78 F. 795 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut | 1897
This is an appeal from the taxation by the clerk of the following items in defendant’s bill of costs: Solicitor’s docket fee on final bearing, $20; solicitor’s fee on seven depositions, §2.50, — §17.50; disbursements for copies of patents, §10.50. The bill, answer, and replication were duly filed, issued, and served, and proofs were taken. After defendant had closed his case, the court, upon motion of complainant for a discontinuance, made an order “that this cause be, and the same is hereby, discontinued, without
It is urged on the authority of The Alert, 15 Fed. 620, that the order of court as to the use of depositions filed herein made this a final hearing. But the order in The Alert discharged the res from custody in a proceeding in rem on payment of the amount claimed by libelant and his costs. As Judge Blatchford says in Wooster v. Handy, supra: “Judge Benedict held that, as an order of court was necessary to obtain the release of the vessel and to cancel the libel-ant’s stipulations, the hearing on the motion to that effect "was a final hearing.” Judge Blatchford, in said opinion, expressly says “that, to constitute a final hearing in equity, there must be a hearing of the cause on the merits.” See, also, opinion to same effect of Mr. Justice Gray, cited and followed by Mr. Justice Brown in Cleaver v. Insurance Co., 40 Fed. 863. In these circumstances the docket fee of $20 must be disallowed. I understand, however, that while the fee bill allows no solicitor’s docket fee upon a discontinuance, it has been the practice in this district, following the analogy of the common law, to allow a fee of $5 in equity, and said sum is therefore allowed. The item for $17.50, for seven depositions, was allowed under that portion of section 824 which allows to attorneys a fee of $2.50 “ for each deposition taken and admitted in evidence in a cause.” These depositions, although taken in this cause, were not admitted in evidence therein. The order of court only provided for their admission in evidence in such suits as might thereafter be brought. The taxation for depositions is disallowed. The taxation for copies of patents must be disallowed, under the rulings of Judge Blatchford in Wooster v. Handy, supra. The copies were not “actually used on or in the trial or final hearing.”