204 P. 502 | Nev. | 1922
By the Court,
This is an appeal, pursuant to supreme court rule 6, from a ruling of the clerk upon an objection to a cost bill.
Appellant in this matter was also an appellant to this court from an adverse judgment rendered in the district court of White Pine County (see 44 Nev. 468, 199 Pac. 477), wherein the court expressed its adherence to certain principles of law enunciated in the case of Studebaker v. Witcher et al., No. 2399 (44 Nev. 442, 195 Pac. 334), from which it followed that the money judgment against appellants should have been modified, but through inadvertence we failed to so order. Thereafter a petition for a rehearing was filed, which was denied (44 Nev. 468, 201 Pac. 322), though leave was granted appellants to apply for a modification of the judgment order. Within the time allowed, appellants made a showing justifying a modification of the original order, whereby the district court was directed to modify its money judgment against the appellants in the sum of $150. Within five days after the receipt of notice of the entry by this court of the order of modification of its former order, the appellants filed with the clerk their cost bill, to which respondent filed its objections. Before the filing of the cost bill, and on the day following the entry of the order modifying the judgment, a remittitur was issued. In apt time, respondent filed objections to the cost bill.
Paragraph 2, rule 6, as printed in 3 Revised Laws, provides that a cost bill must be filed “within five days after the publication or notice of the decision of the cause.” Personal service of a copy of the opinion is equivalent to publication. Rule 15.
It is not intimated that the cost bill was not filed within five days from receipt of notice of the order modifying the original judgment. It is'contended, however, that the order of modification was not a decision. What we shall say in this connection must be considered as applying solely to the immediate situation in hand.
We know such was not the intention of the rule, and no one has had the temerity to so contend. Why should a different conclusion be reached upon this matter ? It is true that a petition for a rehearing was denied, but in denying it the court held in abeyance the question of a modification of the former judgment order, and upon the filing of an application to modify the same, to which no objection was interposed, the court entered an order in modification thereof. It is not suggested that the court did not have j urisdiction to make said order, nor is there
The last suggestion is, of course, not based upon anything in the record; but we cannot refrain from saying that appellants were driven, to the necessity of appealing, so far as appears, to protect themselves. Had they not appealed, Witcher, the main defendant, having done so, execution might have been issued as against them. Furthermore, had respondent brought to the attention of the court the fact that the judgment had been settled by the bondsmen of Witcher, it may be that this appeal would have been dismissed upon the ground that the questions involved had become moot. It is too late now to say that the judgment was settled prior to the rendition of the decision herein. It is too bad that the parties could not have seen their way clear to so stipulate as to have obviated the necessity of prosecuting this particular appeal pending the disposition of the Witcher appeal, saving counsel and court considerable labor.
As to the first contention, all we need to say is that
It is ordered that the ruling of the clerk be reversed, that the tax costs in favor of appellants in the amount claimed in their cost bill, and that a remittitur issue accordingly.