11 Or. 26 | Or. | 1883
By the Court,
Bespondent begun this action in the county court of Douglas county to recover possession of certain personal property of the alleged value of twenty-five dollars, and for twenty-five dollars damages for its detention. He obtained' judgment for the property, which the jury found to be of the value of fifteen dollars, but no damages. The appellant carried the case into the circuit court by appeal, where another trial was had with the same result, except that the value of the property was found to be twenty dollars. Judgment was thereupon rendered for the respondent for the possession of the property, and in the alternative for twenty dollars, its value as found by the jury, and for his costs and disbursements in both courts taxed at $228 65. The appeal is from this judgment.
It is claimed, on behalf of the appellant here, that it was error in the circuit court to award to the respondent all the costs and disbursements incurred by him in the action, as it did by its judgment, from which the appeal has been taken. Bespondent’s counsel insist that this question does not properly arise upon the record of the case now before this court; and that such a question could be brought here only by appeal from the determination of the circuit court settling the amount of costs and disbursements allowable, in the action in the statutory proceeding to tax the same. But this is evidently a misapprehension as to the nature of the question involved here, and of the character of the proceeding to tax
Our statute does not expressly declare what the measure of costs and disbursements on appeal to the circuit court shall be, while it does recognize, rather than enact directly, that costs and disbursements are recoverable on such appeal. (Civil Code, subds. 2 and 3, sec. 542 and 543.) A reference to the various provisions upon the subject of costs and disbursements in civil actions begun in the several courts of the state, clearly reveals a policy on the part of the lawmaking power, to discourage the bringing of actions belonging to certain classes, generally involving small amounts of money, or personal property of little value, in the circuit or county courts, by denying, in some cases, the plaintiff’s'
As we have pointed out, “costs,” on appeal to the circuit court, are recognized by the statute. (Sec. 542, subs. 2 and 3, supra.) This is equivalent to an express enactment for their allowance. The provisions of sec. 53P have always been understood and construed to apply to the allowance of costs and disbursements in the circuit and county courts only. The question here is whether such provisions also furnish the rule of allowance in the circuit court, on appeal from the county court. That they do not on appeals from the justices court has already been decided. (Nurse v. Justus, 6 Or., 75.) This last decision is clearly consistent with the legislative policy before mentioned. The action involving less than fifty dollars was begun in the justice’s court, where the law designed it should be brought. Nurse recovered judgment for twenty-one dollars, and Justus ap
Even if this case came under sub. 3 of sec. 542, so as to make tbe allowance of costs and disbursements discretionary
The nature of his judgment, in the appellate court, furnishes the rule as to the amount of costs and disbursements to be allowed on account of the proceeding in the lower court. If it is such a judgment as would, had it been recovered in the court below, have entitled the prevailing party to costs and disbursements there, its recovery in the circuit court on appeal has the same effect. (See cases last cited.) It follows that the respondent was only entitled to an allowance of twenty dollars in the county, and a like sum in the circuit court as costs and disbursements, and that the judgment of the latter court must be modified accordingly, with costs on appeal to appellant.