Court Opinion

ID: 6229547
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-17 20:18:45.503835+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:57:48.444925
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Black, C. J.
The plaintiff below brought suit before a justice, against the defendant, who offered to confess judgment for five *299dollars. It was not accepted, and the magistrate gave judgment for seventy cents. The plaintiff appealed, and obtained a judgment on a verdict for eighty-six cents. The Court gave him full costs. The defendant denies the plaintiff’s legal right to the costs, and has taken this writ of error to test it.
The Act of 9th April, 1833, which governs the subject, establishes the general rule that the costs on an appeal shall abide the event of the suit, and be paid by the unsuccessful party as in other cases; that is, that a party who succeeds in getting a final judgment for debt or damages shall recover costs without regard to the amount of the judgment appealed from, and no matter who was the appellant. The plaintiff’s case is within the rule, for he has recovered a debt.
But the general rule has two exceptions contained in the two provisoes to the act: one is, that when the plaintiff appeals, he shall pay the costs even if he does get 'a judgment for debt or damages, unless such judgment b'e larger or more favorable to him than that which the justice gave him. In the present case the plaintiff appealed from a judgment of seventy cents and got one in Court for eighty-six cents. The first proviso, therefore, does not deprive him of his costs.
The other exception is, that when the defendant appealed after having offered a judgment, the plaintiff shall pay the costs unless he finally recovers a larger sum than that for which judgment was tendered him before the appeal. This case is not within that proviso, because although a judgment was tendered, it was the plaintiff and not the defendant who appealed, and the efficacy of such a tender is expressly confined to cases in which the defendant is the appellant. We are asked to give this proviso what the plaintiff in error calls an equitable construction, by striking out the word defendant and inserting either party, and by this means make it apply to any appeal taken after judgment tendered. If we had authority to make the law, we might consider of this proposition and perhaps give a favorable answer. But, as it is, we cannot take such liberties with a statute.
The case being within the general provision which the body of the act contains, and not within either of the exceptions, the plaintiff below was entitled to costs, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.