Lead Opinion
Appellee, Michael W. Brown, was suspended and discharged from the Omaha police department on December 12, 1963. A letter from police chief Ostler to Brown on that date reveals that the stated reason for his discharge was conduct unbecoming an officer in that he gave false testimony under oath in a liquor license hearing before the city council.
Appellee appealed from this order of suspension and discharge to the personnel board of the City of Omaha. The personnel board took extensive evidence in hearings commencing on January 20, 1964, and concluding on February 3, 1964, at which time the board took the following action: “THE CHAIRMAN: The members of the Board all being present, and the parties being present, the special session of the Omaha Personnel Board in the matter of the hearing on the appeal of Michael Brown is again officially in session, after executive session to consider the matter. The board will entertain any comments or motions that any member of the board may have in this matter at this time. MR. NOVAK: I move that Mike Brown’s appeal be denied. MR. GALAS: I will second it. THE CHAIRMAN: Motion made and seconded that the appeal in the case of Michael Brown be denied. Will the secretary please call the roll? SECRETARY: Mr. Cascio? MR. CASCIO: Yes. SECRETARY: Mr. Galas? MR. GALAS: Yes. SECRETARY: Mr. Novak? MR. NOVAK: Yes. SECRETARY: Mr. Syas? MR. SYAS: No, for the following reasons: * * (Emphasis supplied.)
The chairman of the board, Dr. Frank Barta, made the following statement at the end of the hearing: “* * * I firmly vote with the members of the board who deny his appeal and also deny it, and this makes it four to one, and it is so ordered. * * * (Whereupon, at 10:35 p.m.,
The petition in error herein was filed in the district court for Douglas County on March 5, 1964. The first assignment of error raises the question of the jurisdiction of the district court. The district court overruled the objections of the appellants as to. its jurisdiction. These objections were made under section 25-1931, R. R. S. 1943, applicable here. This section provides that no proceedings for reversing, vacating, or modifying judgments or final orders shall be commenced unless within 1 calendar month after the rendition of the judgment or the making of the final order complained of. And, we have construed the term “calendar month” as being a period terminating with the day of the succeeding month, numerically corresponding to the day of its beginning, less one. Ruan Transport Corp. v. Peake, Inc.,
We have no power to extend the period of review for 1 or 2 days any more than we could extend it 6 months, and it is fundamental that the right to. review by error proceedings or to appeal is statutory and the requirements of the statute must be met before the district court or this court acquires jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action.
In the Ruan case, supra, the court said: “If the appeal is not timely perfected within 1 month from the date of the entry of the order to' which complaint is made, then this court has no jurisdiction.”
We have held that a judgment is the final determination of the rights, of the parties; that a judgment is “rendered” when the decision is announced upon the law and the facts; and further that the entry of a judgment upon the record is. not an integral part of the judicial act of rendering judgment. Ricketts v. Continental Nat. Bank,
In Dorshorst v. Dorshorst,
In a similar situation, this court said in Harms v. County Board of Supervisors,
Appellee argues that the Omaha municipal code (chapter 7.04.100 (c)), requires that the board “report in writing” its findings and decisions to the parties; that this document, the report in writing, bears the date of February 7, 1964; and that the time for appeal should be computed from this date. We do not agree. The personnel board was sitting in a quasi-judicial capacity; in other words, it was exercising a judicial function in determining the rights of appellee. After the personnel board announced its decision on February 3, 1964, nothing remained to be done except the administrative act of reducing the order to writing and transmitting it to the appellee.
The chairman announced in open hearing on February 3, 1964, “it is so ordered.” The municipal code requirement provided for the reduction of the order to writing and its transmittal to the parties. But, this in no way destroys the indisputable fact in the record that the board announced and rendered its decision at the termination of the hearing on February 3, 1964. It is true that the action of the board had to be transmitted to the parties. But, we feel that this requirement of transmittal is no more significant as far as the finality of the order is concerned than was the necessity, as in the Ricketts case, that a formal decree be spread on the records of the court. It is clear from the holding in the Ricketts case that the rendition of the judgment or final order takes place when the announcement of the decision is made. The appellee was present with counsel and was fully aware of the board’s final and announced decision. The chairman of the board announced, “it is so ordered.”
Consequently, we hold in this case that the district court acquired no jurisdiction of the subject matter, the
Reversed and remanded with directions.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The majority opinion holds that the oral vote constituted the rendition of the judgment regardless of the date when the action was spread upon the records of the board. For support it looks to rules governing appeals to this court from the district court. The analogy bares the sensitivity of the court to the need for a record entry in a case where the transcript is jurisdictional — the case of Michael W. Brown.
Prior to 1941 the transcript was jurisdictional. Although the statute measured the time from rendition of the judgment, this court repeatedly held that time commenced to run when the judgment was entered of record, “ * * so that it * * * (was) within the power of the appellant to comply with the statute regulating appeals, by filing in this court a certified transcript of the proceedings in the district court.’ ” Sloan v. Gibson,
In 1941 the transcript lost its jurisdictional feature, but the phrase “rendition of such judgment” was retained. Subsequently the court said that an announcement without a record entry could be a rendition. See Ricketts v. Continental Nat. Bank,
Time did not commence to run against Brown before entry of the decision on the records of the board so that it was within his power to comply with the statute by filing the transcript in the district court. I respectfully dissent.
