Wilson & Co. v. Stark

47 Mo. App. 116, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 430
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 47 Mo. App. 116 (Wilson & Co. v. Stark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson & Co. v. Stark, 47 Mo. App. 116, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 430 (Mo. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

The judgment in this case was reversed at the last term. At the present term the appellant filed a motion wherein we are asked to allow a certain charge for the cost of printing the abstracts of the record, and then to order that the same be taxed as part of the cost of the appeal in favor of the appellants and against the respondents.

I. The respondent resists the granting of this motion principally upon the grounds, that the charge for printing the abstract not béing for costs, the amount of which is specially fixed by law, cannot be allowed by us and taxed as costs of the appeal after the term at which the final judgment was rendered. We are thus called''fipdn to make a practical construction and application of sections 225‘d and 2931, the former of [119]*119which, provides that, “If the abstract filed by the appellant or plaintiff in error be sufficient and correct, a reasonable charge therefor shall be taxed against the respondent or defendant in error, if he be the losing, party.” This statutory provision by its very terms, while declaring that the charge for printing the abstract shall be taxable as costs, also requires the reasonableness to be first judicially passed upon before it can be made the subject of taxation. There is a clear and well-defined distinction between these costs that are allowed and fixed by statute, and those that require judicial allowance before the authority to tax the same is conferred. The taxation of such items of costs as fall within the first class is a duty that primarily devolves upon the clerk. It is but a ministerial function to be performed by him after the rendition of the judgment. Mann v. Warner, 22 Mo. App. 577; Bosley v. Parle, 35 Mo. App. 235; State v. Beck, 36 Mo. App. 117; Ladd v. Couzins, 52 Mo. 454. In costs of the latter class the clerk has no power whatever to tax the same until specially allowed by the court.

The resisting respondents, to sustain their contention, cite and rely upon Ladd v. Couzins, supra, and the cases in which it has been followed in the courts of appeal. The statute, which was made the basis of the ruling in Ladd v. Couzins, provided that, if the plaintiff “shall fail to recover judgment against such garnish ee, all costs attending such garnishment shall be adjudged against such plaintiff and the court shall render judgment in favor of such garnishee against the plaintiff for a sum sufficient to indemnify him for his time and expenses and reasonable attorney’s fees,” etc. 1 W. S. 66, sec. 227; R. S., sec. 5239. This statute makes provisions for the recovery of costs eo nomine and for the further recovery of such sum as shall be sufficient to indemnify the garnishee in respect to outlays made by him in his defense. These outlays are denominated costs and are recoverable in gross as such. [120]*120Costs of this kind when allowed by the court become a component part of the judgment. It is quite apparent' that the decision, in the case to which we have just referred, to the effect that such costs could not be recovered after a term at which the judgment was rendered, was correct. We do not coincide with the opinion expressed by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Clark v. Hill, 33 Mo. App. 116, to the effect that the opinion delivered by Judge Ewing in that case was not well considered or that it is overthrown by the ruling-in the later case of Clinton v. Railroad, 78 Mo. 575. We think this notion results from ,a misconception of what was there decided. A reference to it will show that the question there decided was not in any respect analogous to that passed upon by Judge Ewing.

In the Acts of 1875, page 127, it was provided that the prosecuting attorney instituting and conducting-certain suits for taxes should, if the. plaintiff recovered judgment, receive as compensation for his services therein a sum equivalent to five per cent, of the sum recovered, to be taxed as cost and recovered and collected as other costs. The clerk failed to tax the attorney’s fee in the case on the amount of the judgment as required by the statute just referred to. The judgment and all costs that had been taxed were satisfied. After several terms of the court at which the judgment was rendered had elapsed, the attorney who had brought the tax’ suit and recovered the judgment, and was entitled to the fees allowed by the statute, filed his motion to have the costs retaxed so as to include his fees. It was held that the motion was timely enough. The cost being allowed and fixed by statute, no action of the court to allow the same was necessary. Nor were such costs a component part of the judgment as in the case decided by Judge Ewing. It was the duty of the clerk to have taxed this item in the first instance and the motion was to require a performance of this [121]*121mere ministerial duty which he had omitted. The two cases are quite distinguishable.

But returning from the digression just made, we may observe that the statute does not require in rendering a judgment of affirmance or reversal that we shall in addition to adjudging the costs of the appeal or writ of error against the unsuccessful party also give judgment for a sufficient sum to indemnify the successful party for his-time, expenses and attorney’s fees, etc., as is required in garnishment proceedings under the statute. The charge for printing the abstract is not required by statute to be made a component part of the judgment of reversal. Costs which require judicial allowances are properly subdivisible into two classes. One is in the nature of indemnity, and for which judgment is required to be specially given, and which, therefore, form a component part thereof, and is to be distinguished from the costs which are adjudged in addition thereto by name. The other is where the charge does not become a component part of the, judgment, though requiring judicial allowance. Only such costs fall within the first subdivision as are made to do so in consequence of some statute by force of which they become a component part of the gross sum for-which the judgment is given.

It must needs follow that the charge here which it is asked to be taxed as costs, as do those costs which are allowed and fixed when allowed by us, comes within the same category as those costs that are fixed by statute and may be taxed by the clerk in the same way. No sufficient reason is perceived why such charge may not be .allowed after the time when the final judgment was rendered and then taxed by the clerk. There is no statute of limitation precluding this, nor do we discover any reason in the law or its policy which forbids it. The two cases last referred to fully support this view.

[122]*122II. It is further contended that the charge of the appellant should not be allowed, for the reason that the abstract was insufficient and incorrect. The statute, section 2253, provides that the appellant or plaintiff in error may file printed abstracts of the record of the case in the office of the clerk. If the respondent or the defendant in error is dissatisfied with such abstract, he may file other or additional abstracts of the record, and if the appellant, or. plaintiff in error does not concur in such other or additional abstracts he shall specify his objections thereto in writing and file the same with the clerk, who shall issue and send an official order commanding the clerk of the trial court to send to the appellate court a certified transcript of that part of the record so in dispute.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Mo. App. 116, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-co-v-stark-moctapp-1891.