52 A. 862 | N.H. | 1902
The plaintiff relies largely upon Fowler v. Owen,
By the common law, the successful plaintiff in an action of ejectment could subsequently maintain an action of trespass for mesne profits, etc., and recover as damages the costs of the ejectment as well as the mesne profits; and this, whether the action of ejectment was brought in the name of a fictitious lessee against a casual ejector, as was the early practice, or by the real owner against the real disseizor, as was the later practice, and whether the defendant appeared and defended, or was defaulted. Aslin v. Parkin, 2 Bur. 665; Goodtitle v. Tombs, 3 Wils. 118; Gulliver v. Drinkwater, 2 T. R. 261; Doe v. Davis, 1 Esp. 358; Brooke v. Bridges, 7 J. Moore 471; Symonds v. Page, 1 C. J. 29; Doe v. Hare, 2 Dowl. 245; Doe v. Filliter, 13 M. . W. 47; Pearse v. Coaker, L. R. 4 Ex. 92.
Generally, the court directed the costs to be taxed when awarded *460 in an action. This was done by an officer of the court known as "taxing master." The fee bill was not definite in all particulars, and the taxing master was entrusted with considerable discretion. It seems that he had authority to allow charges for the services of counsel in giving advice, drawing pleadings, settling affidavits, etc. 3 Enc. Laws Eng. 468, 469; 12 Ib. 77; 3 Bl. Com. 399. When the costs in the action of ejectment were taxed therein, the plaintiff was not entitled to a larger sum as part of his damages in the action for mesne profits; but if there was no authority for taxing them in the ejectment suit, or if for any reason they were not taxed, the plaintiff was entitled to have them allowed by the jury upon evidence submitted to them. In the latter case, the taxation was according to a more liberal scale than in the former. Doe v. Davis, supra; Brooke v. Bridges, supra; Symonds v. Page, supra; Doe v. Huddart, 2 C. M. R. 316; Nowell v. Roake, 7 B. C. 404. In Doe v. Huddart, the judge charged the jury that the party driven to bring an action of ejectment was entitled to recover the necessary expenses he was put to in the assertion of his right; and the jury assessed a larger sum than would be taxed by a master. The defendant, although excepting at first, "gave up" the point and it was not decided. It is said that there was no practice by which the court officers taxed costs against the casual ejector, and consequently they were necessarily taxed by the jury in such case. See remark of Alderson, B., in Doe v. Filliter, 13 M. W. 47, 48. In Nowell v. Roake, 7 B. C. 404, the plaintiff recovered judgment in an action of ejectment upon a writ of error, and it was held that, as the court of error could not award costs, he was entitled to recover the expenses incurred in that court as part of his damages in the action for mesne profits; and that "the jury might reasonably consider the costs between attorney and client as the measure of the damages which he had sustained." In Doe v. Filliter, supra, the plaintiff's costs in the ejectment suit had been taxed under the judge's order and had been paid into court, and it was held that he could not recover more. Rolfe, B., said: "Here a taxation has taken p]ace in the usual way, and by that the plaintiff is bound. Where, indeed, there has been no taxation, then, ex necessitate, the jury must say what is to be an indemnity." Pollock, C. B., assigns as a reason for the decision, that "the plaintiff is not entitled to be in a better situation than any other plaintiff."
The American authorities on the subject are not uniform, but the cases in which it is held that only the taxable costs of the ejectment suit can be recovered as a part of the damages in the action for mesne profits outweigh those in which counsel *461
fees and other expenses are allowed. Only two cases of the latter class have been found: Denn v. Chubb, 1 Coxe 466, and Doe v. Perkins, 8 B. Mon. 198. Denn v. Chubb was a nisi prius decision made in 1795; and it was overruled in the recent case of Pike v. Daly,
The cases in which it is held that counsel fees and other expenses should not be included in the damages are: White v. Clack, 2 Swan 230; Meloy v. Johnston, 2, MacArth. 202; Alexander v. Herr, 11 Pa. St. 537; Stopp v. Smith, 71 Pa. St. 285; Herreshoff v. Tripp, 15. R. I. 92; Pike v. Daly,
In this state, the action commenced by writ of entry takes the place of the action of ejectment. Withington v. Corey,
So far as appears, the title to the locus in this action may have been in dispute in the prior action; each party may have asserted title to it in good faith; but if the defendant showed no title and made no pretence of a title, the only costs that could be adjudged against him in the action would be the taxable costs, the same as would be recovered if he set up a title in good faith which failed only because of a slight preponderance in the weight of the testimony supporting the plaintiff's title. In justice and equity, the plaintiff is not entitled in this action to fuller indemnity for the necessary expenses incurred by her in the former action than she would be entitled to if this action had not been brought. The bringing of this action did not render the plaintiff's claim of indemnity any more just or equitable. Besides, the claim, to the extent allowed by the law, was liquidated and became a part of the judgment in the entry suit. Elementary principles of law would be violated if the plaintiff were allowed to bring it forward again in this action and have it considered as if there was no judgment upon it.
There is nothing in the reserved case to show that the plaintiff is entitled to have the sums paid by her to surveyors and others in the prior action included as a part of her damages in this action.
Case discharged.
All concurred. *463