
    The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company v. Nath’l. P. Poor.
    The instalments due by the subscribers to the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, may be recovered on motion, with costs.
    This was p, motion for judgment against a stockholder, for instalments due upon the shares subscribed for by him in the stock of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company; ten days notice of the motion having been given, according to the fifth section of the charter granted by Virginia, and confirmed by the States of Maryland and Pennsylvania, and by the United States; by which it is enacted that “ whenever any subscriber shall fail to pay any instalment called for by the Company, it shall and may be lawful for the Company, upon motion to be made in any court of record, after ten days notice,' to obtain judgment against the subscriber so failing to pay.” The charter says nothing respecting the costs of the motion.
    
      Mr. Wallach, for the plaintiff,
    observed that the statute of Glo-cester gives costs wherever damages could be recovered at common law, although a summary remedy may be given by statute. Hulloch on Costs, 5. If these subscriptions had been sued for at common law, upon the contract, damages would have been given.
   The Court (nem con.) ordered the judgment to be entered for the several subscriptions, with costs; and observed, that the charter was granted by Virginia, and confirmed and adopted by Maryland, Pennsylvania, and the United States; and that there was in Virginia, at that time, a statute authorizing the court in all cases of judgment on motion to give costs at its discretion. If such a motion as the present were made in Virginia against a subscriber under this charter, the judgment would be with costs, and the same construction should be given everywhere to this clause of the charter.

Judgment for $75, with costs.  