In this statutory proceeding, which was initiated in the county court and thence passed to the district court,
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to collect of the defendant Mrs. Dietemann, as executrix of the estate of her deceased husband, an assessed inheritance tax which she refused to pay, the people had judgment in the district court. Upon review in this court this judgment was reversed with instructions to the district court to set it aside and in lieu thereof to render and certify a judgment to the county court directing the latter to dismiss the proceeding.
Dietemann v. People, ex rel.,
In
Schafer v. Whipple,
scribe rules of practice and procedure in all courts of record and may change or rescind the same. Such rules shall supersede any statute in conflict therewith. Inferior courts of record may adopt rules not in conflict with such rules or with statute.” It may be that if power to prescribe rules of practice and procedure is broad enough to include a rule such as our rule 51, as to which we express no opinion, this Court would have power to charge costs against the state notwithstanding the inheritance tax statute expressly declares that costs shall not in any case be charged against it in proceedings thereunder. And this because the section of the Code above quoted says that such rules of practice and procedure shall supersede any statute in conflict therewith. The general rule of substantive law, as we think, being that a sovereign state when it is a litigant in its own courts is not liable for costs if unsuccessful, unless there is a statute or a rule of court expressly so providing, we are not disposed to hold *95 that our rule 51 was intended to apply, or that it does apply, to the state as a party, or that it supersedes the section of the inheritance tax law above cited. When rule 51 was adopted we were aware of the existence of the previously enacted inheritance tax statute, and when by rule we provided that, unless otherwise ordered, the successful party in the Supreme Court shall recover his costs incurred in this court, we did not intend that recovery should be had against the sovereign state but only from parties litigant against whom court costs are taxable by some express provision of statute or rule. We must not be understood as holding that this court might not, under the authority of section 444 of the Code of Civil Procedure, by express provision charge costs "against the state when it is an unsuccessful litigant in this tribunal. We go no further now than to say that it was not our intention in adopting rule 51 to make the state liable for costs when it is an unsuccessful party litigant. Motion denied.
