143 N.Y.S. 624 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1913
The court is required by this motion to review the rulings of the county clerk in disallowing objections duly interposed by the defendant to the taxation by plaintiff, on entering judgment herein, of a trial fee for the March term, 1913, and five items of disbursements aggregating eighteen dollars and twenty-four cents, shown in the usual form to have been paid or incurred to certain witnesses for mileage for returning to their respective residences pending the trial of the action on the usual adjournment of court over Sunday, and for returning to attend court on Monday.
The right of the plaintiff to tax the trial fee depends upon a question of fact. Taxation of that item is contested only on the ground, that it was embraced in an allowance of $100 made by the trial court to the plaintiff as a condition of granting the postponement of the trial on the application of the dedefendant. It appears by affidavit that such allowance was made for the purpose of paying the witness fees and other expenses of the trial incurred by the plaintiff at that time; and that it was agreed by the attorneys for the respective parties, without taxation of the items, that the plaintiff’s disbursements and expenses would aggregate about that sum.
It appears that after the trial of the action was begun, and on a Friday afternoon, the court adjourned until the following Monday at one o’clock in the afternoon, and that the justice presiding at the term, the attorneys, jurors and the witnesses all left the county seat during the interim; and five material witnesses for the plaintiff, who had been subpoenaed and were in attendance and resided from 43 to 48 miles from the court house, went home and returned to attend court at the adjourned hour. It is conceded on the part of the defendant that the plaintiff was entitled to tax five dollars for the per diem fees of these witnesses for Saturday and Sunday, and its counsel argues that there is no authority for taxing more; but counsel for the plaintiff contends that his client was entitled to tax mileage for these witnesses, in effect, as if they had been duly subpoenaed anew, and he cites in support of his contention Muscott v. Runge, 27 How. Pr. 92; Moulton v. Townsend, 16 id. 306; Miller v. Huntington, 1 id. 218, and an unreported decision in which no opinion was written at trial term Supreme Court, Cattaraugus county, in the case of Kales v. Hogg. The point presented is both interesting and important. It would seem that the ruling made in Kales v. Hogg, sustaining the right to tax mileage in such ca.se, was a mere expression from the bench of the opinion of the justice presiding without specially examining the question; and it appears by affidavit that the court remarked on so ruling, that as jurors were entitled to such mileage the same rule should apply to witnesses. In the ease of jurors, hoAvever, it is expressly provided by section 3314 of the Code of Civil Procedure that
The fees to which the witnesses were entitled are prescribed in section 331.8 of the Code of Civil Procedure as follows: “A witness in an action or a special proceeding, attending before a court of record, or a judge thereof, is entitled, except where another fee is specially prescribed by law, to fifty cents for each day’s attendance; and, if he resides more than three miles from the place of attendance, to eight cents for each mile, going to the place of attendance.” Those statutory provisions have remained substantially the same since the enactment of chapter 386 of the Laws of 1840, from section 8 of which they were taken. In codifying the statute its phraseology, which prescribed half the mileage for going and the other half for returning, was changed, but the revisers’ notes do not indicate that they intended to change, the effect of the statute. See Throop’s Annotated Code Civ. Pro. 1886, § 3318. We may take judicial notice that in those early days and until quite recently in nearly every rural county in the state, court was ordinarly held continuously from the commencement until the end of the.term including
I am of opinion, therefore, that when a witness is duly subpoenaed to attend court it is his duty, unless relieved by' special application to the court on the ground that there has been an abuse of process in holding him in attendance at the court, to attend from day to day on due payment of the per diem allowance prescribed by the statute, and that it is not necessary, in the case of the usual recess of the court over Sunday or a legal holiday, to subpoena him over and pay another mileage. Of course, if after a witness is duly in attendance the case in which he is subpoenaed should be postponed for some time or the court should be adjourned for a longer period than the ordinary recess, the court would not require the witness to remain in attendance on payment of a per diem fee when it was known that the case could not be moved for trial or that the court was not to be in session; and in such case, doubtless, the attorneys for the respective parties would be warranted, without special application to the court, in
It follows that the motion for a retaxation of the costs should be granted, and that the second item for mileage for said five witnesses should be disallowed, and there should be substituted therefor an item of $5 for the per diem fees of the witnesses and the cost should be retaxed at $240.63, but since the question is novel and not free from doubt no costs of the motion are allowed.
Ordered accordingly.