State ex rel. Judson v. Coates

8 Ohio N.P. 682
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. 682 (State ex rel. Judson v. Coates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Judson v. Coates, 8 Ohio N.P. 682 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Phillips, J.,

Several actions are pending in this court, brought by persons claiming to be heirs of Leonard Case, deceased, for the recovery of real estate situate in the city of Cleveland. In each action there are from eight hundred to one thousand defendants, and about the same number of distinct parcels of land are described in each petition. There are many plaintiffs in each action, nearly all of whom are nonresidents. A motion to require the plaintiffs to secure costs- in each of these actions was heretofore submitted to this branch of the court. This motion was granted in cases wherein all the plaintiffs were non-residents, and was refused in cases wherein any of the plaintiffs were residents. Eudora Mining Co. v. Barclay, 26 So. Rep., 113 (122 Ala. 506).

In one of these actions, Hildreth v. Abel, wherein security for costs was not so required,' the relator herein, one of the plaintiffs in said action, tendered to the defendant 'herein precipe for summons; but the defendant refused to accept or file the precipe, or to issue a 'summons, unless his legal fees for such filing and issuing were first paid; and this action is brought, praying that a writ of man 'amus. issue to the defendant, commanding him, as clerk of this court, to accept and file said precipe, and to issue summons according to its command. This presents a question important in practice, and of unusual importance in the particular instance, for the amount of the fees demanded is unusually large.

Counsel for relator make two contentions:

First. That in no case can the clerk demand prepayment of his fees for-the issuing of a summons; and

Second. That if such demand may rightfully be made in jurisdictions where the fees go directly to the officer who earns them, it cannot be made in this county, because, by virtue of our local salary law, the fees earned and collected by the clerk are to be by him paid into the county treasury, to the credit of a “fee fund,” from which he and other county officers are compensated by an annual salary.

In support of the former contention, it is maintained in argument that the courts of Ohio are, and of right must be, open to all suitors, and open to all alike; and that the clerk may not discriminate between suitors, by requiring prepayment of his fees from one, and not from another.

The exact question here presented has not, to my knowledge, been decided by any court in this state. The question is therefore res integra, and must be determined upon principle, and in the light of all that the legislature has enacted upon the general subject. The solution of the case involves a consideration of (1) the liability of litigants for costs made by them, (2) the extent and nature of a plaintiff’s right to the process of the court, and (3) the nature and extent of the obligation of the clerk to issue a summons.

There is a notion, somewhat prevalent, that the courts are open and free to all suitors. This is true only in a modified sense. The courts are open to all suitors — the constitution requires this; but resort to the courts is free only in a qualified sense. The administration of justice is, of course, a matter of public concern; but in so far as it is for the protection of private rights, it is largely a matter of private concern, and of individual benefit. Accordingly, it has always been the policy of judicial administration to require individual suitors to pay at least a part of the expenses incurred at their instance, and in their interest. The state pays t-hie judges of its courts of general jurisdiction; in some jurisdictions, the jury fees are paid by the public; and in some cases involving only public rights, all the costs are paid from the public treasury.

In ail times, each party to a civil action has been, both primarily, a’nd ultimately, liable for his own costs; and in early times, judgment for costs was not allowed to the prevailing party. And where the prevailing party is given judgment for his costs, it is generally said to be upon the theory that he has paid his. own costs, and that the judgment is for his .reimbursement. For the reason that the allowance of costs to the prevailing party is for his reimbursement, the judgment, therefore should not include the costs of the other party, as hie is himself directly liable therefor. Naper v. Bowers, Wright, 692; Bliss v. Long 5 Ohio, 276; Russell v. Giles, 31 Ohio St., 293.

In Bell v. Bates, 3 Ohio, 380, the court says:

“There were no costs, eo nomine, at common law, although in actions sounding in damages, [684]*684a practice prevailed of allowing to the plaintiff, in the assessment of the damages, a sufficient sum to remunerate 'hiim for his necessary expenses. But, in consequence of the hardship which a plaintiff must sustain, in expending large sums of money for the purpose of obtaining his right for which he would have no amends, the statute of Gloucester (6 Ed. i) was passed, allowing costs in certain cases. The subject was frequently, at subsequent periods before the parliament of England, and such provisions made as justice and necessity seemed to demand. “In this state, costs, as a general rule, have never been allowed to the party recovering judgment. The amount to be taxed, however, has been varied from time to time, the whole being regulated by statute.”

Bouvier, in his Law Dictionary, after referring to the statute of Gloucester, and stating that a similar statute has been enacted in all of our states, says:

“A party can in no case recover costs from his adversary, unless he can show some statute which gives him the right.”

in Farrier v. Cairns, 5 Ohio, 45, the court says:

“Costs are unknown to the common law. They are given only by statute, and may be changed, or entirely taken away, at the will of the legislature.”

From these considerations and authorities, it seems to be the policy of the law (1) that each and every litigant shall be primarily liable for all costs made by him, and (2) that the whole matter of the taxation of costs, of requiring payment of, or security for costs, and of allowing judgment for costs, is under the legislative control. Accordingly, our legislature has made very full provision for requiring security for costs, and for the taxation and the collection of costs. Sections 1318, 1338, 5340, 5353, Revised Statutes.

Let us now consider the jural relation between a ministerial officer and one who is so situated as to be entitled to his official services. To understand this relation rightly, and to properly designate and place the right and the duty arising therefrom, we must have recourse to the accepted definitions and classification of legal rights and obligations. Writers on analytical jurisprudence, class private rights as rights in rem and rights in personam. The essential idea of a right in personam is the right to exact performance of an obligation from a certain person. The rights in personam arise either ex contractu or ex lege; the former result from executor contracts, while the latter arise from various jural relations, vithout the intervention of either contract or delict. When any one has a right to have a ministerial officer perform an official act for him, the right is in personam, and this right and the correspondent duty arise ex lege.

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Related

Eudora Mining & Development Co. v. Barclay
122 Ala. 506 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1898)
Ripley v. Gifford
11 Iowa 367 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1860)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-judson-v-coates-ohctcomplcuyaho-1901.