Hammond v. N. P. R. R.

31 P. 299, 23 Or. 157, 1892 Ore. LEXIS 122
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 P. 299 (Hammond v. N. P. R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammond v. N. P. R. R., 31 P. 299, 23 Or. 157, 1892 Ore. LEXIS 122 (Or. 1892).

Opinion

Lord, C. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court adjudging the plaintiff entitled to recover from the defendant his costs and disbursements in this action. By his complaint the plaintiff sought to recover a certain sum therein specified for the alleged failure of the defendant to deliver in good order and condition certain freight, consisting of fire brick and tiles, shipped by plaintiff over the defendant’s railroad. In its answer the defendant denied liability for any greater sum than [158]*158one hundred and ninety-eight dollars and eighty-five cents, the value of forty-one tiles broken, and offered in said answer to allow judgment to be rendered in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant for said sum, with costs accrued up to the filing of the answer. The offer of judgment as contained in the answer, is in these words: “And this defendant now tenders plaintiff a judgment for the sum of one hundred and ninety-eight dollars and eighty-five cents, the value of the forty-one tiles broken with the freight paid thereon, together with the costs incurred up to the date of filing this answer. ” The plaintiff refused to accept this offer of judgment, and the cause proceeded to trial, and upon such trial a verdict was rendered by the jury in favor of the plaintiff for one hundred and ninety-eight dollars and eighty-five cents, the amount for which the defendant offered judgment to be rendered against it.

The defendant contends that the plaintiff should recover no costs or disbursements incurred after filing the answer in which this offer of judgment was made, but that the defendant should recover from the plaintiff its costs and disbursements from the time of filing such answer. On the other hand, the plaintiff contends that he is entitled to recover full costs from the defendant, and denies the right of the defendant to recover any costs from him. The contention of the plaintiff was sustained by the circuit court and judgment rendered in his favor and against the defendant for all costs and disbursements of the action, and from which judgment this appeal is taken. Section 520 of Hill’s Cod e provi des: ‘ ‘ The defendant may, at any time before trial, serve upon the plaintiff an offer to allow judgment or decree to be given against him for the sum, or the property, or to the effect therein specified. If the plaintiff accept the offer, he shall by himself or attorney indorse such acceptance thereon, and file the same with the clerk before trial, and within three days from the time it was served upon him; and thereupon judgment or decree shall be given accord[159]*159ingly, as in case of a confession. If the offer be not accepted and filed within the time prescribed, it shall be deemed withdrawn, and shall not be given in evidence on the trial; and if the plaintiff fail to obtain a more favorable judgment or decree, he shall not recover of him costs and disbursements from the time of the service of the offer. ”

The contention for the plaintiff embraces two points: First, that an offer of compromise cannot be made in an answer; and second, that if it can be made in an answer the offer made in this case was insufficient and defective because it did not tender the costs necessary for entering the judgment proposed to be conferred. It is doubtless the usual practice to make the offer by a separate writing, which, if the plaintiff accepts, is filed with the clerk with the acceptance endorsed thereon. This indicates that the offer is in the nature of a pleading, and is designed to make its existence known so as to avoid misunderstanding about it and put an end to the litigation. But while this is so, it is not perceived, nor is any reason suggested, why an offer of judgment made in the answer is insufficient on that account or inconsistent with the purpose of the statute. In Kaw Valley Fair Association v. Miller, 42 Kan. 20 (21 Pac. Rep. 794), the court, in construing a similar provision of the Kansas statute under which an offer of judgment was made in the answer filed by the defendant, says: “The answer of the defendant in this case is certainly an offer in writing to allow judgment to be taken against him for forty dollars. It is not necessary that it be served upon the plaintiff when it is a part of the pleadings in the action of which the plaintiff is bound to take notice.” In view of these considerations, we are not prepared to say there was error in this regard.

The next objection is based on the idea that the offer of judgment made by the defendant was insufficient and defective because it did not tender the costs for entering such judgment, although the plaintiff failed to obtain a judgment for a greater sum than was so offered by the [160]*160defendant. This proceeds upon the theory that the offer of judgment must be for a sum specified with costs, and the case of Leslie v. Walrath, 45 Hun, 18, is relied on to sustain it. But the provision of the statute under which that case was decided differs from ours in the particular that it provides that the offer to allow judgment shall be “for a sum or the property, or to the effect therein specified, with costs.” Originally this section of the New York Code (section 385) was identical with our own, and did not require that the offer should by its terms authorize a judgment to be entered “with costs.” In McGrath v. Van Wyck, 3 Sandf. 751, the defendant’s offer was silent as to costs; and in construing the section as it then stood, Sandford, J., said: “Section 385 is silent as to costs, both in the offer and the judgment therein. The offer is to contain a sum or a relief for which judgment is to be entered. Then section 303 applies and gives to the plaintiff upon such judgment the costs of the suit. If the suit were one for specific performance, and the offer were for a judgment of performance simply, there is no doubt that on entering such judgment the clerk would be bound to insert in the entry the allowance of costs. And the form of the offer must be the same in an action to recover money only. If it be necessary to insert in the offer the allowance of costs in the latter instance it must be in the former. We think the statute does not require it in either instance. ” But subsequently section 385 of the New York Code was altered so that the offer, as that section now stands, must, by its terms, allow the judgment to be taken “with costs.” Unless it is so made the offer is wholly nugatory and may be treated as a nullity. As touching the change affected by the amendment of the section, Bosworth, J., said: “If a defendant, under that section as it now reads, wishes to make an offer which a plaintiff must accept at the peril of paying the subsequent costs unless he recovers a more favorable judgment than the one offered, he must, by the terms of the offer served, allow judgment to be taken [161]*161with costs. It is of no consequence what the nature of the action may be, whether it be one in which, after trial, costs are in the discretion of the court, or whether it be one in which a recovery of fifty dollars would carry costs. Nor is it any consequence that the judgment offered is less than fifty dollars No matter for what sum or to what effect the defendant may offer to allow judgment to be taken, the offer must expressly state that it may be taken with costs, or it will be a nullity.”

In Leslie v. Walrath, supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 P. 299, 23 Or. 157, 1892 Ore. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-v-n-p-r-r-or-1892.