Fisk v. Thorp
| Decision Date | 08 November 1900 |
| Docket Number | 11,404 |
| Citation | Fisk v. Thorp, 60 Neb. 713, 84 N.W. 79 (Neb. 1900) |
| Parties | ANNA L. FISK v. RUSSELL THORP, JR. ADMINISTRATOR, ET AL |
| Court | Nebraska Supreme Court |
ERROR to the district court for Sioux county. Tried below before WESTOVER, J. Affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Allen G. Fisher, for plaintiff in error.
Albert W. Crites, contra.
We are asked in this case to review the proceeding had in the district court on a motion to set aside and vacate a deficiency judgment rendered against defendants in error, and reverse the order entered sustaining such motion. The motion was filed after the term at which the judgment was rendered, and the application is made under the provisions of subdivision 3, section 602, of the Civil Code on the ground of "irregularity in obtaining a judgment."
By error proceeding, from a similar order of the trial court on the same motion, the case has once before been here for review. In the opinion then rendered, it was held that the court had no jurisdiction at chambers to hear and decide the motion, and was also without power to order a change of venue of the hearing on its own motion, and the order entered vacating the judgment was reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings. Fisk v. Thorp, 51 Neb. 1 70 N.W. 498. The principal error alleged and relied on in the present proceedings, as argued in the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error, relates to the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to support the order entered by the trial court vacating the deficiency judgment. We are precluded from examining into or considering the alleged error complained of in this respect, for the reason that no proper bill of exceptions containing the evidence on which the trial judge acted has been settled, allowed and preserved as a part of the record in the case. We have heretofore, on the application of the defendants in error, quashed the purported bill of exceptions presented as a part of the record. In its absence, we are without means to determine upon what evidence the court acted, and all presumptions in the case should, under the uniform holdings of this court, be resolved in favor of the correctness of the orders and judgments of the trial court. In the absence of a proper bill of exceptions, it will be conclusively presumed that there was introduced before the trial court sufficient evidence to sustain the order entered. Van Etten v. Test, 49 Neb. 725, 728, 68 N.W. 1023. This disposes of all questions presented for the determination of which resort must be had to the evidence in the case.
The question of jurisdiction of the trial court over the defendants in error is argued, but we do not understand that this question arises in the case. Whatever may have been the status of the case as to jurisdiction, the defendants in error have admitted and acknowledged jurisdiction by appearing and invoking the powers of the court to set...
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- Fisk v. Thorp
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Godfrey v. Cunningham
... ... court's finding that the defendant is entitled to the ... relief she seeks. In a similar case in this court, Fisk ... v. Thorp, 60 Neb. 713, 84 N.W. 79, it is said by ... HOLCOMB, C. J.: "It is not required in such instances ... that there shall be tendered an ... ...
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Tootle-Weakley Millinery Company v. Billingsley
... ... The appearance made by the ... [74 Neb. 534] attorney at this time gave jurisdiction as to ... the entire proceedings. Fisk v. Thorp, 60 Neb. 713, ... 84 N.W. 79 ... Appellant's ... second contention is that there was no evidence to support ... the ... ...