The question to be determined upon this appeal is the “ event ” which will carry the costs of appeal when they are awarded by the appellate court to the defendant, appellant, to abide the event. The respondent argues that it is the award of costs upon a second trial which constitutes the event, while the appellant urges that it is the success in recovering a judgment for any amount, irrespective of the award of costs, which determines the event.
The action was brought by the plaintiff, as a mortgagee in possession of mortgaged property, for leave to account for her collections and disbursements in the management thereof, for the determination of the amount due to her and for a foreclosure. Defendant counterclaimed, charging the plaintiff with having negligently managed the property, failing to rent it for the reasonable rental value thereof, and that except for these acts of plaintiff the profits would have been more than sufficient to satisfy fully the mortgage indebtedness and award a judgment to the defendant,
In the above case the costs were awarded generally to abide the event, and in the case at bar the costs were awarded to the defendant, appellant, to abide the event. The above authority is decisive, since the event in each case is the same, namely, the success on the retrial. Whether either party could recover the costs or whether they were recoverable only by the defendant had no bearing on the event which should determine whether or not the costs would be awarded.
The respondent relies on three cases (People ex rel. Shiels v. Greene, 114 App. Div. 168; Miller v. City of Buffalo, 129 id. 833; Crown v. Goldstein Co., Inc., 186 id. 86) as sustaining the right of the respondent to tax the costs on appeal, for the reason that respondent was entitled to tax the costs of the second trial through the award of costs to the defendant in the discretion of the justice at Special Term. Crown v. Goldstein Co., Inc. (182 App. Div. 730; 186 id. 86) was an action at law for damages for wrongful discharge, and the complaint set forth in three separate counts three causes of action, the first of which was to recover damages for a wrongful discharge after performing services for thirteen weeks under a contract of employment for one year; the second was for salary earned, due and unpaid at the time of the discharge; and the third was to recover a sum for extra work, labor and services performed for the defendant during the time of plaintiff’s employment under the contract, but for which the jury were instructed that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover unless they found that the defendant had specially' agreed to pay for said extra work. The defendant admitted the second cause of action, and pleaded tender of payment and refusal to accept. Issue was joined on the first and third causes of action. On the first trial the plaintiff recovered on all the counts litigated. ’ Upon appeal the judgment was reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the defendant, appellant,
Prior to September 1, 1880, when section 3237 of the Code of Civil Procedure (now section 1489 of the Civil Practice Act) took effect, this disposition was correct, since under section 304 of the Code of Procedure (section 3228, subdivision 3, of the Code of Civil Procedure, section 1471 of the Civil Practice Act) in certain actions, of which an action for assault was one, if the plaintiff recovered less than fifty dollars, the amount of his costs could not exceed the amount of damages. An order of the appellate court, therefore, directing that on the new trial costs to the appellant should abide the event, made under the authority of section 306 of the Code of Procedure (Code Civ. Proc. § 3238; now Civ. Prac. Act, § 1490), would have to be made subject to the provisions of said section 304, so limiting plaintiff’s costs to not more than the amount of his damage. The enactment of section 3237 of the Code of Civil Procedure provided that the provisions relating to trial costs should not affect the recovery of costs upon appeal. Since September 1, 1880, therefore, the rule laid down in Snyder v. Collins has not been applicable, so far as common-law cases are concerned, wherein the costs were awarded' by law, and has never been applicable, so far as cases in equity are concerned, where the costs have always been, by statute, in the discretion of the trial court. (Code Civ. Proc. § 3230, now Civ. Prac. Act, § 1477.) Indeed said section 3237 (now section 1489 of the Civil Practice Act) is held to entitle plaintiff to the costs of appeal even though, because of the amount of his recovery, he has not been allowed any costs or full costs upon the retrial. (Page, J., in Selden v. Block, 90 Misc. 579.) In other words, the “ event ” in the case at bar was not the success of the defendant in obtaining the favorable exercise of the discretion of the trial justice in awarding to him costs upon the retrial, but whether or not he was successful in obtaining a judgment in his favor upon
The order appealed from should, therefore, be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, McAvoy and Martin, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
