Court Opinion

ID: 5500352
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 02:58:32.555149+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:33:54.886123
License: Public Domain

Brady, J.
This action was brought under section 1902 of the Code to recover $5,000 damages, alleged to have been sustained by reason of the neglect of the defendants. The trial resulted in a verdict of six cents in favor of the plaintiff, who, without notice, taxed the full bill of costs, which, upon retaxing, was limited to six cents. Upon the plaintiff’s motion, however, an order was granted authorizing the taxation of a full bill of costs, but granting to defendants a stay until after a determination of an appeal from that order. The Code, § 3228, declares the plaintiff entitled to costs of course upon the rendering of a final judgment in his favor in either of the following actions: (3) An action specified in subdivisions 1, 3, 4, or 5 of section 2863 of this act. But if in an action to recover damages for an assault, battery, false im*654prisonment, libel, slander, criminal conversation, seduction, or malicious prosecution the plaintiff recovers less than $50 damages, the amount of his costs cannot exceed his damages. Section 2863, referred to in section 3228, is one enumerating the civil actions which a justice of the peace cannot take cognizance of, and they are as follows: (3) Where the action is to recover damages for an assault, battery, false imprisonment, libel, slander, criminal conversation, seduction, or malicious prosecution, or where it is brought under sections 1837, 1843, 1868, 1902, or 1969 of this act. This action is one embraced within the provisions of section 1902, and therefore one of those of which a justice of the peace cannot take cognizance; but it is not one of those specifically named, in which a recovery of less than $50 damages limits the amount of costs to the damages awarded. The specific designation of the actions intended to be embraced in the limit of costs furnishes the most conclusive evidence of the intention of the legislature to exclude all others. The maxim, expressio unius, est exelusio alterius, applies with peculiar force. Our attention has been called to the case of Garrabrant v. Sullivan, 13 Civil Proc. R. 196, but that was a case for damages resulting from a fall into a coal-hole, and the question here discussed, though apparently considered, is not so presented as to be regarded as controlling. The language of section 3228 is too emphatic to admit of any doubt, however ingeniously the arguments may be devised and employed. The plaintiff is thereby declared to be entitled to costs of course in actions of this character, with others grouped with it; but as to some of them the limit of costs is applied. The whole subject is embraced in the third subdivision of that section, and was considered, therefore, altogether, and both provisions for costs and limit of them inserted in the same paragraph. Nothing on the subject can be said, therefore, to have been left to inference or implication or conjecture. The order appealed from should be affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements. All concur.