Mathie v. Lemery

107 N.W. 365, 15 N.D. 312, 1906 N.D. LEXIS 38
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 107 N.W. 365 (Mathie v. Lemery) 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
Mathie v. Lemery, 107 N.W. 365, 15 N.D. 312, 1906 N.D. LEXIS 38 (N.D. 1906).

Opinion

Engerud, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the district court denying a motion to dismiss an appeal to that court from the county court.

1. N. Gallagher and W. A. Scouton filed a petition in the county court for the probate of the alleged last will and testament of one David Lemery, deceased, which said alleged will named said petitioners as executors thereof. The present appellants opposed the probate of the will, and Mrs. Lemery joined with the petitioners ill the effort to establish the validity thereof; she being the principal beneficiary thereunder. A hearing was had in the county court, and on January 23, 1905, that court made and filed a certain document styled “Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law,” in which the findings of the county court on all the issues of the contest were set forth, together with its conclusion of law to the effect that the contestants of the will were “entitled to judgment that the petition for probate be dismissed, with costs,” and “that said pretended will is null and void, and that the same be canceled of record and that probate thereof be refused.” Thereafter, on the 25th day of January, 1905, without the knowledge of this respondent or her attorneys, a so-called “judgment” was entered in the county court, which was a document in the form required for a judgment in the district court pursuant to findings and conclusions. After the recitals of appearances, etc., it reads as follows: “Now, by virtue of the power vested in this court and in pursuance of the [315]*315premises, it is hereby adjudged and decreed that .the petition for the probate of said pretended will be, and the same is hereby dismissed and denied, that said pretended will is null and void, and that the probate thereof be, and the same is, hereby denied and refused, and that the same be canceled of record. It is further adjudged that the said contestants have and recover of the said proponents •their costs and disbursements in said contest, taxed and allowed at the sum of $67.90.” On the next day after the entry of this “judgment,”, the findings of fact and conclusions of law were served on the attorneys for the proponents of the will, but no notice of the entry of this judgment was served. Thereafter, and on February 7, 1905, Mary Emma Lemery, by her attorneys, served on all the adverse parties a notice of appeal to the district court, and also filed the proper undertaking. The notice of appeal states that the appeal is taken from an order made and entered in the above-described probate proceedings by the county court on January 23, 1905, directing that a certain will, signed by said deceased and offered for probate, be held to be null and void and denied probate, “and the said appeal is taken upon the questions of law and of fact, and in general upon everything involved in determining the legality of said will, and of its being a will of said deceased.”

On the 27th of February, 1905, attorneys for the respondents on that appeal served notice that they would apply to the district court on March 7, 1905, for an order dismissing the pretended appeal. The grounds for such motion were that there was a defect of parties appellant on said pretended appeal, in that the petitioners for the probate of the will, Gallagher and Scouton, were not joined as parties appellant therein, and that said pretended appeal had been taken from the findings of the county court, and not from the judgment in said matter, and that said findings and conclusions were not an appealable order. Before this motion was heard the attorneys for Mrs. Lemery applied to the county court for leave to amend the appeal, and to extend the time within which to perfect the same, by being. permitted to serve upon Gallagher and Scouton an amended notice of appeal, which would include said petitioners as parties, and also describe the judgment entered January 25, 1905. The court, on March 1, 1905, made an order granting this application and directing that the amended notice of appeal be served upon Gallagher and Scouton and the [316]*316other parties in the contest, and that the time for so doing be extended to March 7, 1905. The order also required a further undertaking on appeal. Mrs. Lemery complied in all respects with this order by serving the notice on each of said parties and filing the required additional undertaking on March 2, 1905; and all the papers in relation to these proceedings for amendment were by the county court transmitted to the district court, and were on file at the time the motion to dismiss the appeal was heard.

In support of the motion to dismiss the appeal, counsel argues that the first notice of appeal was merely an attempt to appeal from the findings of fact and conclusions of law, and hence was neither an appeal nor an attempt to appeal from any order or final decree of the county court. This point is not well taken. Counsel calls our attention to section 6296, Rev. Codes 1899, which standing alone, seems to imply that a decree or judgment is to be entered in the county court, separately from the findings and conclusions, the same as in district court. This section, however, must be read in connection with section 6233, which defines what a decree or final order is. It is clear that the “judgment” referred to in section 6296 is the same as or a part of the decree or final order defined in section 6233, as “the final determination of the lights of the parties.” It is plain from the reading of section 6233 that the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and the matters which would in district court belong in the judgment are to be embodied in a single document, which constitutes the decree from which an appeal may be taken, under section 6254, Rev. Codes 1899. The method of rendering and entering a decree in county court is wholly different from that prescribed for the district court by the Code of Civil Procedure. In the county court there is no order for judgment. Nor is there any “judgment book” in which the decree or judgment must be entered in the first instance, and which entry is the act which constitutes the rendition of the judgment of the district court. In the district court the original judgment is the record entered in the judgment book, and a copy of this record is attached as a separate document to those containing the findings, pleadings and other papers, which together constitute the judgment roll. In the county court, the findings, conclusions and the statement corresponding to the judgment in the district court are embodied in a single document which constitutes the decree. This decree, after it is made and filed, is transcribed or copied into [317]*317a record book in which all orders affecting substantial rights, as well as probated wills, etc., are also recorded. Rev. Codes 1899, section 6193, subdivision 3. In short, in county court, the document signed by the judge and filed, embracing findings, conclusions and judgment, is the original decree, and the record book merely contains a copy, while in district court the reverse is true. It is therefore plain that the decision in re Weber, 4 N. D. 119, 59 N. W. 523, 28 L. R. A. 621, has no application to this case.

The fact that the amount of costs had not been taxed, and were therefore not stated in the decree of January 23d, when it was rendered, is not material. Whether or not the omission of the amount allowed as costs would defeat an appeal we need not decide. See, however, Williams v. Wait, 2 S. D. 210, 49 N. W. 209, 39 Am. St. Rep. 768.

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Bluebook (online)
107 N.W. 365, 15 N.D. 312, 1906 N.D. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathie-v-lemery-nd-1906.