74 Neb. 393 | Neb. | 1905
This action was formerly before this court and disposed of by an opinion by Mr. Commissioner Day, reported in 3 Neb. (Unof.) 534. The suit was begun to
After the cause was remanded, the plaintiff by leave of court filed an amended petition, setting forth with greater amplitude the cause of action pleaded in the former reply, and for a second cause of action pleading that he had been in adverse possession of the premises in dispute for more than ten years immediately preceding the beginning of the suit. A motion to compel the plaintiff to elect upon which of the two causes of action, claimed to be mutually
. Appellant in his brief relies upon three propositions which are propounded by him in his own language as follows: (1) “The court erred in compelling the plaintiff to elect.” (2) “The plaintiff is entitled to judgment on the pleadings.” (3) “That plaintiff is entitled to judgment on the evidence.”
As to the first of these propositions, counsel for appellees object, we think rightfully, that it could have been properly presented only by a petition in error. This court cannot, upon an appeal bringing a cause here for a trial de novo, reform the pleadings by introducing issues not tried in the district court, the trial of which would or might require the examination of evidence which neither party was called upon to produce or could have successfully offered in the court below. It is not a solution of the difficulty for the appellant to say, as he does say, that there is enough evidence in the record to maintain the issue of adverse possession in his behalf. Although that assertion be true, appellees were not bound, and might not have been permitted, to introduce evidence in rebuttal, and the only means of correcting the error, if it be one, is a reversal and a new trial, an object which, under the law as it existed when this appeal was taken, was not the office of an appeal to accomplish.
The second proposition is founded upon the contention that the defenses of the statute of limitations and of estoppel are both of them technical pleas of confession and
We thus arrive at a consideration of appellant’s third proposition, which is that he is entitled to a judgment on the evidence. The evidence establishes, as we think without serious conflict, that the plaintiff was the owner of
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing
Affirmed.