Western Ethanol Co. v. Midwest Renewable Energy

305 Neb. 1, 938 N.W.2d 329
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 2020
DocketS-18-1192
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 305 Neb. 1 (Western Ethanol Co. v. Midwest Renewable Energy) 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
Western Ethanol Co. v. Midwest Renewable Energy, 305 Neb. 1, 938 N.W.2d 329 (Neb. 2020).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 05/08/2020 08:17 AM CDT

-1- Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 305 Nebraska Reports WESTERN ETHANOL CO. v. MIDWEST RENEWABLE ENERGY Cite as 305 Neb. 1

Western Ethanol Company, LLC, appellee, v. Midwest Renewable Energy, LLC, appellant. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed February 14, 2020. No. S-18-1192.

1. Judgments: Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. When a jurisdictional question does not involve a factual dispute, determination of a juris- dictional issue is a matter of law which requires an appellate court to reach a conclusion independent from the trial court’s; however, when a determination rests on factual findings, a trial court’s decision on the issue will be upheld unless the factual findings concerning jurisdiction are clearly incorrect. 2. 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. 3. 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. 4. Final Orders: Appeal and Error. The three types of final orders that an appellate court may review are (1) an order that affects a substantial right and that determines the action and prevents a judgment, (2) an order that affects a substantial right made during a special proceeding, and (3) an order that affects a substantial right made on summary appli- cation in an action after a judgment is rendered. 5. ____: ____. A substantial right is affected if an order affects the subject matter of the litigation, such as diminishing a claim or defense that was available to an appellant before the order from which an appeal is taken. 6. Contracts: Assignments. An assignment is a contract between the assignor and the assignee, and is interpreted or construed according to the rules of contract construction. 7. Contracts: Parties. Only a party (actual or alleged) to a contract can challenge its validity. -2- Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 305 Nebraska Reports WESTERN ETHANOL CO. v. MIDWEST RENEWABLE ENERGY Cite as 305 Neb. 1

8. ____: ____. Parties can recover as third-party beneficiaries of a contract only if it appears that the rights and interest of the third parties were contemplated and that provision was being made for them. 9. Assignments: Debtors and Creditors. If the assignment is effective to pass legal title, the debtor cannot interpose defects or objections which merely render the assignment voidable at the election of the assignor or those standing in his or her shoes. However, a debtor may assert as a defense any matter which renders the assignment absolutely invalid, ineffective, or void. 10. Assignments: Actions. An assignee of a chose in action assigned for the purpose of collection is the real party in interest and authorized to maintain an action thereon. 11. Assignments: Actions: Parties: Standing: Jurisdiction: Proof. An assignee can establish standing to bring an action in its own name, and thus show the court had subject matter jurisdiction, if it proves by a pre- ponderance of the evidence the existence of a written assignment under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-304 (Reissue 2016). 12. Evidence: Records: Pleadings: Appeal and Error. An appellate record typically contains the bill of exceptions, used to present factual evidence to an appellate court, and the transcript, used to present pleadings and orders of the case to the appellate court. 13. Evidence: Records: Appeal and Error. A bill of exceptions is the only vehicle for bringing evidence before an appellate court; evidence which is not made a part of the bill of exceptions may not be considered. 14. Actions: Judicial Notice: Appeal and Error. In interwoven and inter- dependent cases, an appellate court may examine its own records and take judicial notice of the proceedings and judgment in a former action involving one of the parties. 15. Actions: Judicial Notice: Records: Appeal and Error. An appellate court may take judicial notice of a document, including briefs filed in an appeal, in a separate but related action concerning the same subject matter in the same court. 16. Pleadings: Evidence: Waiver: Words and Phrases. A judicial admis- sion is a formal act done in the course of judicial proceedings which is a substitute for evidence, thereby waiving or dispensing with the pro- duction of evidence by conceding for the purpose of litigation that the proposition of fact alleged by the opponent is true. 17. Jurisdiction. While 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, such does not prevent a party from conclusively admitting the truth of an underlying fact required to establish subject matter jurisdiction by judicial admission. -3- Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 305 Nebraska Reports WESTERN ETHANOL CO. v. MIDWEST RENEWABLE ENERGY Cite as 305 Neb. 1

18. Estoppel. The doctrine of judicial estoppel protects the integrity of the judicial process by preventing a party from taking a position inconsistent with one successfully and unequivocally asserted by the same party in a prior proceeding. 19. Estoppel: Intent. Fundamentally, the intent behind the doctrine of judi- cial estoppel is to prevent parties from gaining an advantage by taking one position in a proceeding and then switching to a different position when convenient in a later proceeding. 20. Estoppel. Whether judicial estoppel is applicable turns on whether the court has accepted inconsistent positions from the plaintiff. 21. ____. Judicial acceptance does not require that a party prevail on the merits, but only that the first court adopted the position urged by the party, either as a preliminary matter or as part of a final disposition. 22. Trial: Waiver: Appeal and Error. Failure to make a timely objection waives the right to assert prejudicial error on appeal.

Appeal from the District Court for Lincoln County: Richard A. Birch, Judge. Affirmed.

Dean J. Jungers for appellant.

William J. Troshynski, of Brouillette, Dugan & Troshynski, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee.

Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke, Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ.

Funke, J. The judgment debtor, Midwest Renewable Energy, LLC (Midwest Renewable), appeals from the denial of its motion to quash execution of a judgment. Midwest Renewable argued to the district court that the original judgment creditor, Western Ethanol Company, LLC (Western Ethanol), had not assigned the judgment to Douglas B. Vind, the managing member of Western Ethanol who requested execution after Western Ethanol dissolved. The district court disagreed and found that the judgment had been assigned to Vind. Finding no merit in Midwest Renewable’s appeal, we affirm the decision of the district court. -4- Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 305 Nebraska Reports WESTERN ETHANOL CO. v. MIDWEST RENEWABLE ENERGY Cite as 305 Neb. 1

I. BACKGROUND A judgment against Midwest Renewable was transcribed in Nebraska in 2010. This is the second appeal brought by Midwest Renewable disputing the ownership of that judgment. In its first appeal,1 Midwest Renewable argued that Western Ethanol had no interest in the judgment because the judgment had been assigned to Vind. Midwest Renewable argues in the present appeal that there was no valid assignment to Vind. The following background describes the two different cases, which involve the same judgment, and the circumstances which led Midwest Renewable to assert contradictory positions when it filed appeals with this court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
305 Neb. 1, 938 N.W.2d 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-ethanol-co-v-midwest-renewable-energy-neb-2020.