Erbele v. Glerum

110 N.W.2d 184, 1961 N.D. LEXIS 79
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1961
DocketNo. 7936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 110 N.W.2d 184 (Erbele v. Glerum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erbele v. Glerum, 110 N.W.2d 184, 1961 N.D. LEXIS 79 (N.D. 1961).

Opinion

TEIGEN, Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the district court dismissing an appeal taken from the county court. The only question is whether the appellant, in attempting to perfect her appeal from the county court to the district court proceeded in such a manner as to confer jurisdiction upon the district court.

It appears Mary Owen Glerum unsuccessfully sought to contest a document purporting to be the last will and testament of Emma Ashbrook, deceased, in county court. The county court found in favor of the petitioner, C. H. Erbele, and entered its order admitting the document to probate as the last will and testament of the deceased, Emma Ashbrook. It is from this order admitting will to probate that the appellant attempts to appeal.

The district court was of the opinion that the appeal had not been properly perfected and that it, therefore, lacked jurisdiction. This was on the ground that the statutory requirements relative to service of the notice of appeal had not been met. It ordered the appeal dismissed.

The petitioner in the county court is the person designated as executor in the document admitted as the last will and testament of the deceased. He was the movant in the district court for a dismissal of the attempted appeal, and he is referred to as-the appellee in this proceeding.

The appellant, in order to obtain service upon the parties, including the appellee herein, caused a notice of appeal to be mailed to each of them by ordinary mail. A copy of the notice of appeal was also mailed by ordinary mail to the attorney of record in the county court for the ap-pellee. The appellant prepared and filed in the county court an affidavit of mailing, which affidavit discloses that all of the proper steps were taken to make service by mail as provided by Section 30-02-11, NDCC, except that the mailing was not by registered or certified mail.

The mailings in the manner afore-de-scribed were completed to all of the parties of the appeal, except one, within the statutory time provided for the taking of appeals from the county court as provided by Section 30-26-03, NDCC. The mailing of the notice of appeal to one party was made four days after the statutory time provided by said statute had expired. After the statutory time for appeal had elapsed, the appellant filed in the office of the county court an application for extension of time to perfect an appeal under Section 30-26-06, NDCC.

The county court on the same day summarily granted the application and entered its ex parte order extending the time for perfecting the appeal. Within the time extended, the appellant mailed a copy oí [187]*187the notice of appeal to all of the parties by registered mail and filed an affidavit of mailing with registry receipts attached.

The appellee, Erbele, filed a notice of appeal from the order of the county court extending the time for perfecting the appeal. It does not appear that this appeal has been disposed of in the courts as a separate appeal, but the order extending the time for perfecting the appeal was considered by the court in the motion for dismissal of the appellant’s appeal to the district court.

There were two motions made for dismissal of appellant’s appeal to the district court, each made by the appellee. By agreement of counsel, these motions were presented and argued together as one motion. Both motions were noticed for hearing after the date of the county court’s ex parte order extending the time for perfecting the appeal, and after the date to which such time was extended.

Following the hearing on the combined motions for dismissal of the appeal, the district court entered its order, dated September 30, 1960, dismissing the appeal. A copy of this order was served upon the attorneys for the appellant. However, the. original order was not filed in the office of the clerk of the district court for some time. Prior to its filing the appellant made application for and obtained a rehearing in the district court.

At the rehearing the appellant introduced the written admission of service from Rolf D. Glerum, one of the parties respondent in the appeal to the district court, in which he admitted timely delivery of a copy of a notice of appeal from the county court to the district court. Upon inquiry the district court was advised by the attorney for the appellant that he had sent the admission of service to Mr. Glerum, that it had not been returned until after the hearing on the motion for dismissal, and that he had not regarded it as of much consequence until he was studying procedure for an appeal to the Supreme Court.

The district court in its second memorandum decision on the rehearing found that the admission of service had not been sent the respondent Glerum until September 27, 1960, long after the time for appeal from the county court had expired. Thereafter, to wit, on December 13, 1960, the order dismissing the appeal originally entered by the court on September 30, 1960, was filed and docketed in the office of the clerk of the district court. Whereupon appellant took the instant appeal.

The appeal to this court is taken from the whole of the order dismissing the appeal from the order of the county court admitting will to probate. The order dismissing the appeal was grounded on the finding that the appeal was not properly taken as provided by law and that the district court was without jurisdiction.

The appellant specifies as error of law:
1. The court erred in determining that the appeal of the county court was not properly taken.
2. The court erred in determining that the county court was without power to extend the time for perfecting the appeal.
3. The court erred in determining that the court was without jurisdiction of the appeal.
4. The court erred in passing upon the validity of the order of the county court in a collateral proceeding.
5. The court erred in determining that none of the respondents had been served with notice of appeal.
6. The court erred in entering its order dismissing the appeal.

The party who makes a motion has the burden of sustaining the grounds thereof. A party who moves for a dismiss[188]*188al of an appeal from the county court, on the grounds that the appeal was not timely nor properly perfected, has the burden of showing from the records the facts necessary to sustain the verdict. Colwell v. Union Central Life Ins. Co., 59 N.D. 768, 232 N.W. 10, 88 A.L.R. 409. There is no evidence and no claim that the notices of appeal mailed, by ordinary mail, were not received. For the purpose of considering the questions involved, we may assume the notices of appeal mailed, by ordinary mail, were received in the due course of the mails by each of the parties.

The appellant’s contention that the notices of appeal were served in a manner provided by law requires a consideration of the laws of the State relating to service of such notice.

Chapter 30-26, NDCC, relates to appeals from the county court to the district court.

“Any party to a proceeding in county court, * * * who deems himself aggrieved by a decree or any order affecting a substantial right made by a county court, may appeal to the district court of the same county.” Section 30-26-01, NDCC.

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Related

In Re Ashbrook's Estate
110 N.W.2d 184 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
110 N.W.2d 184, 1961 N.D. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erbele-v-glerum-nd-1961.