44 Neb. 350 | Neb. | 1895
This was an action brought by Ralph R. Osgood against Patrick J. Grant, Mary A. Grant, and others to foreclose certificates of tax sales upon lots 14 and 15, in block 69, in the city of Lincoln. Answers and cross-petitions were filed by several of the defendants, setting up liens against the premises by virtue of certain judgments and decrees of foreclosure entered in the district court of Lancaster county.
The first complaint made in the brief relates to the placing of the cause on the trial docket for the February, 1892, term of the district court and the trying of the same at said term. The action was commenced on January 23, 1892, and on February 25, 1892, the appellants, by leave of court, were permitted to file their answer out of time. The answers and cross-petitions of the other defendants were filed at various dates between February 23 and May 16,1892. The February term of Lancaster county district court commenced on February 1 and continued until the following July. At the time the decree in question was entered, namely, June 16, and for at least thirty days prior thereto, the issues in the case had been made up. Section 281a of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “Actions shall be triable at the first term of the court, after the issues therein, by the times fixed for pleading, are, or should have been, made up; and when, by the times fixed for pleading, the ¡issues are, or should have been, made up during a term, such action shall be triable at that term. When the issues are, or should have been, made up, either before or during a term of court, but after the period for preparing the trial docket of such term, the clerk shall place such actions on the trial docket of that term.” It requires no argument to show that authority is conferred upon the clerk of the district court, by the provisions of the foregoing section, to enter upon the trial calendar for the term causes in which the issues are, or should have been, joined during such term. Such is the plain language of the statute.
What is the meaning of the language “during a term,” as used in the section under consideration? That it does not refer alone to the first day of the term is quite evident, but it applies as well to every succeeding day of the term.
The trial court found that there was due the plaintiff upon first cause of action set forth in the petition, for
Complaint is made of the allowing of the plaintiff an attorney’s fee in the action. ' The holder of a tax lien, on the foreclosure thereof, if the sale on which the lien is based is valid, is, under the statute, entitled to an attorney’s fee of ten per cent of the amount of the decree. (Sec. 181, ch. 77, Comp. Stats.; Toule v. Shelly, 19 Neb., 632; Adams v. Osgood, 42 Neb., 450; Alexander v. Thacker, supra.) The-awarding of an attorney’s fee in this case was proper; but as the amount allowed as such fee exceeds ten per cent of' the sum found due the plaintiff by the court, the decree in-that respect is modified by reducing the attorney’s fee tn $37.37 for the first cause of action, and for the second cause of action to the sum of $64.17.
The county of Lancaster sets up in its crossrpetition a lien on the lots arising by virtue of decree of foreclosure rendered in the district court of the. county. In the case at bar the county was given a lien for the amount of the decree, with ten per cent interest thereon. The only complaint made relates to the rate of interest allowed. Appellants insist that the county was only entitled to seven per cent interest. The evidence, without conflict, shows that interest was computed at the proper rate, on the decree in favor of the county, as well as on the decree in favor of' Mr. Burr. The findings and decree in the case under review are modified as indicated above, and, as thué modified, are
Affirmed.