RONALD AND LINDA KOWALEWSKI AND ROBERT AND SALLY SCHROETER, APPELLANTS, V. MADISON COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS AND ELKHORN VALLEY SPORTSMAN CLUB, APPELLEES.
No. S-21-229
Nebraska Supreme Court
January 28, 2022
310 Neb. 812
- Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. A jurisdictional question that does not involve a factual dispute is determined by an appellate court as a matter of law.
- Judgments: Appeal and Error. When reviewing questions of law, an appellate court resolves the questions independently of the lower court‘s conclusions.
- Statutes: Judicial Construction: Legislature: Intent: Presumptions. Where a statute has been judicially construed and that construction has not evoked an amendment, it will be presumed that the Legislature has acquiesced in the court‘s determination of the Legislature‘s intent.
- Time: Appeal and Error. In order to perfect an appeal, a notice of appeal and the docket fee (or application to proceed in forma pauperis in place of the docket fee) must be filed within the applicable period.
Appeal from the District Court for Madison County: JAMES G. KUBE, Judge. Appeal dismissed.
Joseph M. Smith, Madison County Attorney, for appellee Madison County Board of Commissioners.
Michelle M. Schlecht, of Copple, Rockey, Schlecht & Mason, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee Elkhorn Valley Sportsman Club.
HEAVICAN, C.J., MILLER-LERMAN, CASSEL, STACY, FUNKE, PAPIK, and FREUDENBERG, JJ.
HEAVICAN, C.J.
INTRODUCTION
The Madison County Board of Commissioners (Board) approved the Elkhorn Valley Sportsman Club‘s application for a conditional use permit. Ronald and Linda Kowalewski and Robert and Sally Schroeter (collectively the Kowalewskis) appealed to the Madison County District Court. That court dismissed the appeal for failure to pay the docket fee. We agree and, accordingly, dismiss this appeal.
BACKGROUND
The Elkhorn Valley Sportsman Club applied for a conditional use permit to operate a trap and skeet shooting range. A public hearing was held, after which the Board granted the application on September 15, 2020.
The Kowalewskis appealed that decision to the district court on October 14, 2020. With that notice of appeal, the Kowalewskis also deposited with the county clerk for Madison County a $100 check as a cash bond for costs, as well as a check for $82 payable to the Madison County District Court intended to cover the filing fee. In fact, the filing fee to perfect an appeal from the Board to the district court was, at that time, $83.
Day 30, for purposes of filing an appeal, was October 15, 2020. According to the facts as found by the district court, on October 16 (or day 31), an additional $1 was paid to the clerk of the district court. The record does not reveal any request or attempt by the Kowalewskis asking the county clerk to apply the money from the bond to the filing fee.
On December 2, 2020, the Kowalewskis filed a petition detailing their allegations that the Board erred in granting the conditional use permit. The next day, December 3, the Board filed a motion to dismiss on the basis that the docket fee had not been timely paid. On December 4, the Elkhorn Valley Sportsman Club filed its own motion to dismiss on the same grounds.
The district court held a hearing on the motions to dismiss. During that hearing, the court was asked to take, and took, judicial notice of its own file, “particularly those notations from the clerk concerning the filing fee and the notice filed by counsel.” Following the hearing, the district court dismissed the appeal for failure to pay the required docket fee. This appeal followed.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
The Kowalewskis assign that the district court erred in (1) sustaining the motions to dismiss, (2) dismissing the appeal, and (3) considering Elkhorn Valley Sportsman Club‘s motion to dismiss.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[1,2] A jurisdictional question that does not involve a factual dispute is determined by an appellate court as a matter of law.1 When reviewing questions of law, an
ANALYSIS
The primary issue presented by this appeal is whether the district court erred in dismissing the Kowalewskis’ appeal from the decision of the Board for lack of appellate jurisdiction.
The Kowalewskis’ appeal is governed by
State law covers that scenario in
Section 25-2729 specifically provides:
(1) In order to perfect an appeal from the county court, the appealing party shall within thirty days after the entry of the judgment or final order complained of:
(a) File with the clerk of the county court a notice of appeal; and
(b) Deposit with the clerk of the county court a docket fee of the district court for cases originally commenced in district court.
(2) Satisfaction of the requirements of subsection (1) of this section shall perfect the appeal and give the district court jurisdiction of the matter appealed.
We have repeatedly held that the failure to pay the docket fee is jurisdictional,3 and
In support of this contention, the Kowalewskis direct us to Stigge v. Graves4 and In re Application of Olmer (Olmer).5 In Stigge, the appellant was appealing under the prior versions of
In Olmer, we cited Stigge and noted that because
[3] At the time we decided Stigge, and later Olmer, we interpreted
The Board directs us to State v. Moore,8 which is factually similar, though unpublished. That case presented the Nebraska Court of Appeals with the issue of whether an appeal had been perfected despite nonpayment of the docket fee. There, the defendant failed to file either a docket fee or a poverty affidavit with his notice of appeal to the district court. The defendant had previously filed a $50 bond following his arrest,
and that bond was still deposited with the court at the time of his appeal. He sought to have that bond retroactively applied to cover his filing fees. The Court of Appeals rejected this argument and dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
[4] Nebraska law is clear that in order to perfect an appeal, a notice of appeal and the docket fee (or application to proceed in forma pauperis in place of the docket fee) must be filed within the applicable period.9 We have found no case law suggesting that a prospective appellant can pay less than the entire docket fee or that the county clerk has any responsibility in this instance to use money from a bond to make up the difference for an underpaid docket fee. There is no merit to the Kowalewskis’ appeal.
CONCLUSION
The Kowalewskis’ appeal is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.
APPEAL DISMISSED.
CASSEL, J., concurring.
Like my concurring colleague, I agree with the court‘s opinion. I write separately to respectfully contend that my colleague‘s suggestion regarding an alternative approach to
Historically, both county courts and quasi-judicial tribunals were recognized as inferior to the district court.1 Most appeals from county court still run to the district court.2 While in recent years a small number of statutory appeal procedures have been provided from an executive branch official to a county
court or county
Section 25-1937 provides no literal assignment of any power or duty to the county court. Instead, it states that the “procedure for appeal to the district court shall be the same as for appeals from the county court to the district court in civil actions.”6 It does not say that appeal documents shall be filed in the county court. The context of the phrase “the same as for” denotes an appellate procedure identical to appeals from the county court to the district court in civil actions—not an assignment of a function to the county court.7
Moreover, practical difficulties abound. The county court would have no records pertaining to the subject of the quasi-judicial proceeding. It would have no case established in its case management system. It would have no funds from which to pay for the costs of preparing and transmitting a record. It would have no means of certifying to the accuracy of any records of the tribunal from which an appeal is to be taken.
It would have no statutory recognition of the county court as superior to the tribunal. It would have literally no judicial function whatsoever regarding such an appeal. The scheme contemplated by my colleague would have the county court acting in a purely ministerial capacity, but without any statute imposing upon it any power or duty to do so.
I recognize that on several occasions, this court has at least hinted that
The right of appeal in Nebraska is purely statutory.12 I do not believe that this court can, by some change of statutory interpretation, remedy the ill fit of
STACY, J., concurring.
I agree we lack jurisdiction over this appeal, because the docket fee deposited by the appellants was a day late and a dollar short. I write separately, however, to suggest that in an appropriate case, we should revisit the appeal procedure announced in In re Application of Olmer (Olmer).1
In 2004, when the Legislature amended what is now
Olmer reasoned the procedure under
requires that the appealing party file a notice of appeal with the lower tribunal or decisionmaker,”6 instead of filing it with the clerk of the county court. The appellant in Olmer was found to have satisfied that jurisdictional requirement by filing his notice of appeal with the county commissioners and having it file stamped by the county clerk. Olmer did not elaborate on how to satisfy the jurisdictional requirement of depositing the docket fee.
In the instant appeal, the majority opinion appears to assume the procedure described in Olmer requires an appellant to deposit the docket fee with the county clerk rather than with the clerk of the county court. That is what occurred here, and while it may be a reasonable application
Olmer did not discuss the significant differences between the statutory duties of the county clerk and the clerk of the county court. The duties of a county clerk are set out in
docket fee, but the reality is there is no case or statute requiring the county clerk to do anything with a notice of appeal, a court docket fee, or court costs. Under the judicial procedure we sanctioned in Olmer, appellants must rely on the good will of the county clerk to accept and file stamp their notice of appeal, accept their tendered docket fee, and timely transmit the same to the clerk of the district court.
In contrast, it is the statutory duty of the “clerk of each of the courts” to file and carefully preserve all papers delivered to him or her for filing9 and to “perform the duties conferred and imposed upon him [or her] by other provisions of this code, by other statutes and by the common law.”10 In light of a court clerk‘s statutory duty to accept filings, I question whether Olmer correctly concluded that the jurisdictional requirements of
timely transmit the same to the clerk of the district court. The county clerk does not.
In my opinion, this court should, in an appropriate case, revisit Olmer to more thoroughly examine whether the statutory procedure for perfecting appeals under
