Morristown Mills Co. v. Lytle

24 S.E. 530 | N.C. | 1896

The motion was allowed, and the witnesses who had been allowed to prove attendance and mileage in several cases consolidated into one, and whom the order restricted to the privilege of proving but one attendance and mileage in one case, appealed. There were eight actions against the same defendants. At the return term all of said actions were consolidated into one. This was admitted below, though the order of consolidation could not be found. At a subsequent term (August, 1893) the minutes show the following entry (naming these cases): "Judgment against both parties, plaintiffs and defendants, for their costs in each case." Under this the clerk taxed eight several bills of cost, permitting, it would seem, the same witnesses to prove attendances in all eight cases. This was a motion made at August Term, 1895, to set (838) aside the judgment as irregular and void, and to retax the costs. The court properly adjudged that witnesses in said consolidated actions were entitled, after the order of consolidation, to prove but one attendance and in one action. This was the object of the order of consolidation. This is not the case of a creditor's bill, where a witness may be summoned to testify in behalf of several different parties as to entirely different matters, nor is it the case of a witness attending court at the same term to testify in several different cases. But after the consolidation of these actions, at the return term, there was thenceforward but one single action, and a witness could prove his attendance only in that case, for there was but one, and only one bill of cost could be taxed. So much of the judgment as modified the *528 previous judgment was improvidently made. The bill of costs should simply be retaxed, in accordance with the judgment at August Term, 1895. This is not an appeal from a judgment for costs, after the subject-matter of an action has been disposed of. Such appeals the Court will not entertain. But this is an appeal from an order retaxing costs and construing a former judgment, and is reviewable. It is an additional instance to those given inElliott v. Tyson, 117 N.C. 114.

Modified and Affirmed.

Cited: S. v. Horne, 119 N.C. 854.

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