Albers v. City of Omaha

Decision Date20 October 1898
Citation56 Neb. 357,76 N.W. 911
PartiesALBERS v. CITY OF OMAHA.
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Syllabus by the Court.

This court is without jurisdiction to hear a case on appeal, unless the transcript of the record is filed here within six months after the rendition of the judgment or final order sought to be reviewed.

Appeal from district court, Douglas county; Ambrose, Judge.

Suit by Henry Albers against the city of Omaha. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appeals. Dismissed.W. J. Connell and E. H. Scott, for appellant.

Wm. D. Beckett and Wharton & Baird, for appellee.

NORVAL, J.

The board of public works of the city of Omaha, in pursuance of an ordinance passed by the mayor and council, caused the lots of Henry Albers to be filled with earth, for the purpose of abating a nuisance occasioned by the existence of stagnant water on the property. A special tax was levied against the lots by the city authorities to defray the cost of the work, and this action was instituted in the court below to enjoin the enforcement of said tax. A trial on the merits resulted in a decree in favor of plaintiff, and the city has brought the record here for review. The cause is docketed in this court as an appeal. While the city attorney has filed a paper assigning certain errors in the record and proceedings, he has treated the case in the brief filed as being here on appeal. The decree was rendered in the district court on May 13, 1895, and the transcript was not filed with the clerk of this court until March 5, 1896. The cause was not docketed in the time prescribed by statute for prosecuting appeals to this court, as more than six months had elapsed between the entering of the decree and the lodging of the transcript in this court. Withnell v. City of Omaha, 37 Neb. 621, 56 N. W. 381. The practical result to the city would be no more favorable if the cause should be treated as being here on error. The assessment was assailed, and it was held invalid, because plaintiff had never been notified that his lot had been declared a nuisance, and he was given no opportunity to abate the same himself. It has been ruled that, under the charter governing the city of Omaha, the owner of a lot is entitled to notice from the municipal authorities of the purpose to fill his lot, and an opportunity to make the improvement himself, and a special tax to pay for the work is invalid where such notice and opportunity have not been given. Horbach v. City of Omaha, 54 Neb....

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