133 Mass. 587 | Mass. | 1882
Benjamin B. Williams brought an action of contract against Marshall Williams; the defendant filed an answer containing a general denial, and also filed a declaration in set-off. Subsequently he was defaulted, and judgment was rendered against him on his default for 11398.83, and costs. Marshall Williams then brought this writ of review, and, upon the trial, Benjamin B. Williams, the original plaintiff, recovered a verdict of one dollar. Upon these facts, the Superior Court rightly ruled that the plaintiff in review was entitled to costs. The whole subject of costs upon writs of review is regulated by the Pub. Sts. c. 187, which is a reenactment and continuation of the provisions of law in force when this action was tried. By § 34, it is provided that “the prevailing party shall recover costs, unless the court in granting the review imposed on the petitioner terms respecting costs.” Section 35 provides that, “ if the sum recovered by the plaintiff in the original suit for debt or damages is reduced on the review, the original defendant shall have judgment and execution for the difference, with costs.”
A review is a new action, and the party who obtains in it a result more favorable to him than that of the original action is the prevailing party. Williams v. Hodge, 11 Met. 266. New Haven & Northampton Co. v. Northampton, 102 Mass. 116, 122. By the language of the statute, the plaintiff in review in this case is entitled to his costs, and it does not seem to admit of any other construction.
The defendant in review contends that, as the sum recovered by him in the original suit was reduced by set-off upon the trial on the review, the statute does not apply. We doubt
But as both parties have argued the question as the one intended to be presented, we have considered it, and are of opinion that the ground taken by the defendant in review is not tenable.
In other parts of the statutes, careful provision is made as to what shall be the effect upon costs if the plaintiff’s claim is reduced by set-offs, it being provided that, although, as the general rule, if a plaintiff brings his action in the Superior Court and recovers a sum as debt or damages not exceeding twenty dollars, he shall recover no costs, yet this rule shall not apply if his claim as established at the trial exceeds twenty dollars, and is reduced to that amount or less by set-offs. Pub. Sts. c. 198, §§5,7.
If the Legislature had intended that a similar exception should apply in the statutes we are considering, it would certainly have been expressed. The fact that no such exception is expressed is strong, if not conclusive, evidence that it intended that a reduction of the claim of the original plaintiff by set-offs should have the same result as a reduction in any other mode. It is not unlikely that the Legislature may have deemed the rule it established to be, as intimated in Williams v. Hodge, ubi supra, a salutary check upon parties who obtain judgment by default, and file their claims in disregard of the counter claims of the other party, as they do this under the penalty of paying costs,
Memorandum.
On the eighth day of December 1882, the Honorable Otis P. Lord resigned the office of justice of this court, which he had held since the twenty-first day of December 1875.