Devlin v. Mayor of New York

15 Abb. Pr. 31
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 Abb. Pr. 31 (Devlin v. Mayor of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Devlin v. Mayor of New York, 15 Abb. Pr. 31 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

Van Brunt, J.

This motion can be conveniently divided into three branches :

1st. The motion of the plaintiff for an extra allowance based upon his recovery.

[34]*342nd. The motion of the defendants for an extra allowance based upon their recovery.

3rd. The motion for an allowance based upon the defeat of the counter-claim of the city. It does not require any argument to show that the plaintiff is entitled to an allowance upon the amount of the recovery had by him. The case was certainly difficult and extraordinary within the meaning of section 309 of the Code of Procedure.

The motion of the defendants for an extra allowance upon the amount of their respective recoveries presents a more serious question.

The brief submitted by their counsel seems to concede that if these defendants are not entitled to costs against their co-defendant they cannot claim an extra allowance. This seems to me to be a correct view, because section 309 provides for a “further allowance to any party.” It is to be a further allowance, one which is to be added to some other allowance to which the party is entitled under previous sections of the Code.

It will be perceived that the words “to any party,” are used to distinguish this allowance from those referred to under section 308.

The language of section 308 is, “In addition to these allowances,” referring to the costs mentioned in section 307, “ there shall be allowed to the plaintiff” certain sums. But the further allowance in section 309 is to be allowed to any party, thus allowing a defendant, if entitled to an allowance by way of costs, to have the benefit of the provision for an extra allowance under section 309, which he does not enjoy under section 308.

The real question then is, can a defendant who succeeds and obtains a judgment against a co-defendant, recover costs in an action at law.

Section 303 of the Code abolishes all statutes estab[35]*35lishing or regulating the costs or fees of attorneys, and provides for certain allowances, as it calls them, to the “ prevailing party.”

Section 304 provides that costs shall be allowed of course to the plaintiff upon a recovery in several cases, among which is “In an action for the recovery of money,” which is this casé, “where the plaintiff shall-recover fifty dollars.”

Section 305 provides that costs shall be allowed of . course to the defendant in the actions mentioned in section 304, unless the plaintiff be entitled to costs therein. Thus it seems to me clear that although a defendant may be a prevailing party as against a co-defendant, yet there is no provision of the Code which authorizes him to claim costs, if the plaintiff is entitled to costs, because no defendant is entitled to costs, if the plaintiff has his costs. The language is, “Costs shall be allowed to the defendant” unless the plaintiff be entitled to costs. Therefore, if I am correct in the view that I have taken of section 309, that the allowance there mentioned is in addition to costs, the defendants, not being entitled to costs, cannot have the benefit of the provisions of that section.

It is claimed that under section 309 the court has power to make the allowance on the amount of the recovery or claim or subject matter involved, and that the amount of the recovery or claim and subject matter involved is the aggregate amount of all the recoveries.

In consequence of the manner in which the plaintiff brought this action, the whole subject matter involved was the amount of his recovery. Under section 119 he might have brought an action for the benefit of all the owners of the Hackley contract, and if he had done so, he would have been entitled to enter judgment for the whole sum, leaving the distribution among the parties entitled to future action ; and it is truly said that if he had recovered the whole he might have had an allow[36]*36anee upon the whole, and it would have come to the same thing as. to give to each successful party an allowance upon the amount oí his recovery. But the difficulty is that for some reason best known to himself he did not choose to bring his action in that form. He chose to involve in that litigation only his own interest in that contract, and his recovery has been limited to that.

The parties jointly interested with the plaintiff in that contract having refused to unite with him in bringing that action, and thus become plaintiffs and actors, and subject to the risks to which they would be exposed in case of defeat and having succeeded, cannot now claim the same advantages which would have accrued to them had they been actors in this, action.

If the defendants, the city, had succeeded in this action, and had come to this court for an extra allowance as against the plaintiff, I am sure that he would have urged strenously that the subject matter involved was only the amount of damages claimed by him in his complaint, and that he should not be made to suffer because defendants had made claims against the city under the same contract, which had also been defeated.

There is another view to be taken of the language of that section, which is equally fatal to this claim.

The language of the Code is, the court may also make a further allowance to any party upon the amount of the recovery or claim, or subject matter involved. It is very evident from this language that the words “recovery or claim,” are not synonymous with, nor intended to be used in the same or kindred sense with, the words “ subject matter involved,” but that the latter are intended to give the benefits of the provision for an extra allowance to a class of cases in which the recovery or claim would give no data whatever upon which to fix an allowance. The words “ subject matter involved” refer to those cases in which the subject [37]*37matter involved in. the action has a material existence : as, in the case of ejectment, the real estate sought to be recover; In replevin, the personal property sought to be recovered, the title to which is disputed. In cases of this description a judgment adjudging the title of the property to be in the plaintiff, which would be the recovery or claim, would afford no basis whatever upon which to fix an allowance, and consequently, it was provided that in such cases an allowance might be fixed upon the amount of the subject matter involved.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Abb. Pr. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devlin-v-mayor-of-new-york-nyctcompl-1873.