{"schemaVersion":1,"recordType":"legal-article","id":"law:eri:code:civil-procedure:2015:article:291","workId":"law:eri:code:civil-procedure:2015","expressionId":"law:eri:code:civil-procedure:2015:en","title":"Costs Where Pauper Succeeds","number":"291","language":"en","canonicalUrl":"https://eriatlas.com/law/civil-procedure-code-2015/article/291/","hierarchy":{"book":"BOOK IV — JUDGEMENT, COST AND DISCONTINUANCE OF SUITS","title":"TITLE II — COSTS","chapter":"Chapter 3. — Suits by Paupers"},"paragraphs":[{"id":"lead","number":"","text":"Where the plaintiff succeeds in the suit, the court fee and other fees which would have been payable if the plaintiff had not been permitted to sue as a pauper shall be recoverable by the execution officer from the unsuccessful party, and shall be first charge on the subject matter of the suit.","canonicalUrl":"https://eriatlas.com/law/civil-procedure-code-2015/article/291/#lead","sourceTargets":[{"sourceId":"civil-procedure-code-2015-en","pdfPage":159,"url":"https://eriatlas.com/sources/civil-procedure-code-2015/page/159/?article=291&paragraph=lead#article-291-lead"}]}],"caution":"This is the English-language edition published in 2015 and attributed in its front matter to the Ministry of Justice. Refworld labels it an unofficial translation. Eri Atlas has not independently verified the translation, later changes, or whether the text is currently in force."}