12 F. Cas. 1059 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York | 1864
In regard to the 1st and 6th items, there can be no' doubt that they must be disallowed. The 3d item also must be disallowed. It is not shown that the printing charged for was done by the consent of the parties, and under an agreement that the expense thereof should be charged as costs in the case, or that any order or rule of court, either special or general, required or authorized the printing of the papers for the printing of which these charges were made. In Brooks v. Byam [Case No. 1,949], where the record had been printed by order of the court, and the bill was dismissed without costs to either party as against the other, the court directed the costs of such printing to be equally divided between, and paid by, the parties. This was, however, on the ground that the expenditure had been ordered by the court and was considered to have been incurred for the benefit of both parties. I am much inclined to think that the circuit court ought to adopt a rule that, in all equity cases, the papers necessary to be examined by the court on the hearing shall be printed, and to provide for the taxation of the expense as part of the costs of the cause; but, until this is done, the costs of such printing, in the absence of any agreement of the parties or order of the court, should not be taxed.
The 4th item, being the charge for money paid for telegraphic despatches, if the amount is shown to have been properly and neeessarilj- expended in the progress of the cause, should be allowed. This charge is properly taxable, upon the same principle as that -which allows the taxation of necessary and proper postages,—Prouty v. Draper-[Ed. 11,447]; but the affidavit showing the actual expenditure should state the payments in detail and the particular purpose of each telegram, so that the taxing officer may judge of the necessity and propriety of the expenditure and of its allowance on taxation, as a proper disbursement in the suit.
The 5th and 7th items should be disallowed. There is nothing in the charge, or in the affidavit annexed to the bill of costs, to show that this charge is not made for the copying in the solicitor’s office, or by a copyist, of the pleadings or proofs in the cause; and, although the costs allowed by the fee bill are entirely inadequate, the copying of such papers being, in the ordinary course of practice, a part of such solicitor’s proper business, as such, no expenditure for making such copies can be taxed.
The 8th item, also, must be disallowed. The expenses of reporting the argument of the plaintiff’s counsel cannot (be taxed against the defendants, as costs of the cause, in the absence of any agreement of the parties that such expenses shall be taxed.
The items charged under No. 2, for models and old machines, or parts thereof, and the expenses of their transportation, &c., require more consideration. The expenses of a certified or sworn copy of a model from the patent office'might, under some circumstances, be.properly allowed; and, as á general rule, the expense of procuring other models or machines ought not to be taxed. In Hathaway v. Roach [Id. 6,213], Judge Woodbury, after argument by able counsel, said, in a well considered opinion, in respect to charges for models procured and used by the defendant in that case: “If these were models of the stoves described in the plaintiff’s patent, it is my opinion, contrary to that of the counsel for the defendant, that the plaintiff was not bound by any law to produce them. The defendant might then properly and usefully obtain them. They were likely to be beneficial in explaining the patent, and were competent evidence of its coincidence or difference, compared with other stoves, as they related to doings of the plaintiff himself on the subject of the patent. For such models the defendant ought, therefore, to be allowed a ‘reasonable compensation.’ * * * If other models are taxed, I do not think them proper items for the bill of costs, any more than the drawings of other patents procured, or the books which describe them, they all being rather arguments than proofs.” I have not been able to find any other reported case bearing upon this question, and none was referred to on the argument. Upon the best consid. eration I have been able to give to the question, I am of the opinion that the allowance for the expense of models should be confined to such as are copies of models deposited in the patent office, and as were properly procured for use as a part of the evidence in the cause. As there is no proof to show that the models or machines charged for are within this rule, the charges therefor shou.d be disallowed.
It may, perhaps, in this and in many cases, be important to a party to produce the whole or . a part of an old machine, or a model of some machine, for the illustration or the better understanding of the testimony. But general rules for the taxation of costs should, if possible, be established; and any general rule which should allow the taxation of such expenditures as are charged for models and machines in this case, might, in many cases, be in the highest degree oppressive. A farmer or a me