State Tax Cases
State Tax Cases
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question raised by the motion in these cases-
In State v. Nance, 1 Lea, 644, the question wa raised whether the successful party in a lawsuit could be made to pay the State tax on the , suit in the event it could not be made out of the unsuccessful party. The contention was made under the Code, sec. 3204: “ All costs accrued at the instance of the successful party, which cannot be collected out of the other party, may be recovered, on motion by the persons entitled to them, against the successful party.” The question turned upon whether the State tax was costs. It was held that costs were the expenses incident to the conduct of a suit either in its prosecution or defense, and such disbursements-as are allowed by law as fees to witnesses and officers of court. It was further held that the State tax on litigation was a “specific tax” on the “ unsuccessful party to the litigation, imposed for revenue, and no part of the necessary expenses incident to the suit. It followed necessarily that the tax could not be collected from the successful party under the provision cited.
In accord with the reasoning and conclusion of the foregoing case, it was held in the State v. Hartman, 5 Lea, 118, that where a judgment of nol pros-was entered in a criminal prosecution upon the terms
The surety for the costs of the cause is therefore not liable for the tax on the litigation.
Reference
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