Court Opinion

ID: 5455269
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 19:17:25.543326+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:37.042658
License: Public Domain

Mitchell, J.
The decree or judgment of this court was rendered on the 31st of December last, sustaining the trusts in the cause, and adverse to the claims of the receiver. It directed, in substance, that “ the taxable costs’’ of the trustees, and of the receiver and of other parties, together with the amounts secured by the trust deeds, be paid out of the funds in the hands of Mr. Palmer, a special receiver in these actions; and if these were not sufficient, next out of the funds in the hands of Mr. Leavitt, so far as those funds were covered by the trust deed and were necessary for that purpose. The bills were filed in 1842, and answers put in and testimony taken and closed in December, 1850. The pleadings and proofs were all in writing, and constituted several large volumes of printed matter. The cause was called for hearing in April, 1851, before Mr. Justice King, at special term, but was directed by him, pursuant to the Judiciary Act, to be first heard at general term; and it was so heard on the pleadings and proofs in 1852. The trustees applied to one of the justices of this court to tax their costs, when the counsel for the receiver objected that the taxation should be under the Code; and the justice referred the matter to the general term for directions. The receiver now also objects to the taxation, on the ground that he has appealed from the decree and given security in §250, which he insists is a stay of all proceedings, and especially to prevent any payment of moneys under the decree. The trustees contend that the appeal is no stay, unless there be security for the payment of whatever sum the appellant may be decreed to pay.
The only questions now necessary to be decided are, whether an appeal with security in $250 stays the taxation of costs, and by what .system the costs are to be taxed.
Assuming the view of section 459 of the Code, that the *120judgment in these actions is to he entered according to the Oode, although the action was commenced before the Code, then, according to section 311, the clerk is to insert in the ■entry of the judgment the amount of the costs payable to any party; and the judgment would not be complete without such entry. At common law, also, the amount of the costs to the prevailing party formed a proper part of a complete judgment. In equity, also, the same practice prevailed before 1830, and then the only change was to annex the whole bill of costs to the decree, instead of stating the total in the decree. The Code (§ 311), adopts the common law practice. All, then, that the trustees 'now propose to do is to perfect their judgment, not to execute it. Section 335 prevents an appeal on a judgment directing the payment of money from staying the execution of the judgment, unless security be given in the amount therein required; and section 342, allows such an undertaking as was given in this case to “ stay proceedings in the court below upon the judgment appealed from.” Proceedings upon the judgment are those which are in some way to. cony out or enforce the judgment, as an execution on a judgment for the payment of money, or a sale on a decree of foreclosure and sale, or process for contempt, or other coercive measures, on a judgment to deliver documents or property, or to execute a conveyance. These modes of “ proceeding upon a judgment” are specified in sections 335-6-7-8, and illustrate the meaning of the general phrase afterwards used in sections 339 and 342, and show that it is to be construed by reference to those illustrations, and in analogy with them. The taxation or adjustment of costs not being an execution of or proceeding upon the judgment, but a means of completing it, is not stayed by the appeal.
The other question is as to the rule of taxing costs. To understand some of the decisions on that subject more clearly, it may be proper to notice the legislation on which they were founded. The revised statutes prescribed the law as to costs both at law and in chancery, and continued to control as to the amount of costs in suits at law until 1840, when a new system of costs in such suits was adopted. The general principle of the new system was to pay for a particular service a *121certain sum, whether it took much or little writing to perform it. The new act was not merely inconsistent with the old in cases to which it applied, but it expressly repealed sections 11, 18, 19, 22, 21, 31 and 32 of the revised statutes as to costs. These sections related to costs of attorneys and counsel in the supreme court and common pleas, and of the clerks and criers in those courts, (Laws of 1840, ch. 386, § 40, and 2 Rev. Stats. 632, § 17, &c). It however provided by § 38, that the act should not affect any suit or proceeding commenced before that act took effect. This saving section was repealed in 1844, (Laws of 1844, ch. 104, § 8), so that after that time the law of 1810 was to apply even to suits commenced before 1810. At common law, and without some statute, a successful party had no right to costs. If therefore, in any case a successful party will claim costs, he must point out some statute in force, and not repealed, which gives them to him. He cannot claim them under a repealed statute, for that has ceased to exist; and he is left, therefore, to claim them under some statute in force when the judgment is rendered. Accordingly, under the joint effect of the acts of 1810-11, costs could not be taxed under the system of the Revised Statutes if the judgment was obtained before the act of 1811 took effect, except perhaps as between attorney and client. (Brooklyn Bank v. Willoughby, 1 Sand. 669). When the Revised Statutes were adopted they repealed the previous statutes as to costs on the same subject, (sub. 90 of § 1, 3 Rev. Stats.) but declared that such repeal should not affect suits commenced in any civil cause previous to the repeal taking effect—(ibid. p. 155, § 5). That left two systems in force, and it is believed that each was applied as to old suits so far as the services had been rendered under them. Before the Revised Statutes, costs on appeal in certain cases, from a justice’s court to the county court, were in the discretion of the court—but the Revised Statutes gave the appellant full costs if he reduced the judgment against him $10; and the supreme court held, although the appeal was made before the Revised Statutes took effect, that the former statutes were repealed, and that there was then no law regulating the costs' in cases of that kind but what was to be found in the Revised Statutes, which, therefore, must govern. (People ex. rel. Berry *122v. Herkimer County Common Pleas, 4 Wend., 210). This put the decision on the ground that no other law as to costs but the new one was then in force. A like decision on the same prinple was made in the Supervisors of Onondaga v. Briggs, (3 Denio, 173), under the acts of 1840—44. And the court held that even in suits commenced before the act of 1840, if judgment were obtained after the act of 1844 took effect, all the costs were to be taxed under the act of 1844—but on the ground that the previous acts as to costs have been repealed, and so became totally extinct. The court, said—“ When the 30th section of the act of 1840 came to be repealed by the act of 1844, all the provisions of the Bevised Statutes regulating the compensation of counsellors and attorneys in this court became extinct,” and that besides the two acts of 1840 and 1844, there was no other act in force when the suit was terminated, or when the costs were taxed, bearing upon the subject. (Ibid. 175, 116).
This case is different. These were equity suits, commenced before the Code took effect, and the Bevised Statutes, as to the costs in such suits, remain to this day unrepealed, notwithstanding all the amendments of the laws; they were not touched by the acts of 1840 and 1844, and there never has been any act expressly repealing them. They, therefore, may stand along with the Code, and have generally been supposed still so to stand and to have equal force where the services were rendered under them. Section 459 of the Code, as amended in 1851, does- not by implication repeal them. It makes the provisions of the Code “ apply to future proceedings in actions theretofore commenced, as follows when an issue of law or fact was to be tried, then the trial and all subsequent proceedings, and after judgment to the proceedings to enforce, vacate, modify, or reverse it, including the costs of an appeal.” By its very terms it was to apply only to the future proceedings in the cause. The bills of complaint drawn and served in these cases, and the answers and replies also drawn and served, and the testimony then taken, and the order closing the proofs,' all constituted parts of the past, (and not of the future,) proceedings in the cause when the act of 1851 was passed. These services, too, were all rendered under a reasonable expectation *123that they were to be paid for under the laws then in force. These laws do remain still in force, and have no application unless it be to cases when actions were commenced (as this was) before the Code took effect, and the costs had not yet been taxed, nor judgment rendered. They cannot be said to have been allowed to remain for cases where judgment had been rendered, but costs not yet taxed; for after judgment the rights of the parties would be fixed as on a contract, and the subsequent repeal of the law could not affect such rights. It is also entirely contrary to the prevailing policy of the legislature to . allow a law to retrospect, even where it does not impair a contract. Accordingly, the Code, by express terms, was not to apply to these existing suits, except in the first part of it, which relates only to the powers of the courts, (§ 8). The statute of limitations adopted in it was made to apply only to future actions and causes of action, although such statutes affect the remedy only. The title of the Code relating to costs was included in the part which was not to apply to existing-actions ; and while other sections were, by the supplementary act of 1849, made applicable to old suits, this title as to costs was excluded from that act, except section 315, as to costs on motion. This shows a deliberate purpose on the part of the legislature to save the right of costs for services already rendered, as they would a like right under an express contract. Such a clear purpose, so consonant to justice, ought not to be defeated on a supposed implication. Section 303 was quoted as repealing all the old fee bills; but it must be taken with the qualification contained in section 308, which expressly permits its application to existing suits, and then it will only read that the old fee bills are repealed as to future suits, and leave them in force as to old suits. Then section 459 may apply the new system of costs to such part of the proceedings as should be had after that section took effect. This makes all consistent and just. The principle of the Code, as expressly declared, leads to the same result; it declares in the same section that costs are allowed to the prevailing party by wa/y of ■md&rrmity. If, as the counsel for the receiver argues, and as the decisión of the Superior Court sanctions, the old bill is to prevail, as between attorney and client, the indemnity to the client can *124■only be by allowing him what the law compels him to pay to his attorney.
The result is that the Code, as originally enacted, did not repeal the old fee bill as to suits previously existing; and that although section 303 of the Code, as first enacted in terms, repealed the old fee bill, yet, by prior sections of the Code, that repeal applied only to future suits—thus, before section 459 was enacted, the old fee bill was in force as to old suits, and the new fee bill under the Code as to new suits, and services were rendered with' a fair understanding that they were to be paid for under the old system ; that this new section was added, applying the Code to all future proceedings in the old suits. The effect of this on section 303 was, that after this, the ■old fee bill was repealed as to all future proceedings, but in force as to all past proceedings. It can hardly be questioned that those who adopted this section meant it to apply only to the mode of future proceedings in such suits, and did not mean to disturb anything that had even the seeming of a pre-existing right; otherwise they would not have been so careful to confine the effect of the section to future proceedings, and to include, by express terms, costs in appeal, and leave them out in other cases. This shows that they did not intend that past ¡costs should be included in the general term (future proceedings) before used.
The whole question, perhaps, turns more properly on the meaning of the decree than of the Code—that gives taxable ■costs, expenses and counsel fees. The costs intended must be such as would cover all the expenses of the party, legitimately incurred in the suit, and those would include for the attorney whatever might have been fairly taxed to him, as the services were rendered and the suit progressed. The taxing ofiicer .should proceed and tax the costs on the principles above stated, taxing all costs prior to July, 1851, under the Chancery fee bill, and all subsequent costs under the Code.*

 Upon this subject, see also the case of Vernon a. Mc Masters post.