Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States v. Hughes

26 N.E. 1, 125 N.Y. 106, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 591, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1847
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 16, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 26 N.E. 1 (Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States v. Hughes, 26 N.E. 1, 125 N.Y. 106, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 591, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1847 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Earl, J.

The plaintiff commenced this action to foreclose a mortgage, and its attorney obtained a search of the title of the mortgaged premises from the Lawyers’ Title Insurance-Company of Hew York, a corporation organized under chapter 538k)f the Laws of 1885, and he paid it for such search $28.50. The plaintiff claims that the sum should be taxed as. a lawful disbursement in its bill of costs. The coiut below held that it was not entitled to such taxation, and from that decision it has appealed to this court.

*108 There is nothing in the act under which the Lawyers’ Title Insurance Company was organized making its searches official, nr its certificates as to title evidence in any court. The searches made by it have no greater force or value in the law than an unofficial search made by an individual; and unless the plaintiff would have been entitled to the taxation of this item if the search and charges therefor had been made by an individual, its claim fails.

At common law neither costs nor disbursements were allowed to the prevailing party in any case, and their allowance has always been regulated by statute. Unless, therefore, the plaintiff can point to some statute authorizing the clerk to allow and tax this item, the decision below is right.

After costs and disbursements were allowed by law, they were confined to certain fees payable to counsellors, solicitors and attorneys, and to payments made to officers who were entitled to charge fees for official services, and to the legal fees of witnesses. '

The first comprehensive statute in this state which we have been able to find regulating the fees of attorneys, counsellors, solicitors and public officers, is the act, chapter 190 of the Laws of 1801 That act was re-enacted with some amendments in the Revised Laws of 1813, vol. 2, p. 3. In these statutes, minute provisions were made for the fees of attorneys, counsellors, solicitors, officers and witnesses; and the fees thus specified were all the fees which were taxable in favor of any party entitled to recover them. The whole subject of fees was again regulated by the Revised Statutes, part 3, chapter 10, titles 3 and 4; and in all these statutes it was made illegal and criminal for any officer or person to take or exact any other or greater fee than that specified in the law. Section 20 of title 3, contained a general provision as follows: The actual disbursements of a solicitor in the Court of Chancery or of an attorney in the Supreme Court necessarily incurred in cases not lierein'specified, which shall be proved by affidavits and shall be deemed reasonable by the taxing officer may be allowed in the taxation of costs,” *109 A similar clause in the following language was contained in the Revised Laws (2 R. L. 13): “ and the solicitor is to be allowed in the taxation of costs for all postages and other disbursements actually and necessarily incurred or paid in the cases not specified.” The precise scope of the clause “necessarily incurred or paid in the cases not specified,” is not entirely plain. But we believe it has always been construed to mean the fees of officers — fees of the same character as. those mentioned though not specified; and these general clauses have never been held to extend further. The sums disbursed by solicitors and attorneys for stationery, blanks, for traveling and tavern expenses, and for many other purposes, are necessary, and yet it has never been supposed that under the general language above quoted such items were taxable as disbursements. In Kenney v. Vanhorne (2 Johns. 108), it was held that the expenses of executing a commission were not to be taxed because they were not within the provisions of the act regulating taxable costs and disbursements. In that case, the court said: “ The preparing or making up of cases for argument in the cause is not comprehended in any of the particular services specified in the act, and unless it comes within some of one of the services provided for by the act it cannot be taxed; ” thus showing that in the opinion of the court at that time nothing could be taxed except what was particularly specified in the act. In Hovey v. Hovey (5 Paige, 551), it was held that the solicitor was not entitled to have taxed the expense of ascertaining the residence of the defendants as a necessary disbursement, and that the only disbursements which were properly taxable under the provisions in the fee bill were disbursements by the solicitor for postage; for exemplifications to be used in the suit; for necessary searches in the public offices; for publication of notices required by law or the practice of the court, and other disbursements of a like nature. The chancellor said : “ There are many cases of disbursements by an attorney or solicitor, for the benefit of his client, which are not taxable against the adverse party as costs in the cause, but whicn form a proper *110 subject of allowance to the attorney or solicitor as against his own client.”

t Section 3256 of the Code of Civil Procedure now specifies the disbursements which a party entitled to costs may include in his bill, and it is as follows: A party to whom costs are awarded in an action, is entitled to include in his bill of costs his-necessary disbursements, as follows: The legal fees of witnesses and of referees and other officers; the reasonable compensation, of commissioners taking depositions; the legal fees for publication, where publication is directed pursuant to layr; the legal fees paid for a certified copy of a deposition, or other paper recorded or filed in any public office, necessarily used or obtained for use on the trial; the reasonable expenses of printing the papers for a hearing, when required by a rule of the court; prospective charges for the expenses of entering and docketing the judgment, and the sheriff’s fees for receiving and returning one execution thereon, including the search for property; and such other reasonable and necessary expenses as are taxable according to the course and practice of the court, or by express provision of law.” There is certainly nothing in this section which authorizes the taxation of this item, unless it be the last clause, and thus we are brought to the inquiry whether the item is taxable according to the course and practice of the court, or by express provision of Jaw.” We are pointed to no express provision of law, and the sole inquiry, therefore, is whether it is taxable according to the course and practice of the com’t.” The Supreme Court, which must be presumed to be familiar with its own practice, holds that it is not thus taxable. This the court could have determined from its own knowledge, without any other evidence. But its decision is amply supported by the evidence placed before it, and we can perceive no ground upon which we .can reverse it. We are not presumed to know as well as that court the practice which prevails therein in such cases.

There is no countenance for the taxation of this item in any of the authorities to which our attention has been called. In Perry v. Griffin (7 How. Pr. 263), it was held that nothing *111

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.E. 1, 125 N.Y. 106, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 591, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equitable-life-assurance-society-of-the-united-states-v-hughes-ny-1890.