Sec. 18 of the Stamp Duties Act 1898 provides that any person dissatisfied with the assessment of a Commissioner may appeal to the Supreme Court from the assessment by way of a case stated by the Commissioner for the opinion of the Court, and " upon the hearing of such case
decide the question of costs." On the hearing of an appeal under this section the Commissioner was ordered to pay the appellants' costs. Rule 420 of the Supreme Court Rules of December 1902, which were made DUTIES,
under the Common Law Procedure Act 1899, provided that, subject to the preceding rules, the taxing officer should tax all bills of costs in actions and other proceedings according to the scale of fees and allowances then in use, so far as they should apply, and for business not comprehended in that scale recourse should be had to the old Queen's Bench practice before 1873. The scales then in use on the common law side of the Court were a set of three scales established in 1898, and an old scale which it had been the practice of the Prothonotary to apply in all common law proceedings other than actions at law in the technical sense. Rule 408 established for actions at law three scales which were identical with those established in 1898, for which they were substituted. These scales included fees and allowances for qualifying witnesses, which were not provided for in the old scale or under the Queen's Bench practice.
Held, that an appeal under sec. 18 came within the meaning of the words all actions and other proceedings" in rule 420, and therefore the appellants were entitled to these costs under the scale established by the rules of 1898 and re-established in 1902 by rule 408.
Semble. -Even if there had been no scale applicable under those rules, a successful appellant, under sec. 18, to whom costs were awarded, would have been entitled to have his costs taxed on the same footing as if the question had been tried under some other jurisdiction of the Court in which similar questions could be raised and determined, and in which the costs of qualifying witnesses would have been allowed him on taxation, on the principle stated in Kauri Timber Co. v. The Woosung, 14 N.S. W. W.N., 38.
Decision of the Supreme Court, Robertson v. Commissioner of Stamp Duties, (1905) 5 S.R. (N.S.W.), 622, reversed.
APPEAL from a decision of the Supreme Court of New South Wales.
The appellants were the executors of the estate of Thomas Robertson. The Commissioner of Stamp Duties for the purposes of probate duty assessed a certain station property which formed part of the estate at an amount which the appellants considered excessive. They therefore appealed from his assessment to the Supreme Court by way of case stated under sec. 18 of the Stamp Duties
Act. Pring J., before whom the appeal came, sitting as the Supreme Court under that section, after taking the evidence