Balcom v. Terwilliger
This text of 49 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 170 (Balcom v. Terwilliger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Garling v. Ladd (27 Hun, 112) is an authority to the effect that costs “ will be granted or refused in accordance with the law existing when the party has the right to costs.’
[172]*172That case was referred to in Atkin v. Pitcher (31 Hun, 352), and it was held that in a case brought before 1st of September, 1880, the date when the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure took effect, the costs were to be taxed under section 371 of the old Code, as subdivision 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure, section 3347, declares that chapters 18 and 19 of the Code of Civil Procedure apply only to an action or special proceeding commenced on or after the 1st of September, 1880. This action was commenced after September, 1880, to wit, on the day of December, 1884, and, therefore, does not fall under the exceptional provision of section 3347, subdivision 11. Chapter 522 of the Laws of 1885, amended section 3070 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and it took effect on the 3d of July, 1885. If we apply the exception as to when the amendment shall take effect, or if we assume that the section as amended shall be restricted, its application to cases enumerated in subdivision 11 of section 3347, we must say that as this action was commenced after September 1, 1880, it is not excluded from the operation of section 3070, as it stood after the amendment thereof in 1885. We are thus brought back to the general rule, that costs are regulated and given by the statute in force, when the party has the right to costs. By section 3070, as amended in 1885, it is provided, vizIf neither party make an offer as provided herein, the party in whose favor the verdict, report or decision in the appellate court is given, shall be entitled to recover his costs upon the appeal. As no offer was made, and the plaintiff recovered in the County Court eighty-nine dollars, we must hold that his case falls within the provision we have quoted from section'3070 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended in 1885, in accordance with cases adjudged. (Sheehan v. Buller, 24 Weekly Dig., 168.) If the question were an open one in this court, it might be doubted whether in this case either party were entitled to costs, inasmuch as no offer of judgment, as provided in section 3070, as amended by chapter 522 of Laws of 1885, could be made. It might be questioned whether the legislature intended that the omission of an offer, as provided, should cast a party in costs who, when the appeal was taken, was not authorized to make sudh offer as that named in section 3070, as amended by the legislature in 1885. (Railroad Co. v. Roach, 80 N. Y., 339; Engel v. Fischer, [173]*17315 Abb. N. C., 72; People v. Commissioner of Taxes of N. Y., 95 N. Y., 559.)
However, as before remarked, we must follow Sheehan v. Buller (supra), and the cases referred to in tlie opinion of Mr. Justice Follbtt, and apply section 3070, as amended in 1885, to this case, and reverse the order of the County Court and direct a restoration of the costs taxed in favor of the plaintiff and inserted in the judgment as originally entered. *
The order of the County Court of Broome county shonli be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Order of the County Court of Broome county reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
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49 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 170, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balcom-v-terwilliger-nysupct-1886.