H. H. NEUMEYER ET AL., APPELLEES, V. OMAHA PUBLIC POWER DISTRICT, A PUBLIC CORPORATION, APPELLANT.
No. 38253
Supreme Court of Nebraska
May 26, 1972
198 N. W. 2d 80 | 188 Neb. 516
Matthews, Kelley, Cannon & Carpenter, for appellees.
Heard before WHITE, C. J., BOSLAUGH, McCOWN, and CLINTON, JJ., and COLWELL, District Judge.
COLWELL, District Judge.
Omaha Public Power District, appellant, hereafter called condemner, appeals a jury verdict and judgment of $10,072.50 in the district court for Douglas County, Nebraska, for a transmission line easement. Condemner assigns as error: (1) The district court had no jurisdiction because plaintiffs, H. H. Neumeyer and Esther Neumeyer, hereafter called cоndemnees, failed to secure approval of and file with the county judge their appeal bond within 30 days following the filing of the report of appraisers, contrary to
A brief summary of the pleadings is necessary. The report of appraisers was filed in the county court on January 18, 1968; condemnees filed notice of appeal and affidavit of service of notice of appeal on January 30, 1968; corporate appeal bond in due form, dated February 16, 1968, was filed and approved on February 23, 1968, 36 days after the filing of report of appraisers; transcript filed in the district court on February 29, 1968; on March 15, 1968, condemner filed motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction because of the late filing of the appeal bond; on March 29, 1968, condemnees filed petition on appeal without leave of court; on April 1, 1968, condemner filed motion for nоnsuit for filing petition more than 50 days after notice of appeal; on May 6, 1968, condemner filed motion for summary judgment; and on May 16, 1968, condemnees asked leave to file petition on appeal out of time. All of condemner‘s motions were denied. The issues were tried to a jury in May of 1971. Condemner preserved the asserted jurisdictional objections and apрeals the judgment.
“The securing of an appraisal of damages by the appraisers appointed by the county judge is an administrative act as distinguished from a judicial proceеding. The method of appeal is procedural only and contemplates a complete new trial upon pleadings to be filed as in the case of an appeаl from the county court. The present appeal statute contemplates the filing of pleadings and the framing of issues for the first time in the judicial proceedings in the district court.” Jensen v. Omaha Public Power Dist., 159 Neb. 277, 66 N. W. 2d 591.
As to thе first claimed error, this question has not been met directly since the present eminent domain statutes were enacted in 1951. However, two cases are close to the issue. In Jacobitz v. Bussinger, 179 Neb. 524, 138 N. W. 2d 839 (1965), the reрort of appraisers was filed on January 16, 1964, notice of appeal was filed on February 14, 1964, and on the same date an incomplete bond was tendered to the county judge who questioned its propriety. It was approved and stamped filed on February 19, 1964. This court said: “Where the record shows that an appeal bond was delivered to the proper official within the time provided by law, a delay by the official, for his own reasons, in actually performing, entering, or recording the official filing should not prevent the district court from acquiring jurisdiction on appeal.” The court also stated: “While the statute is mandatory in requiring an appeal bond in appeals from appraisals * * * and the bond must be filed within the time prescribed by statute, the filing date stamped on it, or the time the official records the formal filing, is merely prima facie evidence of the time it was received.” In Gebhart v. Tri-State Generation & Transmission Assn., 181 Neb. 457, 149 N. W. 2d 41 (1967), the plaintiffs therein gave notice of appeal and filed the required appeal bond, transcript of proceedings, and petition on appeal in the district court. The defendant gave notice of appeal, filed transcript of proceedings, and answer to petition on appeal in the district court, but filed no appeal bond. Plaintiffs dismissed their appeal and the district court dismissed defendant‘s appeal. This court, holding that the defendant had no pleading on file in the nature of a cross-petition, stated: ”
Jurisdiction “may be defined in law as the power to
“In construing a statute, the legislative intention is to be determined from a general consideration of the whole act with reference to the subject matter to which it applies and the particular topic under which the language in question is found, and the intent as deduced from the whole will prevail over that of a particular part considered separately.” In re Application of Silberman, 153 Neb. 338, 44 N. W. 2d 595.
We first examine related statutes: “Either condemner or condemnee may appeal from the assessment of damages by the appraisers to the district court of the county where the petition to initiate proceedings was filed. Such appeal shall be taken by filing a notice of appeal with the cоunty judge within thirty days from the date of filing of the report of appraisers as provided in section 76-710.”
“The party appealing from the award for assessment of damages by the appraisers in any eminent domain аction shall, within thirty days of the filing of the award, file a notice of appeal with the county judge, specifying the parties taking the appeal and the award thereof appеaled from, and shall serve a copy of the same upon all parties bound by the award or upon their attorneys of record.”
The statute in question here,
We hold that
Relating to condemner‘s second claimed error, condemnees made as a showing of good cause for the late filing of the petition on appeal that condemners had on file a pending motion to dismiss сondemnees’ appeal for lack of jurisdiction. Where a discretionary duty is imposed upon a district court to determine whether or not good cause has been shown to grаnt leave to a party to plead out of time, its decision will not ordinarily be disturbed absent showing abuse of discretion. See Jensen v. Omaha Public Power Dist., supra. Condemnees did file their petition on appeal 9 days late. The trial court did not abuse its discretion.
There being no error in the proceedings we affirm the judgment.
AFFIRMED.
BOSLAUGH, J., concurring.
I concur in the opinion of the court except that I would not include service of the notice of appeal as a jurisdictional requirement.
McCOWN, J., joins in this concurrence.
