Behr v. Willard

11 Neb. 601
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Neb. 601 (Behr v. Willard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Behr v. Willard, 11 Neb. 601 (Neb. 1881).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

The territory now embraced in the county of Nance was, until about the year 1878, an Indian reservation of the United States, and not within any county of the state. About that time the Indian tribe for whose benefit such territory had been reserved was removed therefrom by federal authority, and the lands embraced in said reservation brought into market by act of congress. Federal authority being thus withdrawn, the [603]*603said territory fell fully within the provisions of the act of 1873, Gen. Stat., 248, which are: “All counties which have not- been organized in the manner provided by law, or any unorganized territory-in the state, shall be attached to the nearest organized county directly east for election, judicial, and revenue purposes * * * If two or more organized counties or portions thereof lie directly east of any unorganized county, then the portions of territory of such unorganized county which lie either north or south of a line running directly west and in continuation of the boundary line between such organized counties, shall be attached to the organized county directly east of such territory for all purposes of this subdivision.”

Under these provisions, that portion of said territory embracing the real estate involved in this action was, for the purposes named, attached to Platte county, while the south portion of said territory was attached to Polk county. Thus the matter stood when the act of Feb. 13, 1879, was passed. [Laws 1879,148. Comp. Stat., sec. 46, chap. 17 and note.] An examination of that act, together with the provisions of law hereinbefore quoted, cannot fail to satisfy any one that in its passage the legislature had two objects in view, and those only, to-wit: to name the new county, and to detach the southern portion from its temporary connection with Polk county and attach it to the county of Merrick. The latter clause of the act, which provides that the two portions of the new county should remain attached to the counties of Merrick and Platte respectively, “ until the officers shall have been elected and the said county permanently organized according to law,” simply declares the law as it then stood. So far as that portion of said county which is of interest to this case is concerned, it was not affected in the remotest degree by the passage of said act, except in re[604]*604spect to the name of the new county. And by reference to the law according to whicih said county must bo organized, we find that the canvassing of the votes cast at the election for county officers called by the special commissioners, is the last act in the function of organization — the county is thenceforth permanently organized according to law. The sentence last quoted was intended by the legislature to mean precisely as though it read, “until the officers shall have been elected, and the said county thus permanently organized.” ¥e fully recognize the rulemf construction which, if possible, gives some meaning and purpose to every word of a statute, but to give to every superfluous sentence or repetition in language a volume of meaning would be quite as mischievous as to leave important provisions unconsidered.

Our attention is called to another act approved the same day as the act above referred to entitled “An act to appropriate money and applying the same in payment of the expenses of carrying on the prosecution of desperate criminal cases” [Laws 1879, 394], and also to another act approved a few days later “to authorize the judge of the district court to designate the county where an indictment may be found, and the person tried for any felonious offense charged to have been committed in any unorganized county or territory in this state, or in any county where no district courts are held,” etc. [Laws 1879, 62.] The best consideration that we have been able to give this act, as well as the other contemporaneous matters to which the attention of the court is called by counsel, lead to conclusions quite the contrary of those urged by him. This act, as well in the title as in the first section, clearly recognizes the fact that there were, organized counties in this state where no terms of the district court are held. And it leaves no room for doubt that [605]*605the legislature, in full view of such state of things, sought to remedy it by means which could only be sustained, if at all, by reasoning the very reverse of that which we are urged to follow in this case. So that neither from the terms of the act under consideration nor those of other acts then before the legislature, nor any contemporaneous fact or circumstance do we find any reason to doubt that it was the intention of the legislature that, upon the election of county officers and the canvassing of jthe votes cast at such election, by the special commissioners appointed by the governor, Nance county should take her place among the fully and permanently organized counties of the state.

Plaintiff in error presents another point. One of the defendants, John Behr, was a resident of Platte county where the action was brought. The statute, sec. 58 of the civil code, provides as follows: “An action to compel the specific performance of a contract of sale of real estate may be brought in the county where the defendants or any of them reside.” It will not be contended that a plaintiff can give a court jurisdiction of a given case by adding the name of an unnecessary party as defendant. It will therefore be necessary for us to examine the petition and see whether, as the case is therein presented, John Behr is a proper defendant. If he is then the action was properly brought in Platte county without regard to the question of the organization of the county of Nance.

In and by the said petition the said plaintiff charges that the defendants, "William II. Robertson and John Behr, on or about the 10th day of November, 1879, purchased of the defendants, the Willards, twenty-two feet of lot four in block twenty-one in Genoa, Nance county, for the sum of forty dollars, ten dollars of [606]*606wbicb sum was paid down, and the balance of thirty dollars to be paid on or before the 15th day of July, 1880. That before and at the time of said purchase it was agreed by and between the plaintiff on the one part, and the defendants, John Behr and W. H. Robertson, on the other part, that the plaintiff would advance and furnish to the said defendants money sufficient to pay for the said lot and to erect thereon a two-story building for a store with dwelling in the upper story, and that they, the said defendants, would take the contract from the defendants, the Willards, to and in the name of her, the said plaintiffj and she to hold and control the same until the defendants, W. H. Robertson and Behr, should repay to her all money by her advanced and interest thereon, and thereupon was to convey the said property to said defendants, Wm. H. Robertson and Behr. That in consideration thereof the said plaintiff' advanced to the said defendants, Wm. IT. Robertson and Behr, the said sum of ten dollars wherewith to make the said first payment, directing that they should see to having the papers made out as above set out and according to the agreement aforesaid.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Neb. 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/behr-v-willard-neb-1881.