23 Or. 157 | Or. | 1892
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This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court adjudging the plaintiff entitled to recover from the defendant his costs and disbursements in this action. By his complaint the plaintiff sought to recover a certain sum therein specified for the alleged failure of the defendant to deliver in good order and condition certain freight, consisting of fire brick and tiles, shipped by plaintiff over the defendant’s railroad. In its answer the defendant denied liability for any greater sum than
The defendant contends that the plaintiff should recover no costs or disbursements incurred after filing the answer in which this offer of judgment was made, but that the defendant should recover from the plaintiff its costs and disbursements from the time of filing such answer. On the other hand, the plaintiff contends that he is entitled to recover full costs from the defendant, and denies the right of the defendant to recover any costs from him. The contention of the plaintiff was sustained by the circuit court and judgment rendered in his favor and against the defendant for all costs and disbursements of the action, and from which judgment this appeal is taken. Section 520 of Hill’s Cod e provi des: ‘ ‘ The defendant may, at any time before trial, serve upon the plaintiff an offer to allow judgment or decree to be given against him for the sum, or the property, or to the effect therein specified. If the plaintiff accept the offer, he shall by himself or attorney indorse such acceptance thereon, and file the same with the clerk before trial, and within three days from the time it was served upon him; and thereupon judgment or decree shall be given accord
The contention for the plaintiff embraces two points: First, that an offer of compromise cannot be made in an answer; and second, that if it can be made in an answer the offer made in this case was insufficient and defective because it did not tender the costs necessary for entering the judgment proposed to be conferred. It is doubtless the usual practice to make the offer by a separate writing, which, if the plaintiff accepts, is filed with the clerk with the acceptance endorsed thereon. This indicates that the offer is in the nature of a pleading, and is designed to make its existence known so as to avoid misunderstanding about it and put an end to the litigation. But while this is so, it is not perceived, nor is any reason suggested, why an offer of judgment made in the answer is insufficient on that account or inconsistent with the purpose of the statute. In Kaw Valley Fair Association v. Miller, 42 Kan. 20 (21 Pac. Rep. 794), the court, in construing a similar provision of the Kansas statute under which an offer of judgment was made in the answer filed by the defendant, says: “The answer of the defendant in this case is certainly an offer in writing to allow judgment to be taken against him for forty dollars. It is not necessary that it be served upon the plaintiff when it is a part of the pleadings in the action of which the plaintiff is bound to take notice.” In view of these considerations, we are not prepared to say there was error in this regard.
The next objection is based on the idea that the offer of judgment made by the defendant was insufficient and defective because it did not tender the costs for entering such judgment, although the plaintiff failed to obtain a judgment for a greater sum than was so offered by the
In Leslie v. Walrath, supra, relied upon by counsel, the defendant before trial served an offer of judgment “for the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, with costs to date.” It was not accepted, a trial was had, and the plaintiff obtained a verdict for the sum of one hundred and twelve dollars and fifty cents. The contention for the plaintiff was that the offer was ineffectual by reason of the limitation imposed by it in respect to costs, its effect being, if accepted, to subject the plaintiff to the costs of entering judgment upon the offer, of execution and entering satisfaction. The court sustained this contention, saying that “the statute authorizing the offer provides that it shall allow judgment for a sum or property, or to the effect therein specified, with costs. The party making ■ the offer frames it to suit himself. If it does not comply with the statute in all substantial respects, it is a nullity, and may be treated as such by the party served with it.” It thus appears that section 885 of the New York Code, as it originally stood, — it then being like our own, — and as construed in McGrath v. Van Wyclc, supra, did not provide or require that the offer of judgment should tender costs. It was a compliance with its provisions to offer judgment for a specified sum; and unless the amount of the judgment so offered was less than fifty dollars, it carried costs when accepted. To make the offer carry costs in every case, no matter for what sum or to what effect, the section was amended requiring that the offer of judgment should, by its terms, allow the judgment to be taken “with costs.” If the
The words of our section 520 “for the sum or property or to the effect therein specified,” relate to the judgment and not to the costs. The offer to allow judgment must be for a sum, or the property, or to the effect therein specified. As a consequence, when the offer is for a sum, and is accepted, costs follow by force of other provisions of the Code in the cases specified. The costs are the incident of the judgment, but not the judgment itself; they come as a matter of course after judgment without an offer, or with an offer when accepted. In a word, the right to costs does not become fixed until the termination of the action or suit. When, therefore, in an action to recover money, the defendant, to put an end to the litigation, offers, under section 520, to allow judgment to be entered for a sum specified, and the plaintiff refuses to accept it, and fails to recover judgment for a sum more than was offered by the defendant, he is liable for the costs and disbursements from the time of the service of the offer. In such case, the criterion by which the question is to be determined is, whether the plaintiff has obtained “a more favorable judgment.” If he has, then he is entitled to costs as well after as before the offer; but if he has failed to obtain a more favorable judgment, then the section provides that “the defendant shall recover. of him costs and disbursements from the time of
There was error and the judgment must be reversed.