57 Wis. 397 | Wis. | 1883
Before the present revised statutes took effect, actions to enforce liens of mechanics, laborers, and material men were held to be actions at law on contract, although having some of the characteristics of suits in equity, and» hence were subject to the limitations of costs prescribed in R. S. 1858, ch. 133, sec. 41, as amended by ch. 402, Laws of 1864 (Tay. Stats., 1,532, § 59). Marsh v. Fraser, 27 Wis., 596; Tewksbury v. Bronson, 48 Wis., 581. In the latter case it was held that the plaintiff had no right of lien, and he was permitted to amend his complaint so as to demand a personal judgment against the defendants. The action was brought before the present revision took effect, and was therefore an action at law. By reason of the amendment, it continued to be an action at law, notwithstanding the revision, for the lien claim was entirely eliminated therefrom. The limitations above mentioned are as follows: “ In actions at law on contract, the costs, exclusive of disbursements, shall not in any one case exceed $25, and when the sum
The precise question here is whether or not the case is affected, in respect to costs, by the enactment of the revised statutes pendente Ute. We think the question must beans wered affirmatively. Sec. 4980, while'it saves the pending action, provides that the subsequent proceedings therein shall conform to the provisions of the revised statutes, when applicable. One of the subsequent proceedings is the taxation of costs, and the taxation must go upon the rule of the statute, which, as we have seen, is full costs to the prevailing party.
It is argued that an action, properly commenced as a legal action, cannot be changed by statute into an equitable one. This may be true of an action which at the common law is. a legal action. We do not decide this. Here we have purely a statutory action, and no good reason is suggested why it may not be made a legal or equitable action at the pleasure of the legislature. This class of actions was always very • close to the line which divides legal and equitable suits. The pleadings therein must, or at least may, contain much that pertains to both. It happens in this, case that the complaint contains many, if not all, of the averments essential to a good complaint in equity. If it did not, on objection
Our conclusion is that the court properly awarded full costs to the plaintiff, although he recovered less than $200.
By the Court.— Order affirmed.