EULALIA MIGUEL FRANCISCO, APPELLANT, V. SERGIO REMIGO DE LEON GONZALEZ, APPELLEE.
No. S-18-329
Nebraska Supreme Court
January 4, 2019
301 Neb. 1045
Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library
www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/
01/04/2019 08:06 AM CST
301 NEBRASKA REPORTS
FRANCISCO v. GONZALEZ
Cite as 301 Neb. 1045
- Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. A jurisdictional question which does not involve a factual dispute is determined by an appellate court as a matter of law.
- Jurisdiction: Service of Process: Waiver. Proper service, or a waiver by voluntary appearance, is necessary to acquire personal jurisdiction over a defendant.
- Jurisdiction: Service of Process. Where a party serves by publication but fails to comply with
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-520.01 (Reissue 2016) , the district court lacks personal jurisdiction over the defendant. - Judgments: Jurisdiction. A judgment entered without personal jurisdiction is void.
- Judgments: Final Orders: Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. A void order is a nullity which cannot constitute a judgment or final order that confers appellate jurisdiction on this court.
- Judgments: Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. An appellate court has the power to determine whether it lacks jurisdiction over an appeal because the lower court lacked jurisdiction to enter the order; to vacate a void order; and, if necessary, to remand the cause with appropriate directions.
Appeal from the District Court for Douglas County: W. RUSSELL BOWIE III, Judge. Vacated and dismissed.
David V. Chipman, of Monzón Guerra & Associates, and Dorian E. Rojas, of Immigrant Legal Center, an affiliate of the Justice for Our Neighbors Network, for appellant.
No appearance for appellee.
PAPIK, J.
A Nebraska statute,
BACKGROUND
Eulalia brought this action against Sergio Remigio De Leon Gonzalez (Sergio). In Eulalia‘s complaint, she alleged that Sergio was the father of both of her children: Christopher Darinel De Leon Miguel, born in 2010, and Yamileth Lizbeth De Leon Miguel, born in 2016. She asked that Sergio be declared the father of the children and that she be awarded sole physical and legal custody.
She also asked that the court make certain specific findings. She asked that the court find that reunification with Sergio was not viable due to abandonment and neglect and that it was not in the children‘s best interests to return to Guatemala. Eulalia moved from Guatemala to Omaha, Nebraska, while pregnant with Yamileth. The specific findings Eulalia requested would
Eulalia filed a motion requesting that she be allowed to serve Sergio by publication. In support of the motion, Eulalia submitted an affidavit which stated that she had not had contact with Sergio in nearly 2 years, that she did not know of any friends or family that knew Sergio‘s whereabouts, and that she knew of no other way to locate him. The district court granted the motion for service by publication, and thereafter, notice was published in The Daily Record of Omaha, a legal newspaper in Douglas County.
After a hearing on the matter at which Eulalia appeared with counsel and testified and Sergio did not appear and was not represented, the district court entered an order declaring Sergio to be the father of the children and awarding Eulalia sole physical and legal custody of the children. The district court declined to find that it was in the children‘s best interests to remain in the United States and not to return to Guatemala.
Desiring the specific findings the district court declined to make, Eulalia filed a timely motion to alter or amend. But, after another hearing, the district court again declined to make the requested findings. Additionally, the district court found that its earlier order establishing paternity and awarding Eulalia custody of Christopher should be vacated under
Eulalia then filed another motion to alter or amend, this time requesting that the district court declare Sergio to be the father of Christopher and award Eulalia custody of Christopher. It also again requested the specific finding that it was in the children‘s best interests to remain in the United States and not to return to Guatemala.
The district court denied Eulalia‘s second motion to alter or amend. In its written order, the court stated that while Eulalia
The district court determined that because Eulalia failed to constructively serve Sergio, it did not have personal jurisdiction over him. In addition, the district court stated that because Sergio was not provided with notice that was reasonably calculated to inform him of this action, any orders against him would not comport with procedural due process.
Eulalia filed a timely appeal.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
Eulalia assigns the following errors by the district court: (1) finding that Eulalia did not properly serve Sergio, (2) finding that it lacked jurisdiction to establish paternity and award custody with respect to Christopher, and (3) failing to find that it was in the children‘s best interests to remain in the United States and not return to Guatemala.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[1] A jurisdictional question which does not involve a factual dispute is determined by an appellate court as a matter of law. State on behalf of Marcelo K. & Rycki K. v. Ricky K., 300 Neb. 179, 912 N.W.2d 747 (2018).
ANALYSIS
[2,3] The district court ultimately refused to grant Eulalia the relief she sought in her final motion to alter or amend because it found that Eulalia had not complied with the statutory requirements for service by publication set forth in
[4] A judgment entered without personal jurisdiction is void. Johnson v. Johnson, supra. Because the district court‘s power to order any of the substantive relief Eulalia contends it should have turns on whether service was proper, we begin our analysis there.
Compliance With
Service by publication, while constitutionally permitted in some circumstances, is a poor bet to provide actual notice to a party of an action that affects his or her rights. As the U.S. Supreme Court observed in Mullane v. Central Hanover Tr. Co., 339 U.S. 306, 315, 70 S. Ct. 652, 94 L. Ed. 865 (1950):
Chance alone brings to the attention of even a local resident an advertisement in small type inserted in the back pages of a newspaper, and if he makes his home outside the area of the newspaper‘s normal circulation the odds that the information will never reach him are large indeed.
Based on the recognition that notice by publication is unlikely to provide actual notice, the Court held in Mullane that it was inconsistent with due process for known beneficiaries of a trust with a known place of residence to receive only notice by publication of an action affecting their rights.
Enacted within a decade of Mullane,
In any action or proceeding of any kind or nature where a notice by publication is given as authorized by law, a party instituting or maintaining the action or proceeding with respect to notice or his attorney shall
within five days after the first publication of notice send by United States mail a copy of such published notice to each and every party appearing to have a direct legal interest in such action or proceeding whose name and post office address are known to him. Proof by affidavit of the mailing of such notice shall be made by the party or his attorney and shall be filed with the officer with whom filings are required to be made in such action or proceeding within ten days after mailing of such notice. Such affidavit of mailing of notice shall further be required to state that such party and his attorney, after diligent investigation and inquiry, were unable to ascertain and do not know the post office address of any other party appearing to have a direct legal interest in such action or proceeding other than those to whom notice has been mailed in writing.
Eulalia does not dispute that for purposes of
Despite not sending notice to Sergio‘s last known address, Eulalia argues that the district court erred by concluding that she failed to comply with
Eulalia argues that she filed an affidavit that excuses her from not mailing a copy of the published notice to Sergio and satisfies
Even if we were to assume that an affidavit filed in support of a motion to serve by publication could satisfy
Neither does the affidavit refer to any investigation or inquiry of Sergio‘s whereabouts undertaken by Eulalia. It simply states that she does not know where he is or how to locate him. Eulalia contends this is sufficient, apparently taking the position that there was nothing she could possibly do to locate Sergio. As noted above, however, Eulalia knew where Sergio lived prior to her departure from Guatemala. Because Eulalia‘s affidavit provides no indication that she or
Compliance with
Proper Disposition of Appeal.
While the district court denied Eulalia the relief she sought concerning Christopher because it determined it lacked personal jurisdiction over Sergio, it did not vacate its earlier order determining paternity and custody as to Yamileth. As Eulalia correctly points out, the district court could not have had personal jurisdiction over Sergio for purposes of one child and lack it for the other child. Eulalia is incorrect, however, to the extent that she suggests that this incongruence in the district court‘s orders allows us to ignore the lack of personal jurisdiction over Sergio and proceed to the merits of the relief Eulalia seeks.
[5,6] In fact, the lack of personal jurisdiction over Sergio requires just the opposite. As noted above, an order entered by a court without personal jurisdiction is void. Johnson v. Johnson, 282 Neb. 42, 803 N.W.2d 420 (2011). And a void order is a nullity which cannot constitute a judgment or final
CONCLUSION
In light of the foregoing, and because the orders of the district court that purported to determine paternity and award custody of Yamileth were made without personal jurisdiction and were thus void, Eulalia has not appealed from a final order or judgment. We therefore vacate the orders entered by the district court as to Yamileth and dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
VACATED AND DISMISSED.
