Husband seeks review of the referee’s division of property in a dissolution of marriage proceeding. We dismiss the appeal.
A proceeding was held before a referee pursuant to 20th Judicial District Rule 17 and a “request for setting before referee and waiver” (the waiver) signed by both parties and their attorneys. Local Rule 17 provides for referral of certain domestic matters to a referee, and provides further that upon failure to file a motion to have the matter reviewed by the trial court within 10 days, “the order or action of the referee shall be final and shall not be subject to further review by the court.” The waiver was apparently authorized by Administrative Order No. 81-7, issued by the then-Chief Judge of the 20th Judicial District, and effective January 1, 1982. The waiver, which follows the language of the Administrative Order, states in part as follows:
“The parties hereby request that the Referee of the district court hear this matter. In so doing we waive our right to have it heard before a District Judge and our right to appeal the Referee’s decision to a District Judge pursuant to local rule 17. We understand further that in the event either party wishes to initiate an appeal, a motion for a new trial is to be filed and heard before the Referee and that in the event the motion is denied, the judgment shall be deemed final for purposes of any appeal which shall be to the appropriate appellate court and not to a District Judge.” (emphasis supplied)
Following the proceeding before the referee, husband filed a motion to alter or amend the referee’s decision, which motion was denied. Subsequently, husband filed a notice of appeal from the decree of dissolution entered by the referee on May 5, 1982, and the referee’s denial of husband’s motion to alter or amend on June 9, 1982. It is undisputed that the referee’s rulings were never adopted by the trial court as its own order.
In re Marriage of Debrecini,
Since there is no final order from which an appeal may be taken, this appeal is dismissed.
