Appeal by defendant from a judgment of district court for Gage county confirming a sale in a suit for tbe foreclosure of a mortgage.
Tbe errors assigned are: (1), that tbe judgment was not sustained by sufficient evidence; (2) that tbe appraisers were not disinterested and impartial appraisers; (3) tbe published notice of the time and place of sale was not given by publication for 30 days before tbe time of tbe sale; (4) tbe property sold for a sum grossly less than its fair market value, so much so as to make it appear to have been tbe result of fraud on tbe part of tbe appraisers; (5) that tbe appraisers were not selected by the coroner who made the sale, but by outside parties.
The second assignment is without merit. There is no competent evidence in the record to show that the appraisers Huston and Jeffrey were not disinterested and impartial appraisers.
The third assignment is also without merit. The sale was made September 16, 1912. The proof of publication shows that the notice was published in the “Weekly Wymorean” for five consecutive weeks, the first publication being on August 15,1912. It appears, therefore, that there was a strict compliance with the settled rule in this state, as announced in Cuyler v. Tate, 67 Neb. 317: “Notice of a judicial sale published in every issue of a weekly newspaper for thirty days before the day of sale is sufficient.”
The. fifth assignment is likewise without merit. The only ground which we can discover for the complaint set out under this assignment is that the coroner made inquiries as to who would make suitable appraisers, and in the course of his inquiries talked to Jesse S. Newton and the appraiser Huston. An attempt is made to show that Newton was prejudiced against the defendant, but there is no competent evidence to show that the appraisers Huston and Jeffrey were not reputable business men in the city of Wymore, and disinterested and impartial appraisers. That the appraisal which they actually made was a fair appraisal is fully established by what has already been said.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment is
Affirmed.
