Lindgren v. SCHOOL DIST. OF BRIDGEPORT IN MORRILL CTY.

102 N.W.2d 599, 170 Neb. 279, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 77
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1960
Docket34740
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 102 N.W.2d 599 (Lindgren v. SCHOOL DIST. OF BRIDGEPORT IN MORRILL CTY.) 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
Lindgren v. SCHOOL DIST. OF BRIDGEPORT IN MORRILL CTY., 102 N.W.2d 599, 170 Neb. 279, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 77 (Neb. 1960).

Opinion

Carter, J.

This is a suit by a landowner and his wife to enjoin the defendants from giving effect to an order of the county superintendent of schools detaching certain lands of plaintiffs from School District No. 50 and annexing such lands to the School District of the city of Bridgeport. The trial court held the proceedings void and granted injunctive relief. The School District of the city of Bridgeport and the members of its board of education have appealed.

The School District of the city of Bridgeport is a *282 Class III district which we shall hereafter refer to as the Bridgeport district. School District No. 50 is a Class I district which we shall refer to as District 50. The remaining defendants are the members of the board of education of the Bridgeport district, the county superintendent, county clerk, county treasurer, and county assessor of Morrill County, the members of the school board of District 50, and the petitioning legal voters of that district.

The plaintiffs have filed a motion to dismiss the present appeal on the ground that appellants have accepted the judgment of the district court in the present suit by refusing to permit Robert Lindgren, the son of plaintiffs, to attend the high school in the Bridgeport district. The record shows the following: The final decree of the district court in the instant case was rendered on August 20, 1959, and an appeal taken therefrom as hereinbefore stated. On August 29, 1959, the board of the Bridgeport district refused to permit Robert Lindgren to attend the Bridgeport high school. Plaintiffs sought a writ of- mandamus against the Bridgeport district to compel it to admit Robert Lindgren to its high school. The Bridgeport district successfully defended the action and a writ of mandamus was denied. No appeal was taken from this judgment. The motion to dismiss is without merit. We point out that a high school district is authorized by statute to refuse admission to any or all nonresident pupils. § 79-4,100, R. R. S. 1943. We point out further that the application of Robert Lindgren to attend Bridgeport high school was tendered on the basis, of his being a nonresident pupil which the Bridgeport district board could accept or reject as a matter of discretion under section 79-4,100, R. R. S. 1943. The rejection of the application under this authority cannot be considered an acceptance of the decree in the instant case. It seems to us that if the Bridgeport district had accepted the application of Robert Lindgren as a nonresident pupil, *283 it would then have taken a position contrary to its position in the instant case that plaintiffs’ lands were properly annexed and that plaintiffs thereby became residents of the Bridgeport district. In any event, the situation is such that it cannot be asserted as an estoppel against the Bridgeport district or its school board members to prosecute an appeal, or amount to an acceptance of the decree requiring a dismissal of the appeal.

The plaintiffs contend that there is no proper bill of exceptions in this court and that the only question to be determined is whether or not the pleadings sustain the judgment. As heretofore stated, the decree in this case was rendered on August 20, 1959. No motion for a new trial was filed. The appealing defendants ordered a bill of exceptions within time. Before the bill of exceptions was prepared, and on September 28, 1959, a new statute became effective which authorized this court to prescribe rules for obtaining a bill of exceptions. Such rules were prescribed and they became effective at the same time as the new statute. Admittedly, the procedure followed in procuring a bill of exceptions after September 28, 1959, was in accordance with the new statute and the rules of this court authorized thereby. The plaintiffs assert that the statute in force when the decree was rendered must be followed.

We point out that the new statute, section 25-1140, R. S. Supp., 1959, contains no saving clause. It is urged that the general saving statute, section 49-301, R. R. S. 1943, keeps the old procedure in effect. This contention is without merit. In Lovelace v. Boatsman, 113 Neb. 145, 202 N. W. 418, this court said: “A litigant has no vested right in the mode of procedure, and an action commenced before an enactment changing the procedure in the court where the action is pending, after the enactment becomes effective, is properly triable under the changed method.” See, also, Norris v. Tower, 102 Neb. 434, 167 N. W. 728; Department of Banking *284 v. Hedges, 136 Neb. 382, 286 N. W. 277; Krepcik v. Interstate Transit Lines, 151 Neb. 663, 38 N. W. 2d 533. The general saving clause found in section 49-301, R. R. S. 1943, providing that the repeal of a statute shall in no manner affect pending actions founded thereon, nor causes of action not in suit that accrued prior to any such repeal, does not save to a party the procedures of the repealed law. The general saving statute relates to substantive and not procedural law. Lovelace v. Boatsman, supra; Ensley v. State, 4 Okl. Cr. 49, 109 P. 250; Wheelock v. Myers, 64 Kan. 47, 67 P. 632.

Plaintiffs rely primarily on Cozad v. McKeone, 149 Neb. 833, 32 N. W. 2d 760. That case is clearly not applicable. The final order appealed from in that case was rendered at a date subsequent to the effective date of the amendatory statute. We held that the procedures of the new statute applied to the appeal from such a final order and that a bill of exceptions should have been procured under the law in effect when the final order was rendered. The case has no application to a state of facts such as we have in the present case. The bill of exceptions was properly procured and is here for consideration by the court.

Plaintiffs further contend that no motion for a new trial having been filed the only question before the court is the sufficiency of the pleadings to sustain the judgment. Such is not the law. It has been the consistent holding of this court that in an equity action a motion for a new- trial is required to secure a review of rulings of the trial court on alleged errors occurring at the trial, such as rulings on the rejection or reception of evidence. It is required for no other purpose. See, Timmerman v. Timmerman, 163 Neb. 704, 81 N. W. 2d 135; Rush v. Heinisch, 157 Neb. 545, 60 N. W. 2d 608; Nemetz v. Nemetz, 147 Neb. 187, 22 N. W. 2d 619.

Prior to February 6, 1958, plaintiffs were the owners of- certain described lands in District 50. On or before that date a petition was circulated among the voters of *285 District 50 seeking to detach certain lands, including those of plaintiffs, from District 50 and to annex such lands to the Bridgeport district. A sworn list of all the voters in District 50 was attached to such petition. The.petition contained signatures in excess of 55 percent of all the voters of District' 50. On February 13, 1958,. the board of the Bridgeport district' accepted the lands described in the petition, and on March 31, 1958, it filed its petition with the county superintendent for a change in the boundary of its district by including . the lands described in the petition circulated among the voters of District 50.

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Bluebook (online)
102 N.W.2d 599, 170 Neb. 279, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindgren-v-school-dist-of-bridgeport-in-morrill-cty-neb-1960.