Yates v. . Yates

87 S.E. 317, 170 N.C. 533, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 447
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 22, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 S.E. 317 (Yates v. . Yates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yates v. . Yates, 87 S.E. 317, 170 N.C. 533, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 447 (N.C. 1915).

Opinion

*535 Hoke, J.

Our statute on tbe question of costs in civil cases, now chapter 22 of Eevisal, secs. 1264, 1266, and 1267, formerly Code of ’83, ch. 10, secs. 525, 526, and 527, among other things, provides, see. 1264:

1. That costs shall be allowed as of course to plaintiff in the following case.s: In actions to recover real property or a claim for title thereto arising on the pleadings or are certified to have been in question at the trial.

2. In actions to recover personal property.

3. In actions of which a court of a justice of the peace has no jurisdiction, unless otherwise provided by law.

Sections 4 and 5 contain provisions as to actions fo.r assault and battery, etc., and as to certain actions on bonds, promissory notes, etc., when several parties are defendant. These subdivisions not being apposite to any question presented on this appeal.

Section 1266 is to the effect that costs shall be allowed as of course to defendants in actions mentioned in the section just quoted, unless plaintiff be entitled to costs therein.

And section 1267: That in other actions costs may be allowed or not, in the discretion of the court, unless otherwise provided by law.

The meaning of' subdivision 3 of section 1264 of Eevisal, when considered in connection with this last section, 1267, is not clear, nor has it ever been fully and satisfactorily interpreted; but in many well considered decisions of the Court it has been held to be the correct construction of these sections that, in actions which under the old system were peculiarly cognizable in courts of equity and unless coming in the class of actions specified in sections 1264 and 1266, in which plaintiff and defendant who succeed in the controversies were to recover costs as of course, that the costs could be awarded in the discretion of the court tinder the provisions of section 1267. This position was approved as late as 166 Eeports, p. 20, in Bond v. Cotton Mills, a creditor’s bill against the owner and contractor in putting up a cotton mill, in which the principal contractor had become insolvent,, and in Parton v. Boyd, 104 N. C., 422, an action for specific performance.

In Smith v. Smith, 101 N. C., 461, an action to surcharge and falsify the accounts of administrators, and in Gully v. Macy, 89 N. C., 343, an action to set aside sale proceedings and decree of the probate court directing a sale of lands, etc. See, also, same case, 81 N. C., 356, for a statement of the nature of the action.

In Parton v. Boyd, supra, being an action for specific performance, Merrimon, J., states the ruling as follows: “The cause of action in this case is equitable in its nature, and the action is one in which the court will administer the diverse rights of the parties coming within its scope, as they may appear, giving judgment in favor of the plaintiff in one or more respects, and in favor of the defendants in others, and allow costs *536 in favor of one party or the other, or require the parties to share the same, in its discretion.

This action is not one of those classes of actions in which the plaintiff is entitled to costs, as of course, if he recovers, as allowed by the statute (The Code, secs. 525, 526), or in which the defendant is so entitled if the plaintiff fails to recover. Hence, it is one of those in which costs may be allowed, in the discretion of the court, as allowed by the statute (The Code, sec. 527). The purpose of this provision is to give the court authority, in cases like the present one, to allow costs as the justice of the case may require. Gully v. Macy, 89 N. C., 343.

An examination 'of Williams v. Hughes, 139 N. C., 17, same case, 136 N. C., 58, to which we were referred, will disclose that the cause of action was one in which the title to real estate was involved, and the case comes clearly under the first subdivision of 1264, in which costs were to be allowed to the party who recovered as “of course”; and the same may be said of Patterson v. Ramsay, 136 N. C., 561. That was an action of ejectment, and was under the express requirement of subdivision 1, sec. 1264. In the case of Lumber Co. v. Lumber Co., 150 N. C., 281, to which we were also cited as sustaining a different position, the Court was construing a- special statute made to wind up the affairs of an insolvent corporation, and in delivering the opinion, Brown, J., is careful to state: “It was not an action brought under the general equity powers of the Court, but a statutory proceeding for the specific purpose, and the payment of costs was governed by the statute.”

The only case which we find in real contravention of the ruling of the lower court is that of Bruner v. Threadgill, 93 N. C., 225, in which, on an action brought by the mortgagor for an account and redemption of the mortgage, on a balance being found in favor of the mortgagee, a judgment in favor of the mortgagee for the balance and for costs was reversed as to the costs, the Court holding that the mortgagor, having established his principal position, was entitled to his costs as of course.

The principle of that case was directly ignored in a subsequent decision of the Court in Cook v. Patterson, 103 N. C., 127, and, in so far as it holds or tends to hold that the costs in a suit, under the general equitable powers of the court, are not in the court’s discretion, the decision is not in line with the cases first cited, and is disapproved.

In the old equity procedure the costs of a cau.se were usually and to a very large extent in the discretion of the chancellor. Piles v. Redrick, 167 Pa. St., 296; Carroll v. Tomlinson, 192 Ill., 399. And the statute, except in the cases defined and specified, was intended in this respect to confirm the rule in the old equity procedure.

Applying the principle, we think the costs in the present case were clearly in the discretion of the trial court.

*537 It is true that, on the is.sue of indebtedness submitted, there was verdict in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant for $210, but the form of the issue is not in this ease at all determinative of the character of the action.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.E. 317, 170 N.C. 533, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yates-v-yates-nc-1915.