Defendant appeals from the following items of costs taxed against it by the clerk :
1. Costs accrued in the state court prior to the removal of the case here. The action was originally begun in the circuit court for Tuscola county, was tried there twice, was twice carried to the supreme court, (32 N. W. Rop. 660,
2. The taxation of a double docket fee of $20. The case was tried in May last, and the jury disagreed.. The question is whether the plaintiff is entitled to an attorney’s fee of $20 upon this trial, as well as upon the second trial, which resulted in a verdict. In the case of Stove- Works v. Berry, (unreported,) decided in 1879, in which the verdict on the first trial was set aside, it was held that the docket fee was taxable but'once, and we see no reason to change our opinion. We decided this case upon the authority of Dedekam v. Vose,
“We are of opinion that, upon the face of the statute, the intention of the legislature is manifest that it is only where some question of law or fact*865 involved in or leading to the final disposition actually made of the ease has been submitted, or, at least, presented, to the consideration of the court, that there can be said to have been a final hearing which warrants the taxation of the solicitor’s or proctor’s fee of $20.”
In this case it was held that where an order was obtained dismissing a bill with costs, without notice to the defendant or consideration of the case by the court, the docket fee of §20 should not be allowed. In Huntress v. Town of Epsom, 15 Fed. Rep. 732, it was held by Judge ClaiíK that, where there had been two trials of a case, the first of which resulted in a disagreement of the jury, and the second in a verdict, bat one. docket fee of S20 would be allowed. This case is also directly in point. 1 am aware that some recent cases in New York announce a different rule. Schmieder v. Barney,
