Goodyear v. Sawyer

17 F. 2, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 1850
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJune 29, 1883
DocketNo. 126
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 17 F. 2 (Goodyear v. Sawyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodyear v. Sawyer, 17 F. 2, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 1850 (uscirct 1883).

Opinion

Hammond, J.

Until the practice of this court conforms more closely to the equity rules, and the analogies to which equity rule 90 directs us for our government, and is less influenced hv the more modern [4]*4system erected by legislation for the state courts of equity, to be found in our Tennessee Code, there must be a good deal of forbearance for irregularities like those found in the conduct of these cases. There can be no doubt that a too close adherence to the technicalities of our equity practice, when they are relied on by a kind of ex post facto application of them, as in this case, to defeat some unforeseen result, would frequently work injustice because of the fact that there has been, under the influence mentioned, so little regard for them in the progress of these particular cases, and generally by the bar in all cases. The contention here that there can be taxed no solicitor’s fee because there has been no replication filed in some of the cases, does not admit of much consideration at the hands of the court when the default is that of the party making the objection. The truth is our state Code has abolished replications in equity, and until recently, when the necessity for them in our federal practice has been emphasized, there has been a general neglect to file them, as by. the plaintiffs in these cases., It does not lie with them, therefore,, to say that without a replication there can be no “final hearing,” and consequently no taxed docket fee.

There are other irregularities of practice relied on to defeat the docket fees in these cases that can be accounted for only -by this disregard of our own, and the mistaken application of the state practice. For example, these cases have never, in fact, been set for hearing at all. Our state practice requires the clerk, as soon as answer is filed, to set ail cases for hearing on the hearing docket. It has always been so done by the clerk of this court; and it may be doubted if any equity case in the court has ever'been properly set for hearing according to the practice that should govern us. 2 Daniell, Ch. Pr. (5th Ed.) 964-971. The eases go to the trial docket, under the practice grown up in the clerk’s office, even before answer filed, and are called term after term, and whatever is to be done is accomplished * without the least regard to the technical practice.

, Again, our state practice, by statutory regulation, permits a plaintiff until final decree to dismiss his dull at will, and before the clerk. Not so here. The right of the plaintiff to dismiss .is not an unqualified one, and it can never be properly done in the clerk’s office, except, perhaps, by force of equity rules 2 and 5 in the special case provided for in equity rule 66; and it is only, perhaps, by the court, in term-time, that any dismissal can be made, it not being one of those interlocutory steps authorized to be done in vacation or at rule-days for the preparation of a cause, but essentially a final disposition of it., Equity Rules, Nos. 1-6; 1 Daniell, Oh. Pr. 790-812; Stevens v. The Railroads, 4 Fed. Rep. 97.

Yet the state practice was attempted to be followed in these cases, and we have in one of them the anomaly of an attempted dismissal' at .rules before the clerk, even after an account had been ordered. With this constant tendency to mix state with federal, practice, which [5]*5prevails in other states as well as this, and which, no 'doubt, influences legislators, as well as the bar and bench, it is misleading to overlook the tendency in construing statutes or adjudicating matters of practice like this now before us. I shall, therefore, treat these cases as if that were done which the parties intended to be done, namely, as having been dismissed upon the application of the plaintiffs. If proper orders have not been entered by the court to effectuate that result, it may now be done. The case of dismissal after a decree for an account is somewhat peculiar; but there is no doubt that the plaintiff may, either by consent, or without it if -the defendant has no special interest to protect, procure an order to dismiss after a decree ordering an account. 1 Daniell, Ch. Pr. 793, 810, 811.

But the mistake the plaintiff makes here is to claim that because on tho hearing he procured a decree for an account and for costs he is the prevailing party, and no docket fee can be taxed. That was an interlocutory decree in the sense of the practice in matters of costs, and, whatever may be its effect as to other costs, had nothing to do with the docket fee, which is to be decreed only on a “final hearing.” I think, moreover, if the plaintiff dismisses after a decree for account and inquiries, the order of dismissal necessarily revokes the former decree for account and costs, and the defendant is entitled to his full costs, as when the bill is dismissed on application of the plaintiff in other cases; but it is not necessary to decide that in this case, it being clear that the judgment given for costs against the defendant by the decree for the account did not apply to the docket foe. That foe is left to the “final hearing” for allowance and taxation.

We have, then, the simple question presented whether the defendant is entitled to recover a docket fee for his solicitor, to be taxed when the plaintiff takes an order to dismiss his bill in the ordinary way, or “without prejudice.” It is a question between party and party, and one arising under the law of costs as applicable to a court of equity, and not ono between the attorney and his client, or the attorney and the losing party. Like the fees of the clerk or marshal, those of an attorney or solicitor are payable to him by the party for whom the services are rendered, (his client, in the case of an attorney,) but are taxable, under certain circumstances, as costs against the losing party in favor of the prevailing party at law, and as the court may direct in equity. Rev. St. § 823; Caldwell v. Jackson, 7 Cranch, 276; Anon. 2 Gall. 101; In re Stover, 1 Curt. 201; Lessee v. Arbuncle, Pet. C. C. 233; In re U. S.v. Cigars, 2 Fed. Rep. 494.

Of course, not all the charges of the attorney against his client were taxable as costs, but certain special items were, under the general law. In some states, notably Tennessee, this allowance of costs to attorneys never prevailed, mostly for the reason that under the practice the services usually performed by the attorney, for which the charges were taxable, were relegated to the clerk or sheriff. But in other states, as in New York, it was customary to tax attorney’s [6]*6and solicitor’s fees somewhat in the -manner which has always prevailed in England. • There certain items were taxable as attorney’s fees, quite as a matter of course, and others were or were not taxable according to the peculiarities of the case; the whole subject being largely regulated by statute, or the rules and practice of the court.

The rule at law was to tax them in favor of the prevailing party as a matter of right; but in equity, while this was the general rule, the court, in its discretion, governed by well-settled principles of judgment, may refuse costs, tax them against the prevailing party, divide them, enlarge the items of taxation, or otherwise regulate the allowance as it may deem just. Trustees v. Greenough, 105 U. S. 535; Lottery Co. v. Clark, 16 Fed. Rep. 20; U. S. v. Treadwell, 15 Fed. Rep. 532; Wiegand v. Copeland, 14 Fed. Rep. 118. And it is important to remember that, both at law and in equity, there were interlocutory

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 F. 2, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 1850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-v-sawyer-uscirct-1883.