42 A.D.2d 779 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1973
In an action in which a judgment foreclosing a real property mortgage was entered and a sale held pursuant thereto, plaintiff appeals from an order-judgment of the Supreme Court, Nassau County, entered October 25,1972, which, after a hearing, denied its motion for leave to enter a deficiency judgment against defendants Ryan under section 1371 of the Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law and awarded a total of $5,279 in costs to said defendants against plaintiff. Order-judgment modified, on the law, by (1) striking from the second decretal paragraph thereof the following: “b) CPLR Section 8301(b), 8301(d): 1. expert witness 1,350.00 2. transcript 609.00” and “d) CPLR Section 8303(a)(2) 3,000.00” and (2) reducing the total amount of the award of costs therein to defendants Ryan to $320. As so modified, order-judgment affirmed, without costs. It has long been the practice not to allow taxation as a “necessary disbursement” (see CPLR 8301, subd. [a]) amounts paid to witnesses who testify upon a trial as experts in excess of the statutorily authorized amounts which presently are, under CPLR 8001, (subd. [a]), $2 for each day’s attendance and 8 cents per mile as travel expenses when the travel was not wholly within a city (Mark v. City of Buffalo, 87 N. Y. 184, 189; People ex rel. Envoy Apts. v. Miller, 165 Mise. 943, 945, affd. 255 App. Div. 972; Kiev v. Seligman & Latz of Binghamton,, 47 Mise 2d 364). It has also been the rule that an expenditure to procura a transcript of trial minutes in order to aid counsel in his preparation of a brief for presentation to the trial court is not a taxable disbursement (Schurre v. Borden, 242 App. Div. 802 [Appeal No. 2]; Long Is. Gontr. é Supply Co. V. City of New York, 142 App. Div. 1). Respondents’ reliance on subdivision