119 Neb. 503 | Neb. | 1930
This action was originally an appeal to the district court from the award of the compensation commissioner. Special appearance of the plaintiff (employee) was made and sustained in that court, and the defendant’s (employer’s) appeal to the district court was dismissed by that court without a hearing on the merits. From the order of dismissal the defendant appeals to this court.
It appears from the record that the hearing in this case before the compensation commissioner was determined on the 27th day of March, 1929; that notice of appeal from this award was duly given and the petition in due form was filed in the district court for Scotts Bluff county on the 3d! day of April, 1929. On the same day summons was issued by the clerk of the district court, which fixed the 14th day of April, 1929, as the return day and the 9th day
“ (1) No proper service of summons hath been had upon this plaintiff on said appeal, in that the purported summons issued in said case on the 3d day of April, 1929, makes the return day therein on the 15th day of April, 1929, instead of the 7th day of April as required by law, and makes the answer day therein on the 9th day of May, 1929, instead of April 14, 1929. (2) No copy of the petition of the defendant, Farmers Irrigation District, on said appeal was served with said summons as by law required.”
On the 20th day of June, 1929, the employer, Farmers Irrigation District, by written motion, moved the court to permit and direct the amendment of the summons issued and served herein by correcting the mistake of the clerk by the insertion of the true and correct date for the return of said summons and the insertion of the true and correct date of answer day therein, and to attach a copy of the petition to conform to statute. Thereafter on the 20th day of June the motion of the Farmers Irrigation District to amend the summons issued and served herein was overruled, and the special appearance was sustained and the appeal of the employer thereupon dismissed and alias summons denied. The employer now presents this action on the part of the trial court as error.
This action arises under the Nebraska workmen’s compensation law. Under section 3062 of that act, procedure in cases of dispute, so far as pertains to the matter before us, is as follows: “In case either party refuses to accept the recommendations or awards of the compensation commissioner, either party may submit to the district court a verified petition, setting forth the names and residences of the parties and facts relating to the employment at the
It is also to be noted that the statutory designation of this proceeding in the district court is “an appeal,” it being provided by section 3080, Comp. St. 1922, that the award made by the compensation commissioner shall be final, “unless notice of intention to appeal to the district court has been filed with the compensation commissioner within seven days following the date of rendition of the’order or award: Provided, that the order and award shall be binding and final, notwithstanding notice -of intention to appeal has been filed within the time limit, until the appeal has been perfected and service had upon the opposite party or parties.” • With reference to the filing of the statutory notice of appeal with the compensation commissioner, which is not questioned in the instant case, Flansburg, J., in Mucha v. Morris & Co., 105 Neb. 180, says: “The provision for the filing of notice with’the compensation commissioner was for the purpose of giving the adverse party knowledge of the appeal. Upon the filing of such notice, no further duty devolved upon the compensation commissioner. The filing of such notice did not affect the award; on the other hand, the award continues to be binding until the appeal is perfected and service had; It is apparent that such notice is for the benefit of the opposing party; and in such cases it is
It must be conceded that the proceedings before us evidence a bona fide attempt on part of the litigant to exercise the constitutional right “to be heard in all civil cases in the court of last resort, by appeal, error, or otherwise.” The simple mandate of the Constitution is that this right “shall not be denied.” So far as the party appealing is concerned, the compensation act under consideration contains but two requirements as to appeals: First, the giving of notice of appeal; and, second, the filing of a prescribed petition within a prescribed time. It seems admitted in the record that these requirements were substantially performed. The terms of this act under consideration impose on the clerk of the district court upon the filing
This court is committed to the doctrine that the right of appeal is a substantial one to be sustained if possible, and equitable relief in the form of a new trial will (be granted where a suitor without fault or laches on his part is deprived of some essential to review. Norfolk Packing Co. v. American Ins. Co., 116 Neb. 118.
Under the provisions of sections 1, 2, and 5, ch. 47, Laws 1881, entitled “An act providing for an appeal from the decision of the county court in certain matters,” prescribing that the county judge shall transmit to the district court a transcript of his proceedings within ten days after an appeal from an order in probate is perfected, it was held that, where a party has within due time done all that is legally required to perfect the appeal, the district court does not lose jurisdiction of the appeal by reason of its being filed six days late. Drexel v. Reed, 69 Neb. 468, 65 Neb. 231; Cheney v. Buckmaster, 29 Neb. 420. It would seem that to deny the right of appeal in the instant case wholly because of an official error of the clerk of the court when the appellant “has, within due time, done all that is legally required to perfect an appeal” is hardly consistent with the basic principle which the case last albove cited proclaims. However, the record in the case presents other matters for our consideration.
The language of the..statute involved (Comp. St. 1922, sec. 3062) is already quoted. By its terms, “upon the filing of such petition a summons shall issue and be served upon the adverse party, as in civil causes, together with a copy
It.is thought that the statutory language under consideration, “as in civil causes,” forming a part of section 3062, Comp. St. 1922, is synonymous with and the exact legal equivalent of “as in other civil actions.” It is to be remembered that our Civil Code has abolished distinctions between actions at law and suits in equity and in lieu thereof has ordained that there shall be but one form of action which shall be designated “a civil action.” Comp. St. 1922, sec. 8503. A civil action is commenced by filing in the of
The analysis of the objections sustained by the district court in the present case discloses that they are essentially two; first, that the summons issued and served was defective in that there was a misstatement as to the return and
Was the failure to serve a copy of the petition jurisdictional? The language of section 3080, Comp. St. 1922, doés not in express terms so declare. Indeed, by express reference, as we have seen, the compensation act incorporates within itself the provisions of the Civil Code relating to the issuance and service of summons, and thereby adopts these provisions as applicable to, and in all respects governing, its procedure. Under the Civil Code jurisdiction attaches on service and return of summons. There is no other jurisdictional requirement. By reference these Code provisions are embodied in the compensation act and are controlling, unless the added words, “together with a copy of the petition,” are inconsistent with the language of the Civil Code. But such is not the case, for they may be construed together and harmonized. The words last quoted then become “directory” in character, at least not mandatory in the sense of jurisdictional. This construction, it seéms, would Ibe necessitated by the fact that the entire proceeding, as we have already seen, is appellate in' its char
Reversed.