Court Opinion

ID: 8126067
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 15:06:32.944613+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:39:13.921254
License: Public Domain

Hammond, J.
The statute does not leave the court any discretion in disallowing the plaintiffs’ costs in this case. The authorities cited are not applicable, and need not he considered in this connection. At common law each party paid his own expenses of litigation, and costs were not known. The court had no discretion about it, to allow them or disallow them. The statute of Gloucester first enacted that the prevailing party should recover his expenses as costs from his adversary, and, as a matter of law, judgment for the costs followed a judgment in his favor. But this act of congress changes that rule, and says that, where the recovery is less than $500, no costs shall be allowed, and, in effect, restores the common law in such cases. Some statutes enacted for the same purpose as this—to prevent frauds upon the jurisdiction of the court —do give the court a discretion to allow or disallow the prevailing party *554his costs, and each case then depends upon its own circumstances; and the rule of judgment would he to allow costs where the party had a fair or reasonable expectation of recovering more than the limited amount, and to disallow them where it was plainly to be seen that there was no reasonable expectation.
But this section is imperative, and only confers a discretion to go further than the statute goes, by permitting the court, in flagrant cases, to impose an additional penalty for the fraudulent trespass on its jurisdiction by condemning the prevailing party to pay his adversary’s costs. So imperative is this statute that even that discretion as to costs which always did belong to a court of equity, but not to a court of law, is taken away in the class of cases denounced by this section.
The argument that the statute only forbids the operation of the rule allowing costs to a prevailing party as a matter of course, and only prevents a taxation, by the clerk in the ordinary course of business, but does not interfere with the power of the court to allow the costs, presupposes the existence of power in the courts to allow costs, which is erroneous. Costs are entirely the creature of statute, in cases at law, at least, and courts cannot grant them inherently. The argument might have some plausibility in an equity court and proceeding, but not in one of law, and the restriction of this statute upon even the powers of a court of equity in that regard is only an indication of its mandatory and rigid rule of exclusion.
The plaintiffs’ motion to be allowed costs iá overruled. So, also, is the defendant’s motion to compel them to pay its costs. The nature of the cause is quite conclusive of her fair and reasonable expectation of recovering more than the limit of the statute. So ordered.