Florence Lake Investments v. Berg

978 N.W.2d 308, 312 Neb. 183
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 2022
DocketS-21-350
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 978 N.W.2d 308 (Florence Lake Investments v. Berg) 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
Florence Lake Investments v. Berg, 978 N.W.2d 308, 312 Neb. 183 (Neb. 2022).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 11/04/2022 09:05 AM CDT

- 183 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 312 Nebraska Reports FLORENCE LAKE INVESTMENTS V. BERG Cite as 312 Neb. 183

Florence Lake Investments, LLC, appellant, v. Jason Berg and Mary Berg, appellees, David M. Kroeger, intervenor-appellee, and Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Incorporated, and Zoetis, Inc., garnishees-appellees. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed August 12, 2022. No. S-21-350.

1. Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. A jurisdictional question that does not involve a factual dispute is determined by an appellate court as a matter of law. 2. Judgments: Appeal and Error. When reviewing questions of law, an appellate court resolves the questions independently of the lower court’s conclusions. 3. Garnishment: Appeal and Error. Garnishment is a legal proceeding. To the extent factual issues are involved, the findings of the fact finder will not be set aside on appeal unless clearly wrong; however, to the extent issues of law are presented, an appellate court has an obligation to reach independent conclusions irrespective of the determinations made by the court below. 4. Jurisdiction. Parties cannot confer subject matter jurisdiction upon a judicial tribunal by either acquiescence or consent, nor may subject matter jurisdiction be created by waiver, estoppel, consent, or conduct of the parties. 5. Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. Before reaching the legal issues presented for review, it is the duty of an appellate court to determine whether it has jurisdiction over the matter before it. 6. Jurisdiction: Final Orders: Appeal and Error. For an appellate court to acquire jurisdiction of an appeal, the party must be appealing from a final order or a judgment. 7. Judgments: Final Orders: Words and Phrases. A judgment is the final determination of the rights of the parties in an action. - 184 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 312 Nebraska Reports FLORENCE LAKE INVESTMENTS V. BERG Cite as 312 Neb. 183

8. Judgments: Words and Phrases. Every direction of the court made or entered in writing and not included in a judgment is an order. 9. Judgments: Final Orders: Statutes: Appeal and Error. While all judgments not incorrectly designated as such are appealable, an order may be appealed only if a statute expressly makes the order immedi- ately appealable or the order falls within the statutory definition of a final order. 10. Final Orders: Appeal and Error. To be a final order subject to appel- late review, the lower court’s order must (1) affect a substantial right and determine the action and prevent a judgment, (2) affect a substantial right and be made during a special proceeding, (3) affect a substantial right and be made on summary application in an action after a judgment is entered, or (4) deny a motion for summary judgment which was based on the assertion of sovereign immunity or the immunity of a govern- ment official. 11. Final Orders. Substantial rights under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1902 (Cum. Supp. 2020) include those legal rights that a party is entitled to enforce or defend. 12. Judgments: Final Orders: Garnishment: Liability. An order over- ruling an application to determine garnishee liability in a postjudgment garnishment proceeding is an order affecting a substantial right made on a summary application in an action after a judgment is entered. 13. Judgments. A summary application in an action after judgment is an order ruling on a postjudgment motion in an action. 14. Judgments: Final Orders: Garnishment: Liability. A court’s order overruling an application to determine garnishee liability affects a gar- nishor’s substantial rights, because it undermines a garnishor’s ability to satisfy its judgment against a judgment debtor. 15. Statutes: Legislature: Intent. When construing a statute, a court must determine and give effect to the purpose and intent of the Legislature as ascertained from the entire language of the statute considered in its plain, ordinary, and popular sense. 16. Statutes: Courts. A court must reconcile different provisions of the statute so they are consistent, harmonious, and sensible. 17. Statutes: Intent. In construing a statute, the court must look at the statutory objective to be accomplished, the problem to be remedied, or the purpose to be served, and then place on the statute a reasonable construction which best achieves the purpose of the statute, rather than a construction defeating the statutory purpose. 18. Judgments: Debtors and Creditors: Garnishment: Property. Generally, executions and garnishments in aid of executions are mecha- nisms by which a judgment creditor can seek judicial enforcement of - 185 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 312 Nebraska Reports FLORENCE LAKE INVESTMENTS V. BERG Cite as 312 Neb. 183

a monetary judgment—usually by seizing and selling the judgment debtor’s property. 19. Final Orders: Garnishment: Property. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1315 (Reissue 2016) is inapplicable to a final order regarding a postjudgment garnishment in aid of execution directed to specific property where all rights of all parties claiming an interest in the specific property gar- nished have been adjudicated. 20. Garnishment: Liability: Service of Process: Time. A garnishee’s liability is to be determined as of the time the garnishment summons is served. 21. Judgments: Debtors and Creditors: Garnishment. The claim of a judgment creditor garnishor against a garnishee can rise no higher than the claim of the garnishor’s judgment debtor against the garnishee. 22. Judgments: Debtors and Creditors: Garnishment: Subrogation. A garnishor is subrogated to the rights of the judgment debtor and can recover only by the same right and to the same extent that the judgment debtor might recover from the garnishee. 23. Garnishment: Liability: Service of Process: Time. In determining the liability of a garnishee to a garnishor, the test is whether, as of the time the summons in garnishment was served, the facts would support a recovery by the garnishor’s judgment debtor against the garnishee. 24. Federal Acts: Pensions. The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 provides a uniform and systematic framework for regulation of employee benefit plans to ensure that the employee’s accrued benefits are actually available for retirement purposes. 25. Federal Acts: Pensions: Debtors and Creditors. The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 utilizes an anti-alienation stat- ute to bar creditors from collecting undistributed funds in an employee benefit plan. 26. Federal Acts: Pensions: Garnishment. The restrictions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 on assignment or alienation of pension benefits apply to garnishment. 27. Constitutional Law: Statutes. Federal preemption arises from the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution and is the concept that state laws that conflict with federal law are invalid. 28. Federal Acts: Pensions: Garnishment: Statutes. The anti-alienation statute of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 pre- empts conflicting state garnishment laws. 29. Federal Acts: Pensions: Garnishment: Liability. The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 does not preempt a garnishee, acting as a plan administrator, from being found liable under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1030.02 (Reissue 2016). - 186 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 312 Nebraska Reports FLORENCE LAKE INVESTMENTS V. BERG Cite as 312 Neb. 183

30. Debtors and Creditors: Garnishment.

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Bluebook (online)
978 N.W.2d 308, 312 Neb. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florence-lake-investments-v-berg-neb-2022.