9 N.Y.S. 591 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
The proceeding was by reference, under the statute, (3 Rev. St., 7th Ed., p. 2299, § 36,) of a disputed claim against the estate of a deceased person. The claim was based upon an alleged judgment of a justice’s court against the defendant’s testator. On the trial before the referee the plaintiffs gave no evidence of the judgment or of the jurisdiction of the justice’s court, except by the transcript of the judgment filed in the clerk’s office of the county. The referee reported in favor of the plaintiffs, and his report was confirmed at special term, and judgment was entered thereon. On appeal to this court the judgment and order were reversed on the ground that there was no presumption of the jurisdiction of the justice’s court; that although, by the filing of the transcript, the judgment became a judgment of the county court for the purposes of its execution, yet that it did not thereby obtain the benefit of the presumption of jurisdiction which attaches to judgments rendered in the county court; and that the fact of jurisdiction must be affirmatively proved to give effect to the judgment as the basis of an action. 46 Hun, 52. A new trial was accordingly granted, with costs of the appeal to abide the final award of costs. After some delay a new referee was appointed, and after the cause was noticed for trial before him the plaintiffs moved at special term for an order discontinuing the proceeding without costs; and the order was made, from which this appeal is taken, discontinuing the proceeding on payment by the plaintiffs of the costs and disbursements of the
The Revised Statutes provide for costs in this proceeding “as in actions against executors. ” 2 Rev. St. p. 89, § 37, (3 Rev. St. 7th Ed.) p. 2300. This provision is qualified in respect to the award of costs to the plaintiff by sections 1835 and 1836 of the Code of Civil Procedure, but those sections have no reference to the question of costs in favor of the defendant. The proceeding is not within the provisions of section 3240 of the Code, and the award of costs is not in the discretion of the court. The right to costs of the defendant, in such proceedings, is regulated by section 3229. The correctness of all these propositions is recognized in the ease of Hopkins v. Lott, 111 N. Y. 577, 19 N. E. Rep. 273. We are justified, therefore, in treating the questions in this case as if they arose in “an action in which the complaint demands judgment for a sum. of money only.” In such case, by the terms of section 3229, referring to section 3228, the defendant is entitled to costs, of course, upon the rendering of final judgment, unless the plaintiff is entitled to costs as prescribed in the section referred to. The words “upon the rendering of final judgment,” in both of the sections 3228 and 3229, were added in the latest revision of the Code, and are an instance of the chief revisor’s careful attention to detail. They cannot, probably, have been intended to limit the right to costs of either party to those cases alone in which the action is prosecuted to final judgment. They do, no doubt, limit the right of the party to enter judgment for costs without direction of the court; and we assume that the provision in question does not change the rule of practice which has so long and uniformly prevailed, that the defendant in a common-law action will have the costs which have already accrued awarded to him by the court as a condition of the discontinuance of the action by the plaintiff, except in a case where such an award of costs would work manifest injustice to the plaintiff. Such a case has always been regarded as an exception to the rule, as, for example, where the defendant has obtained a bankrupt’s discharge after the commencement of the action, (Hart v. Storey, 1 Johns. 143;) or had fraudulently concealed the fact of his infancy from the plaintiff, (Van Buren v. Fort, 4 Wend. 209;) or where, in an action for a penalty, the law imposing the penalty was repealed after action brought, (Cole v. Rose, 65 How. Pr. 520;) or where one named as a defendant by mistake, and not served with process, has intruded himself into a litigation, the result of which could in no manner affect his interest, (Manufacturing Co. v. Krause, 9 Abb. Pr. 175, note.) The case of De Barante v. Deyermand, 41 N. Y. 355, (correctly reported in 40 How. Pr. 180,) relied upon by the respondents here, was clearly a case coming within the exception to the rule. In that case the defendant held a release which was a complete defense to the action, but which he and his counsel had purposely omitted to plead. When the cause was ready for trial, they produced it to the counsel for the plaintiff, and declared that they proposed to rely upon it. Upon these facts, which appear in the report of the case last cited, (40 How. Pr. 180,) the plaintiff was allowed to discontinue his action without costs. Judge Mason, in his opinion reported as above, points out that the result would have been the same if the action had proceeded, and the defendant had attempted to avail himself of the release as he proposed. This he could have done only by amendment of his answer, and that the court would not have permitted except upon condition that the plaintiff have leave to discontinue without costs, if he elected to do so. The case of Winans v. Winans, 54 N. Y. Super. Ct. 541, is authority for the proposition that the court may, in a proper case, refuse leave to discontinue even on payment of costs, and that it may also, in a proper ease, impose terms in addition to the payment of costs. Other cases cited by counsel for the plaintiffs which have not already been noticed were suits in equity, in which costs were unquestionably in the discretion of the court.
Macomber, J., concurs. Corlett, J., not sitting.