Allan v. Allan
Allan v. Allan
Opinion of the Court
Exceptions to the ruling of a single justice affirming, on appeal, a clerk’s taxation of costs in equity. The original bill was filed in the clerk’s office May 6,1901. Subpoena issued returnable at the following August Pules, at which time the defendants appeared. Their answer was filed October 3, 1901. A preliminary injunction was granted, without objection, October 11, 1901, in term time. On March 24, 1902, the plaintiff filed an amendment to his bill, withdrawing the original allegations, and praying for relief upon entirely'new and different grounds. The amendment was allowed withomt. objection, at the following April term, upon payment by plaintiff of one bill of costs. The defendants filed their answer to the amended bill, November 5, 1902, and replication was filed at the April term, 1903. At the October term, 1903, an interlocutory decree was entered by consent of parties, sending the cause to a master for an accounting. A hearing was had by the master December 22, 1903, and the master’s report was filed at the April term 1905, when objections were filed by the defendants to the acceptance of the report for defects appearing therein, and the cause was thereupon recommitted to the master. The master’s amended report was filed June 8, 1905. The cause was finally heard by a single justice, June 9, 1905, and a final decree was filed August 2, 1905, in which it was adjudged that “the plaintiff recover his taxable costs against the defendants.” In taxing the costs, the clerk allowed the plaintiff
There is no general statute regulating the recovery of costs in suits in equity. There are some instances where the statutes provide that costs shall be awarded, as for example, in bills for redemption from mortgages, under some conditions, the plaintiff is “entitled to judgment for redemption and costs. But usually it rests in the sound discretion of the court whether costs shall be awarded to either or neither party, as equity shall require. Stilson v. Leeman, 75 Maine, 412. As to the specific items which may be allowed, if costs are awarded, the court will exercise its discretion, in the absence of any statutory provision or rule of court. As was said by the court in answer to the requirement of chapter 89 of the Laws of 1867, that the Justicies of the Supreme Judicial Court should “prepare a schedule or tariff of legal taxable costs, as provided by statute”:— “There are very many servicies important and necessary in the administration of justice, and for which those rendering them are justly entitled to compensation, when no fees are established by statute, and where none can well be established in advance . . In such cases when no foes are established, or ‘authorized by statute,’ the court claims and exercises the right of supervising charges, if objected to and found unreasonable, and of making suitable deductions.” 55 Maine, 595. And to their answer the justices appended a schedule of “Fees in Equity Cases” which were proper to be allowed, but for which there was no statute provision.
From time to time, the court, in its Chancery Bules, has established schedules of fees which may be taxed as costs in equity suits, and which, so far as applicable, are controlling, 72 Maine, at p. 600; 82 Maine, at p. 605.
In the taxation before us the clerk seems to have followed, by analogy, the rule in suits at law, where the allowance for travel and attendance is regulated and measured by the number of terms of
The only rule in chancery which touches an allowance for travel
The practice in taxation by clerks in this state has not been uniform ; but in one ciase only, Stilson v. Leeman, has the question of allowance for travel and attendance been presented for the determination of this couxd. In that case travel and attendance were taxed as in actions at law, for the reason, as it seems, that the (¡ase was heard or made up in term time. But we think the better practice, and one which we now approve, is to follow the rule established for fees at hearings on exceptions to bill or answer. The situations are entirely analogous. And by applying this rule, there will follow a single uniform practice covering costs at hearings of all kinds.
The plaintiff is entitled to no costs until after his amendment to his original bill was filed. He then started with a new bill. The case shows that, the plaintiff should recover for attendance at five hearings, at two dollars each, — namely, when the cause was sent to a master, when the cause was heard by the master, when the objections to the master’s report were heard, when the parties were, heard by the master upon the recommittal of his report, and when the cause was finally heard by a single justice. We allow the third item, not because the plaintiff prevailed in that instance, which he did not, but because the difficulty seems to have arisen through inherent defects in the report itself.
The plaintiff is also entitled to recover for travel to these hearings,
Exceptions sustained. Appeal sustained. Cleric’s taxation to be modified by kirn in accordance with this opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.