16 Or. 355 | Or. | 1888
This case arises out of a proceeding of mandamus. The writ was issued out of said Circuit Court upon the
The following is the substance of the facts found: (1) That the respondent was the treasurer of said Marion County. (2) That on the sixth day of May, 1887, said County Court, sitting as a board of commissioners, duly authorized said county clerk to draAv the warrants, by an order made for that purpose, Avhich Avas entered of record. (3) That the said clerk duly executed such order. (4) That in the month of November, 1886, the said clerk filled out two Avarrants upon the treasurer, respectively, for ten thousand dollars and five thousand dollars, and deliA'ered them to T. C. ShaAv, who Avas county judge of said county, and he delivered them to appellant, and obtained from him the amount thereof in money, and used it for the benefit of said county. That the money received by the county judge Avas not paid into the treasury of the county; but was paid to the city of
As conclusions of law the court found: (1) That the said sixteen warrants were valid and legal claims against said county. (2) That the appellant was the legal owner and holder of them. (3) That it was the duty of the respondent to pay or indorse the same when presented by the appellant. (4) That said warrants should draw interest at eight per cent per annum from the date of their presentment, the sixth day of May, 1887.
Upon these findings of facts and law, the appellant’s counsel moved the said Circuit Court for a judgment, commanding the respondent to pay to the appellant the amount due upon the warrants, and for costs, which motion the court refused to grant, but directed a judgment in favor of the appellant and against the respondent, to the effect that the latter pay to the former the amount of said warrants and interest out of any money in his hands as such treasurer belonging to said county, applicable to
The main grounds of error relied upon by appellant’s counsel are, the setting aside of the judgment entered July 13, 1887, the refusal to allow the appellant’s costs in the proceedings upon the writ of mandamus, and for not rendering a judgment directing a peremptory mandamus, commanding the respondent to immediately pay the ■ amount due upon said warrants, with the accrued interest thereon, from the sixth day of May, 1887, at the rate of eight per cent per annum. The transcript contains no bill of exceptions, and we have no data by which to determine the questions involved in the case, except the findings of the court referred to. As to the right of the Circuit Court to set aside the judgment entered July 13, 1887, there can be no doubt. Courts have control of their own records, and are authorized to correct them so as to make them conform to the truth. Where a case involving a question of fact is tried by the court without a jury, its decisions should be given in writing, and conclusions of law separately, and which shall be entered in the journal, and judgment entered thereon accordingly. A judgment in such a case, without such decision having been made and entered, cannot be attacked collaterally; but it is so irregular that the court which directs it should, as a matter of duty, recall the judgment or set it aside whenever the fact is brought to its notice. Such a judgment may be avoided on appeal or by the court in which it is entered.
The question as to whether the appellant was entitled to recover costs depends upon the construction of the statute regulating mandamus proceedings, which provides: “That if judg
We would be inclined to adopt the counsel’s theory, if we could do so consistently with the statute, not because of anything appearing particularly favorable to the exemption of the respondent from the payment of costs in this case, but cases have arisen, and are liable to arise frequently, in which an officer is greatly perplexed as to what his duty is in a certain matter. In such cases it would be a hardship to impose costs upon the officer for refusing to act when he did not know how to act. But is this one of the cases in which costs are not provided for as above mentioned? The answer to this question depends upon the construction to be given to the provision regulating mandamus proceedings before set out. Is this not a proceeding, “as to which the allowance and recovery of costs” is there provided for? If it had been intended that- costs should be left in the discretion of the court in a mandamus proceeding, the Code, it seems to me, would have so provided in express terms; but instead of that it provides, as before shown, “that if judgment be given for the plaintiff, he shall recover the damages, to be ascertained, etc., together with the costs and disbursements.”
It cannot seriously be claimed that this provision requires the recovery of damages as a condition to the recovery of costs and disbursements. The case belongs to a class in which the doing
The refusal of a county clerk to record a deed to valuable real estate might occasion no damage in fact, yet it would be absurd to hold that the grantee would not be entitled to recover costs, as a matter of right, under the statute, where he had been ■ put to the trouble and expense of enforcing the recording of it by means of such a proceeding.
I do not think that the view contended for by the respondent’s counsel regarding the construction of the said provision of statute is maintainable. It appears to me that the appellant was entitled to recover his costs and disbursements in the proceeding as a matter of course. He is not, however, entitled to recover the costs and expenses of the entry of the judgment of July 13, 1887, which was set aside by the Circuit Court; nor of any costs or expenses created under the last-mentioned judgment, but should be required to pay the same, and the clerk’s fees upon the motion to set it aside.
The judgment appealed from will be modified by directing the issuance of a peremptory mandamus to pay the amount of said warrants and interest forthwith, and in the other matters as herein indicated.
As to the question of costs in proceedings of this kind, I understand the rule to be, that costs are not allowed unless expressly authorized by statute. At common law there
A like principle prevails in actions of a public nature, where officers ai’e compelled to prosecute or defend in their official capacity, and such prosecution or defense is conducted in good faith and for the public benefit. In the County of Clare v. Auditor-General, 41 Mich. 183, Cooley, J., said: “That no costs are awarded where the case is of a public nature and has arisen from ambiguous legislation.” So in Houston v. Neuse River Nav. Co. 8 Jones (N. C.) 476, which was an information in the nature of a writ of quo warranto against a corporation to have its privileges declared forfeited, etc., Battle, J., said: “ The order dismissing the information is affirmed, but it is reversed as to costs. In a matter of a public nature, the officer who acts for the State does not pay costs for the other party.” In Hammond v. People, 32 Ill. 446; 83 Am. Dec. 286, it was held that a prisoner released under a habeas corpus did not authorize costs to be taxed against the officer who arrested him under a valid process. Other cases might be referred to, but these are sufficient to illustrate the application of the principle. Now the case in hand is public in its nature, and is brought against the defendant, in his official capacity, to compel him to pay certain warrants drawn on him as such officer. He has defended the action, and as the court has not awarded costs against him, there is no error, unless there is some statute authority to tax him with the costs.
Our statute in relation to proceedings by mandamus provides: