United States v. Cadzow

7 Alaska 126
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedJanuary 15, 1924
DocketNo. 2577
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Alaska 126 (United States v. Cadzow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Cadzow, 7 Alaska 126 (D. Alaska 1924).

Opinion

CDEGG, ’District Judge.

The plaintiff, after judgment, has filed an amended cost bill claiming:

Marshal’s fees ...................................$ 210.50

Witness fees as follows:

W. L. Harber, Ft. Yukon, actual and necessary expenses of travel and subsistence in lieu of mileage and per diem............................. 460.30

Harry Healy, same, subpoenaed about 200 miles up Porcupine river from mouth................... 792.30

Charles Strom, same, subpoenaed same place....... 772.80

The defendant objects to the three last items on the ground that each charge is unlawful, not authorized by law, and that said taxation was made in total disregard of the provisions of the Compiled Daws of Alaska, of the Session Daws of the [128]*128Alaska Legislature of 1923, and of the Revised Statutes of the United States.

Prior to the year 1923 the subject of the payment of witness fees and marshal’s fees by litigants was regulated by the Attorney General under authority conferred by Act June 6, 1900, tit. 1 § 30 (48 USCA § 25 [U. S. Comp. St. § 3587]; section 389, Comp. Laws Alaska 1913), which reads as follows:

“In case the law requires or authorizes any services to be performed or any act to be done by any official or person within the District of Alaska, and provides no compensation therefor, the Attorney General may prescribe and promulgate a schedule of such fees, mileage, or other compensation as shall be by him deemed proper for each division of the court, and such schedule shall have the force and effect of law; and the Attorney General may from time to time amend such schedule and promulgate the same as amended, and the schedule as amended and promulgated shall also have the force and effect of law,”

—and Act June 6, 1900, tit. 3, § 4 (31 Stat. 494), which reads as follows:

“The Attorney General may, from time to time, make such rules and regulations, not in conflict with law, as he may deem necessary to insure the efficient administration of the law and to avoid conflicts of jurisdiction or of officials in the district.” '

Pursuant to the authority therein conferred upon the Attorney General of the United States, he did, on January 1, 1911, under the authority of said act and subsequent acts, promulgate certain amended rules and regulations, among which are the following with reference to compensation of witnesses in the Fourth judicial division :

“For attendance on the District Court or before any officer other than a commissioner pursuant to law, and for the time necessarily occupied in going to and returning from the same, per day............$4.00
“For the distance actually and necessarily traveled in going to and returning from the place of such attendance, per mile ... ............................15
“Provided, that for all travel in other judicial districts and for all travel by sea, except from one point to another .in Alaska and within Alaskan waters, witnesses shall be entitled to only 5 cents per mile for going and returning: Provided further, that a witness subpoenaed from a point 100 miles or over from the place of holding court may elect to receive his actual necessary expenses of travel and subsistence in lieu of mileage hereinbefore provided.”

[129]*129And with reference to the services of the United States marshal by section 432 of the aforesaid printed amended instructions it was provided as follows;

“When the expenses of a marshal or an office deputy on a trip are greater than the mileage, or when the expenses of a fee deputy on a trip on which he elected to take actual expenses in lieu of mileage are greater than the mileage, the actual expenses and the amount of the fees for serving the process should be collected. But when the mileage exceeds the actual expenses of the trip, the mileage and the amount of the fees for serving the process should be collected.”

It is not contended by the defendant that the Attorney General had no authority to promulgate the aforesaid rules, but it is his contention that' the same have been amended, or at least rendered inoperative, by chapter 38, Session Laws of Alaska of 1923, entitled:

“To amend sections 1345, 1352 and 1360, Compiled Laws of Alaska 1913, relative to the recovery of costs and disbursements in certain civil proceedings in court, and to make further provision concerning the same.”

The first paragraph of the act of the Legislature last above mentioned is a re-enactment of section 1345 in identical language, and in addition thereto contains the following provision, viz.:

“The prevailing party may tax as costs the sum of $20.00 when the case is dismissed before it is set for trial after appearance by the opposite party, and the sum of $40.00 when not disposed of until after it is set for trial; for each deposition such sum as may bé allowed by the court; the per diem actually paid the court reporter but not to exceed $10.00 per day; witness fee for each day a witness is necessarily absent from his usual place of abode by reason of attendance upon court, with traveling expenses at 15 cents per mile actually and necessarily traveled; a party to the action, if a witness, shall be entitled to the same fee and traveling expense as any other witness; in the district court only, a reasonable attorneys’ fee to be fixed by the court.
“Whenever in any civil action now pending or hereafter instituted the cause shall be set for trial though dismissed before trial the defendant shall recover as costs all the witness fees and other reasonable expenses which he has necessarily incurred or for which he has necessarily made himself liable in anticipation of a trial of all the issues raised by the pleadings.”

Prior to the time of the passage of the aforesaid act of the Legislature, and up to the 1st day of January, 1917, the amended rules and regulations of the Attorney General hereinabove [130]*130referred to were in full force and effect with the force of law in this division, and, as will be seen by a reference to the Attorney General’s provision with reference to the compensation of witnesses, it is provided that a witness in attendance on the District Court, who is subpoenaed from a point 100 miles or over from the place of holding court, may elect to receive his actual necessary expenses of travel and subsistence in lieu of mileage hereinbefore provided.

On the 1st day of January, 1917, by circular 639 from the Attorney General’s office, the aforesaid provision was further amended to read as follows:

“That any witness before the District Court, a commissioner, or otherwise, may elect to receive bis actual expenses of travel and subsistence, necessary to ordinary convenience and comfort, in lieu of all per diems and all mileage, as above provided.”

It was thus left optional with a witness to claim and to be paid for service and attendance, either per diem and mileage, or in lieu thereof his actual necessary expenses of travel and subsistence, irrespective of where he was subpoenaed.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Alaska 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-cadzow-akd-1924.