Swallow v. First State Bank

160 N.W. 137, 35 N.D. 323, 1916 N.D. LEXIS 160
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 160 N.W. 137 (Swallow v. First State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swallow v. First State Bank, 160 N.W. 137, 35 N.D. 323, 1916 N.D. LEXIS 160 (N.D. 1916).

Opinion

Christianson, J.

In 1912, plaintiff recovered judgment against the defendant in the district court of Hettinger county for $800 damages. The defendant procured a transcript of the evidence adduced, and the proceedings had at the trial, at a cost of $60.75. Defendant thereupon prepared a statement of the case, which was duly settled, upon which it founded a motion for a new trial, which was granted.

The trial court assigned the following four.reasons for ordering a new trial:

“1. That the damages awarded by the jury are so excessive as to convince the court that they were awarded under the influence of passion or prejudice, or given as punitive damages under erroneous instructions by the court as to the amounts of punitive damages, under the first and third causes of action alleged in the complaint. 2. That the evidence, especially that part of the evidence relating to damages, ii-insufficient to support the verdict. 3. That the instructions of the court as to the rights of the jury to award punitive damages under the first and third causes of action alleged in the complaint are erroneous, .to the prejudice of plaintiff. ,4. That the instructions of the court, as to the amount which the jury might award to plaintiff as a penalty for failure to furnish a certificate of discharge or satisfaction of a lien upon personal property,' when such lien was satisfied by the payment of the debt secured thereby, are erroneous, to the prejudice of plaintiff.” The order made no reference to the costs incurred on the motion for a new trial.

Plaintiff appealed from the order granting a new trial. The order was affirmed by this court, and the costs of the appeal directed to be [325]*325taxed in favor of the defendant. See Swallow v. First State Bank, 28 N. D. 283, 148 N. W. 630.

The cause was again tried in the district court, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff. On December 11, 1914, defendant’s attorney filed with the clerk of the district court an itemized, verified statement of costs and disbursements upon the motion for a new trial, which, among other items, included the cost of the transcript. The costs upon the motion for a new trial were thereupon taxed by the clerk of the district court. An application to retax the costs, duly noticed, came on for hearing before the clerk of the district court on December 15, 1914, and resulted in a disallowance of the proposed items of costs and disbursements. Thereafter defendant, upon due notice, moved the court for a review of the re-taxation of costs. Both parties appeared at the hearing of such motion, and the district court entered an order directing the taxation of $60.75, cost of the transcript, in favor of the defendant. Judgment was entered therefor, and plaintiff appeals.

It is well settled (as appellant asserts) that costs are the creature of, and can be awarded only when authorized by, statute. It is equally well settled that “the party complaining in a court of appellate jurisdiction of alleged errors in the taxation of costs in the court below must affirmatively show some error in the taxation of the costs by some appropriate method, or it will be presumed in support of the action of the lower court that there was no error in the taxation, and as a result of such presumption the taxation of costs by the court below will not be disturbed.” 11 Cyc. 168, 169. See also 5 Standard Enc. Proc. 965.

There is nothing in the record to show whether costs were ever taxed on the appeal; nor is there anything to show when the retrial of the action was had, or whether the costs upon such retrial have been finally taxed. All these matters, upon which the record before us is silent, would necessarily be disclosed by the records in the court below, and consequently known to the trial court.

The presumption is that the trial- court’s order was properly made, and the burden is upon appellant to show wherein it is erroneous. To do this he must present a sufficient record for reviewing the errors assigned. (Davis v. Jacobson, 13 N. D. 430, 432, 101 N. W. 314.) [326]*326In considering an appeal from a determination involving the taxation of costs, this court does not try the case de novo as appellant suggests, but sits merely as a court of review, and as such reviews merely the correctness of the rulings made by the trial court. Consequently, it is a general rule that a party, in order to be heard on appeal, must be able to produce a record showing that the specific objections urged in the appellate 'court were properly presented in the court below. 5 Standard Enc. Proc. 965; 11 Cyc. 169.

■So far as the record in this case shows, plaintiff presented no objections whatever to the taxation of costs, either before the clerk of the district court or before the district court itself. Hence, there is considerable doubt whether appellant has presented any question for our determination in this case. If he has, it is self-evident that the presumptions above referred to must apply with even more than usual force, and if the trial coiirt’s determination can be sustained on any conceivable statement of facts not negatived by the record presented on this appeal, it must be so sustained.

Plaintiff contends that no costs or disbursements can be taxed except in favor of the party which finally prevails, i. e., the party in favor of whom final judgment is eventually rendered; that in this case, final judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, and that consequently defendant was not entitled to recover any costs.

Many of our statutory provisions relative to costs were originally adopted by the territorial legislature. This is true of § 7790, Compiled Laws 1913, which was originally adopted by the legislature of the territory of Dakota in 1883.' Subdivision 3 of this section, relating the allowance to the prevailing party of costs, provides that there shall be allowed: “To either party, when a new trial shall be had, for all proceedings after the granting of and before such new trial, $5 ; for attending upon and taking the deposition of a witness conditionally or attending to perpetuate his testimony, $2; for drawing interrogatories to annex to a commission for the taking of testimony, $2; for making and serving a case or case containing exceptions, $5, except that when the case shall necessarily contain more than fifty folios, there shall be allowed $2 in addition thereto.” This provision was construed by the territorial supreme court in First Nat. Bank v. North, 6 Dak. 136, 41 N. W. 736, 50 N. W. 621. In that case the court held that where [327]*327a party made' a motion for a new trial “on the minutes of the court,” and thereafter jwepared and served a bill of exceptions in order to obtain a review of the ruling on the motion for a new trial, such party, upon a new trial being directed by the supreme court, was entitled to tax costs as the prevailing party “for making and serving a case ... containing exceptions.” In the same case the court also held that “in such case the fees paid the stenographer for a transcript of the proceeding from which to prepare the bill is taxable under § 4, chap. 52, Laws 1879; Comp. Laws 1913, § 484, providing that stenographer’s fees for transcripts ‘shall be taxable costs.’ ”

The particular provision relating to stenographic fees construed by the territorial legislature has subsequently been eliminated from the statute where it was then found, but language of similar import and far more specific in its terms has been incorporated in § 7793, Comp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 N.W. 137, 35 N.D. 323, 1916 N.D. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swallow-v-first-state-bank-nd-1916.