75 So. 643 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1917
1. Our attention is called to the small amount involved in this case, and appellant's counsel take occasion to urge that this court should give careful consideration to the principles involved, importing a fear that, on account of the small amount, the court might not give that careful consideration which it otherwise would. The amount of money involved in a cause is not important as affecting the decision or consideration by the court of the principles involved. The rights of property are just as, sacred to the beggar in rags as to the rich and affluent; and the courts of this state will so treat and consider them.
Under our present Constitution (section 204) and statutes following that section, certain exemptions are allowed for debts contracted since July, 1868. It will be observed that the decisions passing upon this language refer to "debts contracted." Crawford v. Slaton,
At common law costs were not recoverable by either party in any case, either civil or criminal. They are given by statute, and the law of costs must be deemed and held a penal law. City Council of Montgomery v. Foster,
In the case of Northern v. Hanners, supra, Tyson, J., says:
"The judgment in favor of the successful party for costs, however, has no element of debt in it."
And to support this holding he cites Lathrop v. Singer, 39 Barb. (N.Y.) 396. This certainly must be the law; otherwise a sentence to hard labor to pay costs due the state would violate that clause of the Constitution which provides against imprisonment for debt. That these statutes, providing for hard labor for the payment of costs due the state, are not in violation of the Constitution, has been upheld so often that it is hardly necessary to cite authority. Bailey v. State,
It is clearly the law that exemptions cannot be successfully claimed against a penalty, which cannot be a "debt contracted" (Crawford v. Slaton, supra); and where the judgment is for costs only, whether in actions ex delicto or ex contractu, exemptions cannot be claimed against its collection (Donaldson v. Banta, supra; Buckley v. Williams, supra). Where a plaintiff obtains a judgment for damages and costs in an action for a tort, under the decisions, the judgment is an entirety and must be collected as such; the costs being an incident to and controlled in their collection by the principal judgment. This is so even if the judgment is for a nominal amount. The law requires them to be paid, not because the defendant had contracted to pay them, but because he had wrongfully caused the other party to pay them. And, as a judgment must be considered and treated as an entirety, when the recovery is had in an action ex delicto, the costs are in effect ex delicto, and, when in an action ex contractu, the costs are ex contractu. But where the costs are recovered independent of any other judgment, as in this case, they do not constitute a debt founded on contract, and there is no element of contract in a judgment so rendered. Donaldson v. Banta, supra. The right to recover a judgment for costs against a plaintiff is purely statutory, and therefore is a penalty; and as against a penalty exemptions cannot be claimed.
We have carefully considered the opinion in the case of Clingman v. Kemp,
Based upon the foregoing authorities and many others which we have not cited, we conclude that the rules as to exemptions as applied to judgments for costs are as follows:
(1) Where the judgment is in an action ex delicto, the costs become a part of the recovery, and are treated as an entirety, and therefore exemptions will not be allowed against their collection.
(2) In an action ex contractu, where there is judgment for the plaintiff, the costs are a part of the recovery, and the judgment must be treated as an entirety; and as against such a judgment exemptions properly claimed will prevail.
(3) In any action where the recovery is for costs only, such judgment is not based on a "debt contracted"; and as against its collection the claim of exemptions will not lie.
The above being decisive of the case, it becomes unnecessary to notice the other assignments of error.
For the error pointed out, the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause remanded for proceedings in accordance with the above decision.
Reversed and remanded. *97