Osborn v. . Cardeza

101 N.E. 806, 208 N.Y. 131, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1031
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 101 N.E. 806 (Osborn v. . Cardeza) 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
Osborn v. . Cardeza, 101 N.E. 806, 208 N.Y. 131, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1031 (N.Y. 1913).

Opinion

Collin, J.

The appeal presents the single question, did the Appellate Division have the power to modify the final judgment, which awarded to the plaintiff the costs of the action and an extra allowance, by providing that neither party to the action should recover the costs of the action as against the other.

The complaint contained allegations of fact which upheld and justified the prayer for relief that the defendants as trustees in liquidation of a corporation of which the plaintiff was a stockholder and which was in process of dissolution under section 57 of the Stock Corporation Law be restrained from further action and be removed *133 and that they account as such trustees. The answer substantially denied the allegations of the complaint and •demanded that it be dismissed, with costs. A reference to hear and determine the action was made. The referee made a report containing findings of fact and the conclusions of law that the defendants as trustees should not be restrained or removed, but must forthwith close up all outstanding matters in their hands and make a final accounting “and that the plaintiff herein is entitled to judgment in accordance with the above, with costs.” An interlocutory judgment following the decision of the referee was entered, and affirmed by the Appellate Division upon the appeal of the defendants. The defendants appealed to this court from this judgment of affirmance, and we dismissed the appeal upon the ground that the judgment was not final but interlocutory. (Osborn v. Cardeza, 180 N. Y. 69.) Subsequently, the defendants were ordered to file their account and thereafter a referee was appointed to take and state the accounts. The referee made a report to the Supreme Court in which he stated the accounts, and “that judgment should be entered in accordance with the above with costs.” An extra allowance to the plaintiff of $500 was ordered. The Special Term ordered the final judgment. It recited the original reference to hear and determine the action, the report of the referee thereunder and the subsequent proceedings in the action, and contained the provision that the plaintiff recover of the defendants “ the sum of $500 extra allowance, besides the sum of $1,118.26, the taxable costs of this action, making the total sum of $2,218.26, the sum to be paid to the said plaintiff or her attorney by them personally, and not from the fund hereby determined to be in their hands as trustees, and that the plaintiff have execution therefor.” It contained directions as to the referee’s and stenographer’s fees, which need not here be stated. The defendants appealed from this final judgment to the *134 Appellate Division and the Appellate Division made the modification that neither party to the action should recover the costs of the action as against the other, and as thus modified affirmed it. The question presented is, as already stated, did the Appellate Division have the power to make this modification.

Costs can only be awarded in pursuance of the provisions of some statute. In this action in equity, the awarding of costs was discretionary. In actions in equity, costs rest in the sound discretion of the court, and are to be awarded or refused according to the justice of each particular case. The statute under which costs may be awarded in an equity case is section 3230 of the Code of Civil Procedure as follows:

“ § 3230. Except as prescribed in the last two sections, the court may, upon the rendering of a final judgment, in its discretion award costs to any party in such sum not exceeding the total amount authorized by statute as to the court shall seem just.”

At the time of the reference to hear and determine the action, section 1022 of the Code of Civil Procedure contained the provision:

“ The decision of the court or the report of a referee upon the trial of the whole issues of fact must state separately the facts found and the conclusions of law, and direct the judgment to be entered thereon, * * *. In an action where the costs are in the discretion of the court the decision or report must award or deny costs, and if it awards costs it must designate the party to whom the costs to be taxed are awarded.”

Therefore, if the execution of that reference was a “trial of the whole-issues of fact,” the report of the referee lawfully awarded the costs, and the interlocutory judgment rendered upon the report of the referee necessarily also awarded them.

Under the pleadings which fixed the issues of fact -to-be tried the trial by the referee to hear and determine the *135 action was a trial of the whole issues of fact within the meaning of section 1022. The accounting which the resulting judgment determined should be had was something left to be done to fix the extent or limit of the actual relief to which the determination of the issues entitled the plaintiff. The right to the accounting having been adjudged, the taking and stating of the account was not a part of the trial of the issues in the case. It was a proceeding essential to the final judgment which would fix the interests of the parties in the fund to be accounted for and the sum of the relief to be afforded the plaintiff. The practice followed by the referee in not retaining the action for the purpose of taking and stating the account was regular (Zapp v. Miller, 109 N. Y. 51), although he could have heard all the evidence upon the issues, as he did, and then proceeded to take the account, making a single report on the whole case upon which a final decree might have been entered without application to the court. (Canton Brick Co. v. Howlett, 169 N. Y. 293, 297; Young v. Valentine, 177 N. Y. 347; Niebuhr v. Schreyer, 22 Abb. N. C. 12.) In the last case the court, referring to 2 Van Santvoord’s Eq. Pr. (3d ed.) 195, said: “ When the whole of the issues raised by the pleadings have been so referred, it has been recommended as the better course for the referee to hear and determine such issues in the first instance separately, and report thereon to the court. If these are determined in favor of the plaintiff, and his right to an accounting be thereby established, he may then move on the report for another order confirming the report, and referring the cause (usually to the same referee) to take and state the account between the parties. The same authority on the practice in such cases lays down the course of procedure on the accounting so ordered, and in the making and filing of the report thereon; by which it appears that the proceedings in respect thereto are to be had under rule 30, and that after the hearing of the exceptions, if any, a final *136 judgment is to. be entered'embracing in effect the findings upon the issues, as well as adjudging the amounts or balances found due upon the accounting.” (p. 19.)

Such was the practice followed in the present case. This court considered the subject under discussion in dismissing the appeal from the judgment 'of the Appellate División affirming the judgment entered upon the report of the referee to hear and determine the action. Judge O’Brien writing for the court said (p.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.E. 806, 208 N.Y. 131, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborn-v-cardeza-ny-1913.