March 28, 1901. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE McIVER.
This is an appeal from an order of his Honor, Judge Townsend, in reference to the taxation of costs in this case by the clerk. For a proper understanding of the questions presented by this appeal, it will be necessary to state so much of the history of the various proceedings in the case as affect the questions involved. It seems that the action was for slander, and at the time of commencing this action, the plaintiff obtained an order for the arrest of the defendant, and also a writ of attachment. Both of these orders were executed, and under the latter the sheriff seized a lot of horses and seems to have had them in his custody for the period of thirty-three days. Subsequently the order of arrest was set aside and the attachment was dissolved, and when the judgment of this Court to that effect was remitted to the Circuit Court, his Honor, Judge Benet, made an order, in which, after reciting the substance of the judgment of this Court, he directed the clerk to enter up judgment accordingly, "and for the costs and disbursements of the defendant upon such proceedings and appeal thereof (therefrom?);" and he further ordered that the sheriff do forthwith turn over to the defendant, or his attorney, the proceeds of the sale of the property which had been attached in this case. From this order there was no appeal. Soon thereafter the clerk proceeded to tax the costs as claimed by the defendant in an itemized bill set out in the "Case," amounting to the sum of $693.70, as there stated. Much the largest item contained in such bill was the sum of $538.84 as "board for forty-nine head of horses thirty-three days at 33 1-3 cents per day each;" and it also contained three items amounting in the whole to $45 as costs in the Supreme Court, and also the sum of $3.50 as a disbursement for a copy of the opinion of the Supreme Court. The clerk allowed the entire bill of costs as presented by defendant, giving as his reason for allowing 33 1-3 cents per day for the feed of the horses, the fact, as he supposed (erroneously, however,) that this Court, in the case of Southern Railway Co. v. Sheppard, 42 S.C. 543, more fully reported in 20 S.E.R., 481, had said that such an amount was a reasonable charge. The plaintiff excepted to the allowance of the costs of the defendant in the Supreme Court as well as to the disbursement for a copy of the opinion of the Supreme Court, and also to the charge of 33 1-3 cents per day for each horse. Upon these exceptions the case was heard by his Honor, Judge Klugh, who passed an order on the 1st day of November, 1897, sustaining the exceptions to the allowance of costs in the Supreme Court as well as to the disbursement for a copy of the opinion of the Supreme Court; and the order then proceeded in these words: "It is further ordered, that the item for maintaining horses at the price of 33 1-3 cents a day be recommitted to the clerk to take testimony as to what would be a proper charge for maintaining said horses. The other items of the taxation are not excepted to, and stand confirmed." From this order of Judge Klugh the defendant appealed solely on the ground of error in reversing the action of the clerk in taxing costs for defendant's attorneys. This Court, on the 16th of February, 1898, rendered judgment affirming the judgment of Judge Klugh (see Addison v. Sujette, 51 S.C. 305). Soon thereafter the clerk proceeded to take testimony as to what would be a proper charge for maintaining the horses, and made an order in which, after stating the substance of the testimony, he adjudged that the amount should be the sum of $472.28 — made up of the following items: "Paid to Jesse Coleman 25 cents per day for 49 horses, $125; 49 head of horses at 23 1-3 cents per day for 23 days, $262.96; 80 cents per day for hand hire for 23 days, $18.50; one horse for 23 days at $1, $23; interest on same for 15 months, $42.92 — $472.28." To this adjudication of the clerk the plaintiff excepted upon the several grounds set out in the "Case." Upon these exceptions the case was heard by Judge Townsend, "when (as stated in the `Case') all the foregoing papers were submitted to his Honor, the presiding Judge, as well as a large amount of testimony taken by the clerk." Thereupon the Circuit Judge rendered his decree, from which the defendant appeals upon the several exceptions set out in the record, a copy of which, together with a copy of Judge Townsend's decree, should be incorporated in the official report of this case.
We do not propose to consider the exceptions seriatim, but will consider the questions which we understand these exceptions to raise. The first and most important question is whether this item for the expense of maintaining the defendant's horses while in the possession of the sheriff can properly be regarded as one of the disbursements of the defendant to be taxed as a part of his costs, or whether it should not more properly be regarded as one of the items of the damages secured by the undertaking which the plaintiff was required to enter into before obtaining the warrant of attachment, which, as will be seen by reference to sec. 251 of the Code, the plaintiff undertook, if the attachment should be set aside by order of the Court, not only to pay "all costs that may be awarded to the defendant," but also "all damage which he (the defendant) may sustain by reason of the attachment, not exceeding the sum specified in the undertaking." Now, as the attachment was set aside by the Court, it would seem (if this were an open question) that any amount which the defendant may have paid or may be liable to pay for the maintenance of his horses, while in the possession of the sheriff under what proved to be an illegal warrant of attachment, would properly constitute one of the items of the damage sustained by reason of the attachment. But is this an open question? The order of Judge Benet required the clerk to enter up judgment "for the costs and disbursements of the defendant upon such proceedings," meaning the order for the arrest of the defendant and the writ of attachment as is necessarily implied by the terms of the order. From this order there was no appeal, and no exception thereto was noted or taken. The clerk under that order proceeded to tax the costs and disbursements, and amongst the latter he included the expenses of "Board for 49 head of horses 33 days at 33 1-3 cents per day each." While there were exceptions to other items in the bill of costs and disbursements as taxed by the clerk, there was no exception raising the point afterwards sought to be raised by the plaintiff, that the expense of feeding the horses while in the possession of the sheriff could not be taxed as a disbursement of the defendant, and the only point raised was as to the amount of the charge for feeding the horses, 33 1-3 cents per day for each horse. This is manifest from the terms of the exceptions as stated in the "Case." "The plaintiff's attorneys excepted to the items allowing the costs of the defendant's attorneys upon the appeal of (to?) the Supreme Court, and also the items of $3.50 for the certified copy of the judgment of the Supreme Court, and also to the per diem of 33 1-3 cents per day for the feed of each horse." And it is also made more manifest by the terms of the order of Judge Klugh disposing of such exceptions, for he says: "That the items for maintaining horses, at the price of 33 1-3 cents per day, be recommitted to the clerk to take testimony as to what would be a proper charge for maintaining said horses." This was a plain recognition of the right to make the charge, and the only reason for recommitting the matter to the clerk was to ascertain the proper amount of the charge, as to which the clerk was directed to take testimony. For if Judge Klugh had supposed that the plaintiff's exceptions raised the point that no such charge could be included in the disbursements, he certainly would not have recommitted the matter to the clerk to take testimony "as to what would be a proper charge for maintaining said horses," as that would have been imposing upon the clerk and all parties concerned a wholly useless burden, if he had supposed that plaintiff's exceptions had made the point that no such charge could be included in defendant's disbursements, and that such point was well taken. It is quite certain, therefore, that Judge Klugh held, either that the point was not made by the exceptions, or that it was not well taken; and in either view, that is conclusive of the question; for, as we have seen above, there was no appeal from that portion of his order; and his conclusion, whether right or wrong, is the law of this case, and must be regarded as final so far as this point is concerned. Under this view, the fourth exception must be sustained. For a like reason all the other exceptions, except the seventh, must all be sustained, not because we approve the points of law therein made, but simply because such points have already been practically decided in this very case, and cannot now be raised again.
The seventh exception is overruled for the reason that we know of no law which authorizes the charge of interest in a case like this.
While there is no exception to the ruling of Judge Townsend, sustaining plaintiff's first exception to the clerk's taxation of costs, yet as the views there presented by the Circuit Judge may possibly be regarded as having some bearing upon the exceptions which were taken, it may not be amiss to say that we think the remarks of the Circuit Judge are based upon a misconception of the scope and effect of the order of Judge Klugh. He did not undertake to deprive the clerk of the right to perform the duty imposed upon him by statute, to determine, in the first instance, the amount which should be allowed for disbursements; but finding that the clerk had based his conclusion, as to what would be a proper charge for maintaining the horses, upon an erroneous assumption as to what this Court had said, in a case arising in another county, several years before, he very properly recommitted the matter to the clerk, with instructions to take testimony as to what would be a proper charge for maintaining the horses in this case, manifestly meaning that he should base his conclusion as to what would be a proper charge upon the testimony so taken; otherwise, he would not have "recommitted" that item in the taxation to the clerk, but would have simply directed him to take the testimony and report the same to the Court. So that even if Judge Klugh had the power (which may be questioned) to require the clerk simply to take the testimony and report the same to the Court, he certainly did not undertake to exercise any such power.
The judgment of this Court is, that the order appealed from be reversed, except in so far as it sustains the exception to the charge of interest, and except in so far as it finds that the allowance for maintaining the horses are reasonable; and that the case be remanded to the Circuit Court, with instructions to carry into effect the views herein announced.
We desire to add, that in stating the amounts allowed, we have simply followed the statement as made in the "Case," but as it seems to us that there are some small arithmetical errors in such statement, the Circuit Court may instruct the clerk to correct such errors before entering the total amount of the costs and disbursements allowed in the judgment.
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