Court Opinion

ID: 5515003
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 04:28:50.119971+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:34:16.587592
License: Public Domain

By the Court,
Nelson, Ch. J.
Assuming that Sears was the owner of the demand prosecuted in the common pleas, he succeeded in recovering a judgment in that court; had he failed, he would have been liable in that court to the defendant’s costs. In this court, instead of prosecuting he defended, and we have repeatedly held that a party defending a suit in the name of another, though himself the party in interest, is not liable to the costs of the action if the defence prove unsuccessful. We cannot regard the writ of error as such a continuation of the suit below as to place the defendant in error in the light of a party prosecuting his demand. He is not a volunteer in this court, but is called here by his adversary—the same as a defendant in an ordinary suit. There may be a necessity for bringing the writ .of error in consequence of the institution of the suit below ; but so it may be said in all cases, that there is a necessity for bringing a suit against the defendant because he neglected or refused to pay the debt claimed by the plaintiff, and therefore the party in interest who defends the suit, though not a party to the record, should pay the costs of the suit. A writ of error is not a continuation of the suit below, because it may be sued out by a new attorney without obtaining a rule for a change of attorney. 7 T. R. 337. 8 Johns. R. 287.
Motion denied.