Sonia Alland, a citizen of New York, appeals from that part of a final judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York dismissing on the merits Claim 3 of her complaint, by which she sought to recover $6,066 as reasonable attorney’s fees for costs incurred in suing upon two promissory notes. The district court granted the relief sought on Claims 1 and 2 of the complaint and *953 awarded Mrs. Alland, pursuant to the confession of judgment contained in the notes, $18,200 plus interest, which represented the amount owed by the appellee. Neither party appeals from the judgment as to the first two claims; Mrs. Alland appeals only the dismissal of her Claim 3.
I.
The district court, whose opinion is reported at
The appellee finance company defaulted on payments due on both notes on November 1, 1970. Notice of default was mailed to appellee on December 9, 1970, and again on January 27, 1971. Acting on behalf of the company, Alex Shepard refused to make payment of the balance owing on either note. Appellant retained counsel in her effort to collect on the notes. Counsel contacted Shepard by telephone on March 2, 1971, for the purpose of informing him that appellant would not commence legal action if appellee made full payment of the amounts owing by March 5, 1971. Shepard indicated his awareness of the default, but he informed counsel that he had decided not to pay until compelled to do so.
Appellant moved ex parte for a judgment by confession in the Southern District of New York on March 27, 1971. *954 In Claim 1 of her complaint appellant sought recovery of the balance owing on Note 1, $17,304 ($16,800 principal plus $504 interest); in Claim 2 she sought recovery of the balance owing on Note 2, $896 ($800 principal plus $96 interest). 2 Claim 3 of the complaint, seeking $6,066 attorney’s fees as “costs of suit” in recovering on the notes, was based on the following language which appeared in both notes:
If any installment of this note, or interest thereon, be not paid within thirty (30) days after written notice that it is overdue, then the entire unpaid balance hereof shall at once become due and payable at the option of the holder hereof, and the undersigned hereby authorizes any attorney at law to appear in any Court of Record in the United States, after the above obligation becomes due as aforesaid, and waive the issuing and service of process and confess a judgment against the undersigned in favor of the holder hereof for the amount then appearing due, together with costs of suit, and thereupon to release all errors and waive all right of appeal, (emphasis added)
The district court, finding that the sale agreement was “a product of arms-length bargaining between the parties,”
Plaintiff’s claim for $6,066 attorney’s fees, however, is denied. “Costs of suit” reasonably refers to mere filing fees rather than attorney’s fees.54 F.R.D. at 256 .
The narrow issue we must determine on appeal, then, is whether the district court erred in ruling that “costs of suit” as used in the parties’ contractual agreement refers only to court filing fees, to the exclusion of attorney’s fees. Resolution of this question depends, we think, on ascertaining the intent of the parties in their use of those words in the agreement.
II.
We note that there is no question of subject matter jurisdiction here; federal court jurisdiction exists by reason of diversity of citizenship. 28 U.S. C. § 1332. And since in the promissory notes the appellee finance company, in case it defaulted, “authorize[d] any attorney at law to appear in any Court of Record in the United States * * * and waive the issuing and service of process and confess a judgment against [the finance company],” appellee consented in advance to
in personam
jurisdiction in federal district court.
See
Atlas Credit Corp. v. Ezrine,
Careful research in the New York authorities indicates that no New York court has yet construed the phrase “costs of suit” within the context of a contractual agreement between private parties. Appellee finance company has cited numerous cases that have construed the term “costs”, or “expenses”, to support its argument that the generally understood legal meaning attached to those words excludes attorney’s fees.
See, e. g.,
Matter of Poersch,
While it is true that each party to a litigation normally must bear its own expenses, it is clear that the parties may by contract agree to permit recovery of attorney’s fees as part of plaintiff’s expenses in prosecuting suit.
See
Swiss Credit Bank v. International
*956
Bank, Ltd.,
We fully agree with appellee that no ambiguity exists as to what is commonly meant by the term “costs” as that word is used by courts, legislatures, and attorneys, and that the term does not normally refer to counsel fees. Appellee’s lawyers, however, did not employ the term “costs” when they drafted or reviewed the agreement; they chose instead the more expansive “costs of suit”. On this point “we deem it significant, as did the district court, that the appelleepromisor is a finance company which deals daily with promissory notes and confessed judgments, and which must therefore be presumed to be completely familiar with the legal effect of the language used in such notes; that the notes here in question were either drafted by appellee’s attorneys or carefully reviewed by them before being executed by Shepard; and that appellant Sonia Alland is a layman who is not expected to have familiarity with the technical, legal meanings of words which, although ordinary enough to laymen, have assumed specific legal significance when used by lawyers. Notwithstanding the fact that appellant is not expected to be familiar with legal jargon, however, if appellee’s lawyers had used the term “costs” our task here would be much simplified, for that term would have expressed precisely what appellee now urges was intended by “costs of suit”, and there could have been no room for doubt or mistake. But ambiguity was created by appellee’s use of “costs of suit”, and our inquiry thus centers upon what the parties must be reasonably held to have expected from the execution of the document in the form and language used,
see Bowles, supra,
In construing contracts, words are to receive their plain and literal meaning, even though the intention of the party drawing the contract may have been different from that expressed. A party to a contract is responsible for ambiguity in his own expressions, and has no right to induce another to contract with him on the supposition that his words mean one thing while he hopes the court will adopt a construction by which they would mean another thing more to his advantage. Calderon v. Atlas Steamship Co.,170 U.S. 272 , 280,18 S.Ct. 588 , 591,42 L.Ed. 1033 (1898).
III.
In Hoffman & Place v. Aetna Fire Ins. Co.,
It is a rule of law, as well as of ethics, that where the language of a promisor may be understood in more senses than one, it is to be interpreted in the sense in which he had reason to suppose it was understood by the promisee. * * * It is also a familiar rule of law, that if it be left in doubt, in view of the general tenor of the instrument and the relations of the contracting parties, whether given words were used in an enlarged or a restricted sense, other things being equal, that construction should be adopted which is most beneficial to the promisee, (citations and emphasis in original omitted)
See also
Dennis v. Massachusetts Benefit Ass’n,
When the foregoing canons of construction are applied to the facts presented, it must be concluded that a reasonable layman would have been justified in believing that in the event appellee subjected him to any cost in suing on the promissory notes appellee would assume liability for all costs of such a suit. It is obvious that the finance company here could have avoided the resulting costs of a lawsuit by not defaulting on the notes, or could have minimized such costs by paying the amounts owing at any time during the early stages of what became a protracted litigation. Instead, appellee chose a course of action which not only put appellant to substantial attorney’s fees, but which reflects a bad faith intent successfully to use the $18,200 owing to appellant at an interest rate (6%) more favorable than could be obtained from a commercial lender, for a period measured by the date of default (November 1, 1970) and the date on which the district court entered judgment in favor of appellant (August 31, 1971). 5 And we note that neither in district court nor in this Court has appellee raised any defense or justification for defaulting on the notes, for dragging appellant through months of costly litigation in two federal district courts, or for burdening the courts with what appears to have been an unmeritorious, indeed, an indefensible, refusal to comply with the contractual agreement.
Appellee, a finance company, is not a stranger to the coercive advantages provided by the confessed judgment device; undoubtedly, it is fully aware that the procedure allows a creditor to avoid formal, lengthy, and expensive legal proceedings in order to collect from his debtor, and that it is precisely for this reason that lenders use the confessed judgment.
See, e. g.,
49 C.J.S. Judgments, § 134 and cases cited therein;
cf.
American Cities Co., Inc. v. Stevenson,
Appellee’s course of conduct in this action manifests an intention to use our already over-crowded court dockets and the time-consuming judicial process as means to securing financial advantage. Such conduct bespeaks a willingness, therefore, to abuse the processes of the federal court system. This alone might well provide adequate grounds for awarding reasonable attorney’s fees to one in appellant’s position.
See
Newman v. Piggie Park Enterprises, Inc.,
Applying the above-cited rules of construction to the contractual agreement before us, we conclude that a reasonable layman in appellant’s position would have been justified in believing that “costs of suit” would include all the reasonable expenses of prosecuting a lawsuit, including attorney’s fees. If appellee had wished to limit its liability for such expenses to mere court costs or filing fees, it would have used the unambiguous term “costs”. We therefore hold that appellant is entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees and that it was error for the district court to dismiss Claim 3 of her complaint. We remand the cause to the district court in order that appellant may present itemized evidence with respect to “costs of suit”, including reasonable attorney’s fees for prosecuting this action both in district court and on appeal. The district court shall enter judgment accordingly, in an amount so determined by it.
Notes
. The language contained in Note 1 was as follows:
PROMISSORY NOTE
$42,000.00 November 1,1966
FOR VALUE RECEIVED, the undersigned promises to pay to the order of SONIA F. ALLAND the sum of Forty-Two Thousand Dollars ($42,000.-00) with interest computed from November 1, 1966 on the unpaid balance at the rate of six percent (6%) per annum, computed and payable quarterly on the unpaid balance, with the first installment of interest to be paid on February 1, 1967. The principal sum due hereunder shall be payable in five (5) equal consecutive annual installments of Eight Thousand Four Hundred Dollars ($8,-400.00) each, the first such installment being due on the 1st day of November, 1967. Payment of one or more installments in advance of the dates herein provided may be made at the option of the maker without penalty.
If any installment of this note, or interest thereon, be not paid within thirty (30) days after written notice that it is overdue, then the entire unpaid balance hereof shall at once become due and payable at the option of the holder hereof, and the undersigned hereby authorizes any attorney at law to appear in any Court of Record in the United States, after the above obligation becomes due as aforesaid, and waive the issuing and service of process and confess a judgment against the undersigned in favor of the holder hereof for the amount then appearing due, together with costs of suit, and thereupon to release all errors and waive all right of appeal.
CONSUMERS CREDIT CORPORATION
By /s/ Alex J. Shepard
President
Except for the amounts involved, the language of Note 2 was identical to that of Note 1.
. On March 25, 1971, Alexander Alland had assigned to his wife all his rights in Note 2.
. Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
.
But see
John Deere Co. of Baltimore, Inc. v. Cerone Equip. Co., Inc.,
. Even after appellant obtained judgment in the District Court for the Southern District of New York,
