
    Frank Reynolds, Plaintiff, v. The Aetna Life Insurance Co., et al., Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, Kings Special Term,
    December, 1899.)
    Costs — On appeal.
    Where an issue is tried between the defendants, which is not germane, nor related, to the issue between the plaintiff and the defendants, but is wholly independent of it, and, on appeal to the Court of Appeals, the plaintiff is respondent on the main issue, and a defendant is also respondent on the said issue between the defendants, and there is an affirmance of the entire judgment, with costs to the “ respondents ”, each respondent is entitled to tax a bill of costs.
    Motion to resettle the judgment on the remittitur from the Court of Appeals, so that the respondents shall get only one bill of costs instead of one each. The remittitur reads that the judgment appealed from is affirmed and that “ the respondents recover against the appellants costs of appeal to this court.”
    William C. Davis for motion.
    William S. Bennett opposed.
   Gaynor, J.:

In Van Gelder v. Van Gelder (84 N. Y. 658) it was held that costs to the respondents ” in the remittitur meant only one bill of costs for all of the respondents. But there the respondents seem to have been united in interest, or at. least, their several interests were germain to the main issue. Was that the case here?. The insurance company defendant here concededly owed the amount of a life insurance policy. ' The plaintiff claimed it, as did also two others. The plaintiff therefore brought this suit in equity against the insurance company and the said two other claimants, alleging the conflicting claims,, and praying that the plaintiff might be adjudged entitled to the money. “ After ” the suit was begun the defendant insurance company, instead of waiting for the event, paid the money to the said two other claimants, its co-defendants. It afterwards served an answer that its said, two co-defendants induced it to so pay the money to them by “ fraudulent tricks and devices ”, and prayed for judgment against them to recover it back. On the trial the plaintiff got judgment, but the court refused to delay or complicate the plaintiff’s case with the said controversy between the defendants, ruling that it was not germain to the plaintiff’s case, and refusing to decide it. The plaintiff’s rights could in no way be affected by the said dispute between the defendants created by themselves after the suit was begun. The Appellate Division affirmed the plaintiff’s judgment, but went further and tried the dispute between the defendants, and gave judgment to the defendant insurance company against its said two co-defendants for a recovery back of the money. Thereupon the said two co-defendants appealed to the Court of Appeals from the judgment of the Appellate Division. The defendant insurance company did not appeal from the plaintiff’s judgment. The plaintiff thus became a respondent against the said two appealing co-defendants to maintain its judgment establishing its right against all of the defendants to the fund, and the defendant insurance company became a respondent to maintain its said judgment for the recovery of the money against its said two co-defendants.

The Court of Appeals has held that these two controversies were germain to each other, and affirmed the entire judgment. I confess my inability to see that they were. They seem to be wholly distinct and independent of each other. But that is not to the present purpose, for they were germain, i. e., the Court of Appeals has so decided. That being so it is claimed that the giving of costs to the “ respondents ” by the Court of Appeals meant only one bill for both, the same as in the VanGelder case. But I am reluctant to so construe the remittitur. On this question of costs it seems to me that the actual fact that the issue between the defendants was wholly distinct from and bore no relation whatever to the issue between the plaintiff and the defendants, should govern. The plaintiff should not be made to share his costs with the defendant insurance company because it prevailed over its two co-defendants in the issue litigated between it and them. That is no matter to the plaintiff. If the defendant insurance company had failed on such issue, or if such issue had not been raised at all, the plaintiff would be in the very same case that he is now, viz., with his judgment against the defendant for the fund. As the plaintiff is entitled to costs, and as the remittitur gives costs to the “ respondents ”, I see no way except to interpret the remittitur as giving a bill of costs to each' respondent.

The motion is denied, without costs.  