The defendants in this case provided a surety company bond to dissolve an attachment which the plaintiffs had placed on their property. The defendants prevailed on the merits and sought to recover as part of their costs the sum of $19,500 which they had expended, in addition to the surety company premiums, in procuring a letter of credit which the company required as collateral before issuing the bond. A judge of the Superior Court ruled that as matter of law that sum was not recoverable as part of costs. That ruling was affirmed by the Appeals Court and we granted further appellate review thereon.
Creed
v.
Apog,
The plaintiffs brought this action in Superior Court to recover a sum allegedly due them under a real estate brokerage contract. The exact details of this action are unimportant for the issue at hand; in any event, after a trial by jury, the defendants prevailed on every count. On appeal this judgment was upheld on the merits,
Creed
v.
Apog,
At the commencement of this contract action, the plaintiffs caused an attachment in the sum of $300,000 to be made by trustee writ on the goods, effects or credits of the defendants in the hands or possession of named trustees. G. L. c. 246, §§ 1,20. On motion of the defendants the judge ordered the attachment reduced to $200,000, after which the defendants caused the attachment to be dissolved by filing a surety company bond therefor as provided in G. L. c. 223, § 120. In order to obtain this bond, the defendants were required by the surety company to present a bank letter of credit as collateral; this letter of credit cost the defendants $19,500 to obtain. The defendants also paid $5,850 in premiums on the bond.
*524 After judgment, the defendants moved to be awarded both these sums as costs (as well as other amounts for subpoena and deposition costs not here in dispute). The judge read the controlling statute, G. L. c. 223, § 122, 3 as limiting what might be recovered as costs in such a situation to premiums paid, and therefore awarded the defendants only the $5,850 of premium costs. The defendants contend, and we agree, that the judge had the power to award as part of the costs the additional sum of $19,500 expended for the letter of credit.
The judge’s reading of G. L. c. 223, § 122, essentially rested on the maxim of "expressio unius est exclusio alterius” — the expression of one thing is the exclusion of another. The limitations of this principle as a guide to statutory construction have been pointed out before.
Harborview Residents’ Comm., Inc.
v.
Quincy Hous. Auth.,
Given this silence, Mass. R. Civ. P. 54(d) controls. 4 This rule is consistent with G. L. c. 261, § 1, which provides that "[i]n civil actions the prevailing party shall recover his costs, except as otherwise provided.” It must also be read in harmony with G. L. c. 261, § 13, as appearing in St. 1973, c. 1114, § 345, which provides that "[i]n civil actions or other proceedings in which no provision is ex *525 pressly made by law, the costs shall be wholly in the discretion of the court____” Together, these provisions reflect a policy favoring awards of actual costs to prevailing parties, but leaving considerable discretion to the judge.
We recognize that the broad generality that "in Massachusetts, a litigant must bear his own expenses” has been repeated in several of our cases,
Broadhurst
v.
Director of the Div. of Employment Security,
Such costs have been awarded to prevailing parties by long practice in the Federal courts.
Newton
v.
Consolidated Gas Co.,
We agree that there is no valid reason to distinguish between different types of necessary and reasonable costs of bonding. We have suggested before that allowance of the costs connected with such bonds helps preserve the balance between the plaintiffs’ rights to secure possible judgments and the defendants’ rights to be free of what prove to be unnecessary attachments.
Marcus
v.
Pearce Woolen Mills, Inc.,
The judge mistakenly believed and ruled that she had no power to award the costs paid by the defendants for the letter of credit. We hold that she did have such power, and vacate the order as to costs. The case is remanded to the Superior Court, where the judge, in the exercise of her discretion, is to determine whether to allow the defendants’ motion to include the sum of $19,500 in the computation of their costs.
So ordered.
Notes
General Laws c. 223, § 122, reads: "If the attachment is dissolved and the defendant prevails, his costs shall include the fees of the magistrate and the premium or premiums paid for the bond dissolving such attachment, if it be a surety company bond.”
(d) Costs. "Except when express provision therefor is made either in a statute of the Commonwealth or in these rules, costs shall be allowed as of course to the prevailing party unless the court otherwise directs____”
This portion only of the Appeals Court decision is here by way of further appellate review.
