This is an appeal from a decree of the district court of Nance county, by which plaintiff’s title to certain real-property in said county was confirmed to the exclusion of the rights of appellant Burke. Briefly stated, the facts involved are as follows: On January 27, 1887, there was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, in-the circuit court of
It is urged that the judgment in the federal court is void because that court had no jurisdiction of Tewksbury, for the reason that, as is alleged, there was no service of summons on him. There were three parties named as defendants in the summons, and the return indorsed thereon was as follows:
“I hereby certify and return that on the 22d day of March, 1886, I received this summons, and on the 25th day of March I served the same upon the within named, E. Holland, Edward Cooper, and J. S. Tewksbury, in Weeping Water, Cass county, state and district of Nebraska, by delivering to and leaving with them a certified copy thereof, with all the indorsements thereon — J. S. Tewksbury acknowledging service hereon.
“Ellis L. Bierbower,
“17. 8. Marshal for District of Nebraska.
“By A. G. Hastings,
“Deputy U. 8. Marshal.”
On the summons was also this indorsement:
“District of Nebraska, ss.
“I hereby accept service of a copy of the within summons this 25th day of March, 1886.
“J. S. Tewksbury.
“By Tewksbury & Cooper.”
The other contention of appellant is dependent upon the construction which he' insists should be given a certain act of congress. It has already been stated that the judgment was rendered January 27, 1887, in the federal court. On, the 1st day of August, 1888, there was passed an act by congress of which the part material to our purposes is the first section, which provides: “That judgments and decrees rendered in a circuit or district court •of the United States, within any state, shall be liens on property throughout such state in the same manner and to the same extent, and under the same conditions only, as if such judgments and decrees, had been rendered by a court of general jurisdiction of such state; provided, that whenever the laws of any state require a judgment or decree of a state court to be registered, recorded, docketed, indexed, or any other thing to be done, in a particular manner, or in a certain office or county, or parish in the state of Louisiana, before a lien shall attach, this act shall be applicable whenever the laws of such state shall authorize the judgments and decrees of the United States courts to be registered, recorded, docketed, indexed, or otherwise conformed to the rules and requirements relating to the judgments and decrees of the courts of the state.” (U. S. Statutes at Large, v. 25, p. 357, sec. 1.) The appellant insists that by the enactment of this federal statute the transcripting of a judgment of that court in the office of the clerk of the district court of Nance county became indispensable to the continued existence of a judgment lien, and that, therefore, it of necessity results, from the conceded failure to file such a transcript, that the lien which existed previous to August 1, 1888, ceased to exist because of the enactment by congress of the statute of which the first section is above quoted. To sustain this position there has been cited Dartmouth Savings Bank v. Bates, 44 Fed. Rep., 546, a case decided in the United States circuit court for the district
In this state the statute authorizing the filing of a transcript of a federal judgment in the office of the clerk of the district court of a county other than the county in which such judgment is rendered was approved March 28, 1889. The statute passed by congress provided: “Whenever the laws of any state require a judgment or decree of a state court to be registered, recorded, docketed, indexed, or any other thing to be done in a particular manner or in a certain office or county, or parish in the state of Louisiana, before a lien shall attach, this act shall be applicable whenever, and only whenever, the laws of such state shall authorize the judgments and decrees of the United States court to be registered,” etc. In this language there is evidenced no intention to make the operation of the law retrospective, neither is there any provision giving time to register federal judgments already in exist
Affirmed.