60 Me. 545 | Me. | 1872
The R. S., c. 82, relate to ‘ proceedings in eourt.’ ‘ The proceedings in court ’ are proceedings in the courts in this State, not in those of other States or of foreign nations. Like all legislation, it has reference to what may arise within the jurisdictional limits of the State.
In this chapter are various provisions in relation to costs. Among others is found § 111, which is in these words: ‘ When costs have been allowed against a plaintiff on nonsuit or discontinuance, and a second suit is brought for the same cause, before the costs of the former suit are paid, further proceedings shall be stayed, till such costs are paid, and the writ may be dismissed, unless they are paid at such time as the eourt appoint.’
Further, the section reads, ‘ when costs have been allowed.' But who is to allow them ? By § 123 provision is made for the court in certain cases to pass upon ‘ costs recoverable.’ The allowance is by the courts of this State, not by those of foreign 'jurisdictions. The word ‘ allowed ’ refers to what is here done, as in § 107.
The costs of a preceding suit, in which the plaintiff has been nonsuited, ‘ when a second suit is brought for the same case, must be paid at such time as the court appoints,’ else ‘further proceedings shall be stayed.’ Where is the second suit to be brought ? Obviously, when the first had been brought, in this State. The statute does not say the costs are to be allowed, nor the suit to be brought in this State, — but the bringing a new suit, and the allowing past costs equally and alike are to take place within this jurisdiction, and not elsewhere. The court are to allow the costs and. fix the time of their payment.
It is enough that costs have accrued. The statute does not require the issuing of an execution. Now if there is a nonsuit in England, or in any of our States, is the allowance to be by courts of this State, or is the allowance by one of the judges of another jurisdiction duly certified the allowance within the meaning of this section. If the costs are to be allowed by a judge of this State, then, when the suit was in another jurisdiction, the judges of this are to determine upon the correctness of the taxation of costs in other jurisdictions.
No one reading the section under consideration can doubt- that
But it is said .that by the constitution of the United States, Art. IY, § 1, ‘ Full faith and credit shall be given in each State to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other State.’ But it does not provide that they shall have in other States the same effect, — if it did, an execution issued in our State might run in another. Full faith and credit are given when the judgments of another State are the basis of a judgment in this.
But it does not necessarily follow that because a judgment has been recovered in another State, that it is valid. In an action on a judgment recovered in another State for costs against a plaintiff in a suit commenced there, he may defend by showing that he gave no authority to institute such suit, and had no knowledge thereof until judgment was rendered therein. Watson v. N. E. Bank, 4 Met. 343. To require the payment of costs as a preliminary to the plaintiff's proceeding, might be the requiring of the payment of what is not due, and of what when paid, the party paying cannot recover back.
But it is argued that the power to stay proceedings in a second suit until the costs of a former suit for the same cause of action are paid, exists under the rules of the common law. This is so in certain cases. As in ejectment, because one recovery in ejectment cannot be pleaded in bar to another ejectment for the same lands. So where the nonsuit is upon the merits of the case, the court will interfere, otherwise not. As in Bass v. Firemen, 1 Ld. Raym. 697.
Because the merits did not come in question in the trial upon which the plaintiff was nonsuit, the court refused to stay proceedings. But ‘ it seems to me,’ remarks Lord Ch. Justice DeGrey, in Melchart v. Halsey, 3 Wils. 152, ‘the court would then have interposed, if the plaintiff had been nonsuited upon the merits at the trial.’ So in Hoare v. Dickson, 62 E. C. L. 164, the proceedings
Further, in all the cases on the subject the suits were both brought in the same jurisdiction. In no instance has a plaintiff been compelled to pay costs accruing in a foreign government as a preliminary to enable him to enforce his rights in the English courts. Indeed, the reason upon which the action of the court is based precludes the very idea of interference in such a case. Their interference is to prevent the vexatious abuse of its own process^ The abuse of the process arises only in the second suit. This implies the previous use of the process of the court. The process of the court is not abused by its first use. It is the second only which is vexatious. A person indicted in this State for the selling of spirituous liquors cannot be punished as a second offender by proof of a previous conviction for the same offence in another jurisdiction. So the vexation, to which the courts refer, is the vexation which arises from two civil actions in the same jurisdiction for one and the same cause of action, — the second being after a nonsuit has been ordered on the first on the merits.
The question to .be determined is the intention of the legislature. The word ‘ costs,’ in every other section, means ‘ costs ’ as determined by our legislature, not ‘ costs ’ which may be established by a foreign State. The allowance of costs is to be by the judges appointed under our law. The suits are to be brought in our courts. The proceedings when stayed, are to be stayed by our judges. The act in § 111, as in other sections, relates to what has been, or is to be, done within the limits of this State.
jExceptions sustained.