81 Neb. 321 | Neb. | 1908
April 16, 1906, the plaintiff filed in the office of the clerk of the district court for Hitchcock county, Nebraska, a motion of which the following is a copy: “Comes now the plaintiff, the Clark & Leonard Investment Company, and moves the court to order the present clerk of this court to enter of record as of November 18, 1893, the decree pronounced in this cause on said date, in words,
On motion of the plaintiff the court struck Taylor’s objections and ansAver from the file, and at a later date, as we judge from the final journal entry of the case, Taylor Avas alloAved to refile his objections and ansAver, and the court entered the following final order in the case: “And now on this 23d day of October, 1906, this cause came on for hearing on the motion of the plaintiff for a nunc pro tunc entry of the decree rendered in said cause November 18, 1893, the answer and objections of Wiliam Z. Taylor thereto, the motion of the plaintiff to strike said ansAver and objections, and at request of William Z. Taylor he is allowed to refile answer and objections, and said cáuse being finally submitted to the court upon the foregoing papers and petition of intervention of William Z. Taylor this date filed, on consideration whereof it is ordered by the court that the answer and objections of William Z. Taylor to the nunc pro tunc entry oí said decree be overruled, to which said William Z. Taylor excepts, and it is further ordered by the court that the motion of the
There are two classes of cases in which it has been held proper to enter judgments and decrees nunc pro tunc. First, those cases in which the suitors have done all in their power to place the cause in a condition to be decided by the court, but in which, owing to the delay of the court, no final judgment has been entered. The second class embraces those cases in which judgment, though pronounced by the court, has from accident or mistake of the officers of the court never been entered on the court records. Where the case has been fully tried, and the court takes it under advisement, during which one of the parties dies, a judgment will be entered nunc pro tunc as of the date of the case being submitted to the court, in order that no prejudice shall result on account of the death of the party, and the same rule obtains where a .party is prevented from entering up a judgment on a verdict in his favor on account of a motion for a new trial, during the pendency of which the party dies. 1 Freeman, Judgments (4th ed.), sec. 58. Den v. Tomlin, 3 Har. (N. J.) 14, 35 Am. Dec. 525. A court which has ordered a judgment, which the clerk has failed or neglected to enter in the record, has power after the term at which it was rendered has passed to order the judgment so rendered to be entered nunc pro tunc, provided there be satisfactory evidence that the judgment was rendered as alleged, and of the nature and extent of the relief granted by it. 1 Freeman, Judgments (4th ed.), sec. 61. It is the universal rule, so far as our examination extends, that the entry of a judgment nunc pro tunc will not be allowed to injuri
In the case we are considering the plaintiff insists that Taylor, not being a party to the case originally, had no further interest in the proceeding than to see that the decree finally entered ivas in form and substance the decree pronounced by the court in November, 1893, and that the. effect of the judgment when rendered is a matter for consideration hereafter. The court apparently proceeded upon that theory, the recital in the final order made being that he acted upon the papers before him, showing conclusively that no inquiry into the rights of Taylor as a purchaser of the property affected by the nunc pro tunc decree was made. In Koch v. Atlantic & P. R. Co., supra, it is said: “Where it appears, however, as in the present case, that a stranger to the original judgment is sought to be affected by the nunc pro tunc entry, in order to bind such party, it must also appear that he had notice of the judgment really rendered by the court at the time his rights were acquired or his liability was fixed thereunder, or that he had notice of thé application to have such judgment entered, and an opportunity to appeal.” This court held the same view; judging from the language used in Hyde v. Michelson, 52 Neb. 680. In the third subdivision of the opinion it is said: “It appears, from the evidence introduced on the hearing of the motion for the
By the Court: For the reasons• stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.