19 Haw. 258 | Haw. | 1908
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
The plaintiff claimed of the defendants $400,000 damages for breach of contract. It was conceded that two of the counts were assumpsit, the circuit court holding that the third count which the defendants claimed to be tort alleged a cause which arose out of the contract set forth in the other counts. The original complaint included Helen K Mead, Mary T. Hitchcock, Harriet O. Coleman and Caroline C. Westervelt who were not defendants in the amended complaint. The others, except Alexander who was not served and did not appear, filed separate demurrers to the complaint and to the amended complaint which were identical, except J. B. Castle’s which, as stated in the bill of exceptions, differed in several important particulars. While the demurrers were pending the plaintiff on defendant’s motion and by his consent was ordered to file a bond for costs in the sum of $15,000 within sixty days and for his failure to
The plaintiff’s contention is (1) that the defendants waived all claim to separate costs as well as attorneys’ fees in assumpsit by presenting their joint cost bill of $84.20; (2) that they were not entitled to separate bills of costs and did not become so by separate pleadings by different counsel, and (3) that the statute does not authorize attorneys’ fees on a judgment of dismissal such as was made in this case.
The defendants claim that they are entitled to several costs as they had the right to sever and did sever in their defenses, and that the statute requires attorneys’ fees in all actions of assumpsit to be paid by the losing party upon the amount sued for if the defendant obtain judgment, also that the plaintiff is not entitled to insist on the waiver which should have been made the basis of a motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions, if the point was well taken, which is denied.
The following is the statute under which these attorneys’ fees are claimed:
“In all the courts of this Territory, in all actions of assumpsit there shall be taxed as attorneys’ fees, in addition to the attorneys’ fees otherwise taxable by law to be paid by the losing*260 party and to be included in tbe sum for which execution may issue, ten per cent, on all sums to one hundred dollars, and two and one-half per cent, in addition on all sums over one hundred dollars. The above fee shall be assessed on the amount of the judgment obtained by the plaintiff and upon the amount sued for, if the defendant obtain judgment.” Sec. 1892 R. L.
A plaintiff can discontinue at law at any time before verdict and is then liable for costs of court. If he fail to comply with a valid order to give security for costs his action can be dismissed as in case of his failure to appear for trial.
The cases in which a judgment may be given, although no issue has arisen, are those which come to premature termination by the fault of one of the parties in failing to pursue his litigation; and this may happen either with the intention of abandoning the claim or defense or from failing to follow them up within the periods which the practice of the court in each particular case prescribes. In such cases the judgment against the plaintiff is of nolle prosequi, retraxit, or, when a plea in abatement is sustained and if requested by the plaintiff, cassetur billa. Judgments for the plaintiff by default or on confession of the defendant are generally that the plaintiff do recover and are either interlocutory, if damages have to be assessed, or else are final, a judgment on a verdict for the defendant being that the plaintiff take nothing. When a case is decided for the plaintiff on an issue of law arising on a dilatory plea the judgment is that the defendant answer over. This judgment, however, “is of an anomalous kind. Upon all other issues of law and generally upon all issues in fact the judgment is that the plaintiff do recover;” if his action is for damages only and if the issue be an issue in law or an issue in fact not tried by jury then the judgment for the plaintiff is only that he ought to recover his damages which would have to be ascertained by a jury, the judgment then being interlocutory, but if the issue be in fact and is tried by a jury then the jury at the same time that they
In actions of assumpsit a percentage of the amount of the judgment obtained by the plaintiff for which execution may issue is taxable for his attorneys’ fees and the same percentage of the amount sued for is taxable for defendant’s fees if the defendant obtain judgment. Does the judgment referred to apply in cases of the plaintiff’s action being dismissed? In other words, is the judgment final in the sense of precluding the plaintiff from suing again for the same cause or may it be interlocutory although it, does not finally preclude another action ?
The statute requires attorneys’ fees to be paid by the loser in actions of assumpsit “to be included in the sum for which execution may issue,” and to be “assessed on the amount of the judgment obtained by the plaintiff” and “upon the amount sued for if the defendant obtain judgment.” If this means a judgment of the same kind in the plaintiff’s case as in the defendant’s case it would be a final judgment and not a judgment on a dilatory plea or upon overruling a demurrer, when, according to the practice, the defendant is .allowed to answer over. Although the plaintiff is a losing party on the issue made by the plea or demurrer he is not the loser intended by the statute provided the judgment obtained by the defendant is to be of the same kind as that obtained by the plaintiff.
We think that the judgments intended by the statute are of the same kind whether for one party or the other.
The defendants are not entitled to several costs which the' statute does not appear to contemplate either for joint plaintiffs or joint defendants. It is also not apparent that there were separate defenses. Moreover, the defendants asked for a joint cost bill and had it taxed and included in the judgment. They cannot now be heard to complain of this taxation. How it would
Exceptions overruled.