Crocker v. Collins
Crocker v. Collins
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
These two cases, involving the same question, were heard, and will be considered together. While the remarks which we shall make apparently apply to one case only for convenience sake, yet they are intended to apply to both, and the judgment rendered will be applicable to both cases. It appears that, after a final decision of these cases, the costs were taxed by the clerk, and appellants gave notice of exceptions to the clerk’s taxation, and moved before the Circuit Court to correct the same, which motion was refused. “Thereupon respondents gave notice of the following taxation of costs in each case before the clerk,” “on appeal to the Circuit Court,” followed by a statement of the items claimed. This the clerk refused to do, “because there is no statute or rule authorizing the same, and I do not consider that I have any power to allow it.” From this ruling of the
As was said by O’Neall, J., in Bogan v. White, Dudley, at page 317-318: “I am satisfied that, in strictness, there is no such a thing as an appeal from the clerk’s taxation of costs. He is merely a ministerial officer, exercising no judicial power. It is true, he decides, but it is not as a judge; it is as the mere
It is true, that in the case of Williams v. Jones, 2 Hill, at page 556, it is said, in speaking of the taxation of costs by the clerk: “In taxing costs, he exercises judicial power, and an appeal lies from his judgment to the Circuit Court;” but that remark was a mere dictum, not necessary to the point raised in that case, as the only question there was as to the right of the parties to have notice of the taxation by the clerk; and it does not appear from the report of the case whether the question was brought up by appeal or by motion to correct the taxation of costs by the clerk. At all events, since the subsequent case of Bogan v. White, supra, and the other cases which we have cited, recognizing as the correct practice motion and not appeal, this dictum in Williams v. Jones, supra, cannot now be recognized as law. It may be also true that there are loose expressions in some of the cases characterizing a proceeding to correct the adj ustment of costs by the clerk as an appeal, but there is no case, so far as we are informed, which decides that the errors of the clerk in adjusting the costs of a case can be corrected by appeal; but, on the contrary, the cases first above cited shows that the proper practice to correct sueh errors is by motion and not by appeal.
But, in addition to this, the Code allows costs on appeal from the judgment of a trial justice, or any other inferior court or jurisdiction; and we do not think that the action of the clerk in adjusting the costs of a case, can, in any proper sense of the term, be regarded as a judgment. He simply, as the agent of
The judgment of this court is, that the order appealed from be reversed, and the action of the clerk in refusing to tax the costs in these cases be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CROCKER v. COLLINS STATE EX REL. BARTLESS v. TOWN COUNCIL OF BEAUFORT
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Costs being given by statute, he who claims them must show a statutory right. 2. Ibid. — Taxation—Correction.—The remedy for an erroneous taxation or adjustment of costs by a clerk of court is motion before the Circuit Court and not appeal, and for such motion the moving party is not entitled to the costs allowed on appeal to the Circuit Court from the judgment of an “inferior court or jurisdiction,” as it is not “an appeal,” nor was his adjustment a “judgment,” nor is he an “inferior court or tribunal.”