
    George Lewis Prentiss, as General Guardian of Marie Carleton, Respondent, v. Ellen Bowden, Appellant.
    (New York Superior Court
    General Term,
    October, 1895.)
    By entering judgment upon a remittitur of the Court of Appeals -the successful party waives his right to appeal from any part of the order directing the entry of such judgment.
    Motion by plaintiff to dismiss appeal from order.
    
      G-. F. Bentley and W. B. Wilder, for motion.
    
      B. Patterson, opposed.
   MoAdam, J.

Upon filing the remittitur from the Court off Appeals the question arose whether the defendant, the party finally successful, was entitled to costs in that or all the courts. The Special Term judge decided that as the suit was in equity, and no costs had been awarded by the trial judge, the prevailing party was entitled to the costs of the court of final resort, and to those alone. The defendant acted upon the older and entered judgment for such costs, aggregating1 $116.23, which were paid, and about the same time appealed from so much of the order as denied her the costs of the court below.

The plaintiff now moves to dismiss the appeal upon the ground that by the entry of the judgment and its satisfaction the defendant waived the right to appeal from the order directing the entry of the judgment.

The judgment to' be entered on the, remittitur was in its nature final—one from which no appeal could be taken ; for it directed judgment absolute against the plaintiff on his stipulation; and thd costs to which the defendant was entitled were those recoverable only upon such a judgment. When the defendant entered that judgment she concluded herself by it; her power to appeal from. or enlarge it was gone; and its satisfaction discharged all obligations which could flow from it.

The appeal taken by defendant from the order as to the amount of costs to which she was entitled is inconsistent with , the entry of such judgment; for if part of the order which . was appealed from were reversed she could not enten another judgment for the costs which she claims were wrongfully disallowed. Such costs would not be interlocutory, but those which follow a final judgment, go into the judgment and form an indivisible portion of it. An order granting an extra allowance must, therefore, be made before judgment, “for the costs enter into and form part thereof.” Clark v. City of Rochester, 34 N. Y. 356.

A judgment is “ the final determination of the rights of the parties in the action.” Code, § 1200 : and see Patten v. Stitt, 50 N. Y. 591; In re Braiser, 2 How. Pr. (N. S.) 154 Wilkin v. Raplee, 52 N. Y. 248; Smith v. Dittenhoefer, 1 C. C. Rep. 143. There can be but one judgment in the action (Canfield v. Gaylord, 12 Wend. 236 ; Johnson v. Farrell, 10 Abb. Pr. 384; Board of Underwriters v. Nat. Bank, 146 N. Y. 64), and that the one authorized by the " remittitur. Macgregor v. Buell, 17 Abb. Pr. 31. In some cases the judgment contains several provisions; here there was but one.

The defendant had the undoubted right to appeal from any part of the order; but if she expected to obtain thereby a more favorable allowance of costs she should have refrained from entering judgment until the question of costs had been finally determined, to the , end that all to which she was entitled might form part of it, once for all time. She could not enter more than one judgment on the remittitur. There is no accommodating practice which permits the entry of such judgments on the installment plan. ■

There was' but one subject before the court below, and that was the amount of costs to which the defendant was entitled under the remittitur. It was not a question involving independent causes of action or disconnected rights. There could be but one bill of 'costs taxed under the remittitur, and the fact that items were claimed in the several courts or on different appeals did not divide the matter into .so many distinct controversies involving the right to as many independent

appeals. On the contrary, the relief sought by the appeal is predicated upon and indissolubly connected with that which had been already awarded and enforced. Bennett v. Van Syckel, 18 N. Y. 481; Genet v. Davenport, 59 id. 648. In short, the acts of the defendant were not the assertion of concurrent rights, but were so inconsistent that the election to. assert the one amounts in law to a renunciation and waiver of the other. See Baylies N. T. & App. 18, 19.

The cases relied on by the defendant relate to independent causes of action or grounds for relief, and are inapplicable.

It follows that the plaintiff’s motion must be granted and the appeal dismissed, with costs.

Fbeedman, J., concurs.

Motion granted and appeal dismissed, with costs.  