts, through its officers, to tax the costs the party is at in prosecuting iiis action, although, according to the British forms, it must be de incremento. In statutes passed since the reign of Mdw. I, where costs are given, the costs are of the taxation of the court; and the most diligent search will perhaps justify us in saying, that a statute since that period 1ms not been enacted, in which the assessment of costs eo nomine, lias been exclusively given to the jury. Was such a statute to be made, its injunctions must be obeyed, and quoad hoc, it would be considered, according to its language, an actual or virtual repeal of the statute of Gloucester, in a case that sounded in damages. The act of 1794, ch. 46, is not however a statute of this description. It. is not its object to give costs to a party not before entitled to costs, butit is simply intended, for the very good reasons assigned by the act, to authorise trials at bar in cases on interlocutory judgments, where writs of inquiry had been usually executed before the sheriff in the country. The trial in open court being merely substituted for a trial of the same matter in the country, it could not have entered into the views of the legislature, to give more enlarged powers to the trying jury in the one case than in the other — to innovate upon the common principle, and to empower a tribunal to assess costs as such, which for ages before had been found unequal to the purpose. Where the act directs the jury to be charged to inquire into the damages and costs, the term costs, it seems to us, must be understood in the Sense in which it is contemplated in relation to the subject for which it professes to provide, that is, in relation to writs of inquiry, and the proceedings under them. That in these the costs to be inquired into and found, are merely nominal, will be seen by an attentive examination of Lilly’s, and other books of entry, and by a view of the before mentioned case of Bale vs. Hodgetts. In that case fae jury found damages only, and the court suffered the *288jilaintifF tó amend the inquisition, by the insertion of a 'nominal sum for costs, to entitle him to his judgment de in~ cremento■. The form oféntry, it is proper to remark, seems to have fállen into disuse in this state. For years back it has been the practice in- our superior- courts to enter judgments for the damages assessed by the jury, and for the costs taxed by the court, overlooking entirely the former - method of finding a nominal sum by the jury, and-givilig the judgments for costs as an increase of the nominal sum. This practice furnishes evidence of the disregard in our-courts of the costs found by the jury, and may be considered in some measure as a key to the true meankng of the word “costs,” as used by the Ret of 1794. That act has been in force foi 30 years-, and-tile forms of our courts have never corresponded with it. In that to be found in Harris’s Entries, a book compiled with great care and diligence, after the passage of the law, the order charges the jury to inquire into the damages only. This point was not decided in the case of Harris vs. Jaffray. Ife was evaded by a writ of diminution, on the return of which (he objection to the record appeared to have been removed.
Let the formal errors suggested in the record be amend" ed, and the judgment affirmed.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED*.