Williams v. Hernon
This text of 13 Abb. Pr. 297 (Williams v. Hernon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
—Section 308 of the Code provides that there shall be allowed to the plaintiff, and only to the plaintiff, upon the recovery of judgment by him in any action for the partition of real property, or for the foreclosure of a mortgage, or in which a warrant of attachment has been issued, or for an adjudication upon a will or other instrument in writing, &c., a percentage on the recovery, &c., which cannot exceed sixty dollars. By this provision for the plaintiff exclusively, it may be safely inferred, that the Legislature intended that defendants in the actions specified in the section should not be entitled to any extra allowance.
In section 309, however, as amended in 1858, it was provided that the court may also “ in its discretion make a further allowance to any party, not exceeding five per cent, upon the amount of the recovery or claim, or subject-matter involved.”
If this remained the law, as I erroneously supposed in my late opinion in Hotaling a. Marsh,
The defendants in this action, therefore, are not entitled to any extra allowance, and the order of the special term should be affirmed, without costs.
Present, Clerke, P. J., Ingraham and Leonard, JJ.
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