Wilcox v. Saunders

4 Neb. 569
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 4 Neb. 569 (Wilcox v. Saunders) 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
Wilcox v. Saunders, 4 Neb. 569 (Neb. 1876).

Opinion

Gantt, J.

In the consideration of this case, it seems necessary in the first place to recur to a former suit between the parties to this action. September 15th, 1870, Saunders ■ brought suit against Wilcox for the specific performance of a contract entered into between these parties, wherein Wilcox agreed to convey to Saunders a certain parcel of land. This suit was determined December 7th, 1872, and the court found that such contract was made between the parties, and that the plain tiff was entitled to a specific performance of the contract, and to a deed for the land from the defendant; and further found that an accounting should be had between the parties, and that the plaintiff had paid the defendant on said contract for said land over and above the amount due therefor; and further found “that for the rent, use and occupation of the land, and improvements, and all damages thereto by [573]*573defendant, further suit must he had, or adjustment made therefor by the parties as they see fit.” It was decreed that the defendant execute and deliver to the plaintiff, within twenty days, a good and sufficient deed for the premises, and in default of him doing so, that the sheriff of the county, as master commissioner in that behalf, make a deed to the plaintiff, and that the defendant pay to the plaintiff the balance found due to him. After-wards the decree was so modified as to extend the time for making such deed to sixty days, upon condition that the defendant execute to plaintiff and deposit with the clerk of the court for the use of plaintiff such deed for said premises, and at the end of which time, if the defendant shall not have procured the case to be docketed in the supreme court and given the undertaking required by law, the clerk shall deliver said deed to the plaintiff. April 13, 1873, the clerk delivered the deed to the plaintiff; and on the twenty-sixth day of the same month the defendant filed a transcript of the case in the supreme court, which was taken and filed as an appeal, and not upon petition in error.

The case now under consideration is an action in tort for trespass, waste' and other wrongful acts alleged to have been committed by Wilcox, defendant in the court below, upon the same premises in controversy in the former suit. And as one ground of defense in this action, the defendant set up in his answer, that he had taken an appeal from the decree in the former case to the supreme coiirt, and that the same was still pending in said court; and therefore he insists that the court erred in admitting the record and decree in the former case to be received in evidence on the part of plaintiff to show a determination of the controversy between the j>arties in respect to the land. It may be conceded that, if an appeal authorized by law, had been duly taken from the decree in the former suit to and was still pend[574]*574ing in the supreme court, the pendency of such appeal would be a bar to this action, for the appeal brings the case into the appellate court for trial de novo, and therefore all matters involved in, or depending on the determination of such case, could not properly be litigated in another action between the same parties while such appeal is pending. But did the defendant have the former case in the supreme court upon an appeal authorized by law?

An appeal is not a remedy to cure or remove an error in matter of law only, but it is a re-trial of the whole case upon the pleadings and proofs. In 3 Bouvier’s Institutes, 70, it is said that an appeal, in a civil suit, is a proceeding unknown to the common law. It is authorized by statute in a variety of cases, and is regulated entirely by the provisions of the act; it cannot be extended beyond the plain and obvious import of the statute granting it.

By act of February 15th, 1864, incorporated in the revised code of 1866, as title XXIV, entitled “ Chancery,” the right of appeal in equity cases was provided for, and the necessary provisions were made regulating the practice in such appeals; but by the act of June 19th, 1867, this entire title, entitled “Chancery” was repealed, and hence, the statutory right of appeal from the district court to the supreme court in equity cases then wholly ceased to exist. And the settled rule of law seems to be that when an act is repealed, it must be considered the same as if it had never existed, except such parts, if any, which are saved by the repealing statute. Butler v. Palmer, 1 Hill, 328. Surtees v. Ellison, 4 Mann & Pyl., 586.

It will not be questioned that to obtain redress by a¡3peal, the right to appeal must exist at the time; this right is not one at common law; it can only exist by statute, and as there was no statute granting such right [575]*575of appeal, at the time the decree was rendered, the legal sequence is, that there was no appeal, and therefore the filing of the transcript in the supreme court as an appeal in the former suit was a mere nulity — and I may remark by way of parenthesis it was afterwards so considered by the court, and for that reason dismissed. But did the defendant Wilcox, acquire any right of appeal under the provisions of. the act of March 3d, 1873? This is entitled “an act to provide for appeals in actions of equity;” and the first section simply grants the right of and regulates the practice in such appeals. The second section provides that “in actions hereafter heard and determined, when the proofs and testimony are taken orally before the court, on the hearing of the cause, the same shall be reduced to writing, in form similar to bills of exceptions and be allowed by the judge hearing the cause, as in cases at law.” In this respect, then, by express terms the right applies only to suits “heard and determined ” after the passage of the act. By the third section, the right of a supersedeas by bond, is expressly limited to cases pending and undetermined at the time of the passage of the act, and to actions brought thereafter. And in the whole act there certainly is no provision giving it a retrospective operation; on the contrary its whole tenor clearly indicates that it should apply only to causes determined after its passage. In the interpretation of statutes, it is a familiar doctrine that they can have no retrospective operation beyond the time of their commencement, •unless so declared by express words or positive enactment, and in such case they will be considered as inoperative and void, if they affect or change vested rights. Butler v. Palmer, supra. Calkins v. Calkins, 3 Barb., 310. Burch v. Newberry, 10 New York, 392. 1 Kent Gom., 455. It is therefore very clear that the defendant acquired no rights under this last named statute.

[576]*576Again, as another defense in the case under consideration, the defendant alleges that the plaintiff in his petition in the former suit claimed for use and occupation of the premises, prior to and during the pendency of that suit, and that the said suit is still pending in the supreme court.. As already shown that suit was not pending in the supreme court.

But can an action in tort and one purely in equity be joined in the same petition? If it cannot, then there is clearly no error in the ruling of the court in admitting the record of the former suit in evidence for the purpose for which it was offered.

In the discussion of this question it may be proper in the first place to recur briefly to the past legislation of the territory in respect to law and equity jurisprudence.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Heckman v. Marchio
296 Neb. 458 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2017)
State v. Wyss
370 N.W.2d 745 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1985)
Wischmann v. Raikes
97 N.W.2d 551 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1959)
CAPITAL BRIDGE COMPANY v. County of Saunders
83 N.W.2d 18 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1957)
From v. Sutton
56 N.W.2d 441 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1953)
Utilities Insurance v. Stuart
278 N.W. 827 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1938)
McCord v. McCord
258 N.W. 474 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1935)
Berg v. Griffiths
252 N.W. 918 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1934)
Gentle v. Pantel Realty Co.
234 N.W. 574 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1931)
Travelers Insurance v. Ohler
227 N.W. 449 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1929)
Haight v. Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway Co.
154 N.W. 836 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1915)
Schultz v. Wise
141 N.W. 813 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1913)
Richardson v. Fitzgerald
109 N.W. 866 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1906)
Hopkins v. Washington County
77 N.W. 53 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1898)
Pollock v. School District No. 42
74 N.W. 393 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1898)
Nebraska Loan & Trust Co. v. Lincoln & Black Hills Railroad
73 N.W. 546 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1897)
State ex rel. Skirving v. Bethea
61 N.W. 578 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1895)
Garczynski v. Russell
27 N.Y.S. 461 (New York Supreme Court, 1894)
Hart v. Barnes
24 Neb. 782 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1888)
State ex rel. Dodson v. Meeker
19 Neb. 444 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1886)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Neb. 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcox-v-saunders-neb-1876.