Woodward v. Pike

Decision Date06 February 1895
Docket Number6391
PartiesWILLIAM A. WOODWARD, APPELLANT, v. WILLIAM A. PIKE ET AL., APPELLEES
CourtNebraska Supreme Court

APPEAL from the district court of Lancaster county. Heard below before HALL, J.

AFFIRMED.

Ricketts & Wilson, for appellant.

H. J Whitmore, contra.

OPINION

RYAN C.

This action was brought by the appellant in the district court of Lancaster county for the purpose of enjoining the collection of a judgment previously rendered in said court in another cause wherein appellee Pike had been plaintiff and appellant and Woodward had been defendant. The suit wherein the judgment complained of was rendered was commenced before a justice of the peace of Lancaster county. From a judgment of date July 6, 1892, in favor of Woodward, Pike appealed to the district court aforesaid, and on August 4, immediately following, filed his transcript therein. As this was within thirty days from the rendition of judgment the jurisdiction of the court last named duly attached. The appellant Pike did not within twenty days thereafter, as required by statute file a petition; indeed this petition was not filed until September 22, 1892. After having filed his petition, by leave of court, plaintiff gave no notice thereof to defendant, but on December 23, 1892, took judgment against him by default. On January 26, thereafter, the defendant learned of the existence of said judgment and began this action to enjoin its collection. The practice sanctioned by this court probably required that upon the filing of this petition out of time the defendant should have had some sort of notice thereof before judgment was entered against him. (Cockle Separator Co. v. Clark, 23 Neb. 702, 37 N.W 628; Arnold v. Badger Lumber Co., 36 Neb. 841, 55 N.W. 269; Schultz v. Loomis, 40 Neb. 152, 58 N.W 693.) While the practice pursued was irregular, the court was not without jurisdiction. The provisions of section 602 of the Code of Civil Procedure afforded ample means of redress for irregularities in proceedings, and for such unavoidable casualty or misfortune as had prevented a defense. There was no evidence offered in this case which even remotely indicated that the defendant had had no opportunity of availing himself of the provisions of the section just referred to. There was charged in the petition in this case no such acts of omission or commission as would justify the assumption that fraud had been...

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