226 S.W. 1028 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1920
The controversy involved in this appeal is over the action of the trial court in adjudicating costs against the plaintiff in a case wherein he was the prevailing party.
Plaintiff sued defendant for direct and consequential damages sustained by reason of the failure of defendants to erect, in accordance with contract, a silo on defendant's farm. A judgment was recovered and defendant appealed, resulting in a reversal of the judgment and a remanding of the cause. [See Bush v. Norman, 199 S.W. 721.]
When the case went back to the trial court, plaintiff filed an amended petition eliminating the feature of rescission so as to place the plaintiff's cause of action unequivocally upon the ground of a breach of the building contract, and direct and consequential damages were again asked, the only difference as to damages being that the direct damages in the original petition were placed at $40, the amount paid for the building, whereas in the amended petition the direct damages, though placed at the same amount, was the difference, between the value of the building erected (alleged in the amended petition to be worthless), and the value it would have been had it been erected according to contract. There was no change as to the consequential damages, either in amount or in theory of recovery.
After said amended petition was filed, defendant filed a motion to tax the costs accruing by reason of the former trials on the original petition against the plaintiff; and at the request of both parties, the hearing on the motion was postponed until after the trial then to be had on the amended petition.
The case was then tried resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, rendered on the 14th of January, 1920, for $246.10 direct damages because of defects in *677 the silo and consequential damages therefrom for loss of silage $135, aggregating $381.10 and costs were adjudged againstdefendant. Two days thereafter, to-wit on January 16, 1920, and at the same term, defendant filed a motion praying that "all of the costs accruing herein up to the filing of said amended petition, except the necessary costs for filing and docketing the original petition and issuing and serving the original summons, and except costs incident to change of venue taken by defendants be taxed against the plaintiff.
The court overruled the defendant's motion for a new trial and then sustained the motion to tax costs and taxed against plaintiff "all costs of trial on the original petition upon which the cause was reversed by the Court of Appeals except" the costs incurred in, and incidental to, the bringing of defendant into court and the change of venue taken by the defendant. From this order taxing costs, the plaintiff has appealed.
It will be observed that by the judgment rendered on January 14, 1920, the costs were adjudged against defendant, and the costs being such as are a part of the judgment of the court, appellant contends that such costs cannot be reached by a motion to retax but only by a motion for new trial. It is undoubtedly true that a motion to retax costs after the judgment term,
does not reach those costs which are a part of the judgment itself but can only affect errors or mistakes of the clerk in taxing costs. [Mann v. Warner,
Owing to the fact that there was also a motion for new trial which was overruled before the motion to retax was acted upon, there may be some question whether this affects our right to consider the motion to retax as in the nature of a motion for new trial or an application to modify the judgment. During the term, the judgment was in the breast of the court and it could, therefore, have modified said judgment of its own motion, on proper grounds justifying such action. True, the better procedure in that event would have been to set aside the former judgment and then re-enter it modified as to costs, so that there would be but one entire judgment on the records. But this, it would seem, is a matter of form rather than of substance, and, since it was in the power of the court, upon proper grounds, to modify its judgment at the term it was rendered; we prefer to dispose of the appeal on the theory that the motion to retax can be regarded as in the nature of an application to modify even though it does not appear that the modification was sought in the motion for new trial and even though the court acted on said motion to tax after overruling the motion for new trial. We do this the more readily because, as we view it, the extent to which the trial court went in retaxing the costs cannot be justified even if it be granted that the motion to retax can be regarded in the light of a request to modify.
Unless there are facts or conditions which will justify the court's discretion in adjudging the costs otherwise, the prevailing party shall recover his costs. [Sec. 2263, R.S. 1909.] And even in cases in which the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, the costs, even of the *679
trial so set aside, "abide the final determination of the suit." [Jennings v. St. Louis, etc., R. Co.,
The basis of the court's action in taxing costs against the plaintiff, although he was the prevailing party, was the fact that after the cause was remanded by this court, the plaintiff filed an amended petition. Now, section 1848, Revised Statutes 1909, authorizes amendments "in furtherance of justice, on such terms as may be proper," etc. And if we may concede that the retaxing of the costs at the time it was done was a condition imposed by the court for allowing the amendment, yet such condition must be "just and proper;" and, while the giving or refusing of costs on motion is at the "discretion of the court" under section 2264, Revised Statutes 1909, yet in such matters, as in all others, the discretion is to be exercised properly and upon grounds calling such discretion into existence. [Minor v. Gerhart,
It is manifest upon a reading of the opinion reversing, the former judgment and remanding the cause for a new trial, that the same was done not because the petition pleaded a wrong cause of action, but because of an error in the instruction on the measure of the direct damages. The petition was such as would have been good after verdict even though defective in some particulars, in the absence of any attack therein at the trial, and there was none. The petition, in such case, would have been sufficient to sustain the judgment had the cause been submitted on the proper measure of damages with evidence to sustain it. The opinion says, 199 S.W. l.c. 722, "all the facts necessary to constitute a cause of action for damages, direct as well as consequential, arising *680 from the alleged breach of the building contract are contained in the petition and, if established as true, entitle plaintiff to a recovery upon a trial had according to the correct theory and the proper measure or measures of damages."
So far as concerns the consequential damages, the evidence which would support plaintiff's cause of action in the first trial would support his cause of action in the second, or, in other words and in the very nature of things, the same evidence, as to this feature, offered in the first trial would be required in the second. And the evidence in the first trial tending to show that the building was not up to contract would tend to establish the breach thereof in the second trial. In other words, so far at least as concerns the far greater portion of the evidence used in the trials under the original petition, it would be as applicable to the second as to the first trial. So that, as to the evidence which was the same under the original and amended petitions, the error of plaintiff in the trials under the first one did not increase the costs any more than in any other case which is reversed and remanded for error committed at the trial. And in those the costs made in both trials "abide the result of the case and are adjudged against the party who finally loses the suit." So that we do not think the court should have gone to the extent of taxing against plaintiff all the costs of the trials prior to the amendment, but should have taxed only those additional costs incurred by reason of the error in specifying the direct damages on the theory of rescission of contract instead of on the theory of a breach of a building contract. No doubt the trial court was induced to sustain the motion by reason of the fact that costs were taxed against plaintiff in Tower v. Pauley,
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to tax costs against plaintiff only to the extent herein indicated.
All concur.