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Courtney v. Jimenez
25 Neb. Ct. App. 75
Neb. Ct. App.
2017
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Background

  • Courtney obtained an ex parte domestic abuse protection order against Jimenez on May 6, 2016; Jimenez was served May 17, 2016.
  • § 42-925(1) requires a respondent to return a form requesting a show-cause hearing within 5 days of service to contest an ex parte order.
  • Jimenez did not return the form within 5 days; he filed a motion to vacate the order on August 1, 2016, arguing the petition/affidavit failed to allege facts supporting a protection order.
  • The district court held a hearing August 9, 2016, concluded the petition lacked sufficient allegations, and vacated the ex parte order (but entered separate no-contact relief in the paternity case).
  • Courtney appealed; by the time of appellate briefing the ex parte order’s original one-year term would have expired, raising mootness concerns.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument (Courtney) Defendant's Argument (Jimenez) Held
Whether appeal is moot Appeal still reviewable; court erred in vacating order Order expired but public-interest question exists Appeal moot as to relief, but public-interest exception applies to statutory issue
Whether § 42-925(1) 5-day requirement is jurisdictional/mandatory 5-day deadline is "hard and fast"; failure bars later challenges or motions 5-day limit is directory; court may later entertain motions including to vacate 5-day requirement is directory, not mandatory; failing to meet it does not preclude later motions
Whether district court had power to vacate ex parte order after 5 days Statutory scheme forbids collateral attacks outside statutory deadlines Court has inherent equitable power to vacate or modify judgments during its term Court has inherent power to vacate/modify orders within its court term; no conflict with statutes found
Whether petition/affidavit alleged sufficient facts to support ex parte order Allegations (text message, past behavior) were sufficient; vacatur improper Allegations insufficient to support relief Sufficiency not reached on appeal (moot); district court found allegations insufficient but appellate court declined to decide on merits due to mootness exception scope

Key Cases Cited

  • Mahmood v. Mahmud, 279 Neb. 390 (protection orders reviewed de novo as analogous to injunctions)
  • Glantz v. Daniel, 21 Neb. App. 89 (public-interest exception applied; 5-day deadline for harassment orders treated as directory)
  • Kibler v. Kibler, 287 Neb. 1027 (court has inherent power to vacate or modify judgments during its term)
  • D.I. v. Gibson, 291 Neb. 554 (statutory time limits construed as directory when not central to statute’s purpose)
  • Doty v. West Gate Bank, 292 Neb. 787 (appellate courts need not decide issues unnecessary to resolution of the case)
  • Hron v. Donlan, 259 Neb. 259 (mootness and requirement of actual case or controversy)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Courtney v. Jimenez
Court Name: Nebraska Court of Appeals
Date Published: Sep 26, 2017
Citation: 25 Neb. Ct. App. 75
Docket Number: A-16-868
Court Abbreviation: Neb. Ct. App.