Case ID: neb_61/html/0068-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Norval, C.-J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Schuyler Building & Loan Association, appellee, v. Harriet Fulmer et al., appellants.
    Filed December 18, 1900.
    No. 9,310.
    1. Decree of Foreclosure: Sale oe Mortgaged Property: Pinal Order. A decree foreclosing a real estate mortgage, with the usual provision for a sale of the mortgaged property, is a final order or judgment within the meaning of the Code.
    3. Vacation of Decree: Power oe District Court: Statute. A district court is without power to vacate a decree entered by it at a prior term foreclosing a mortg-ag'e, except for the causes and in the manner prescribed by statute.
    3. Motion for New Trial: Limitation: Except on the ground of newly-discovered evidence, a motion fpr a Dew trial must be filed within three days after the judgment is rendered.
    Appeal from the district court for Colfax county. Heard below before Marshall, J.
    
      Reversed.
    
    
      George R. Doughty, for appellants.
    
      G. J. Phelps, contra.
    
   Norval, C.-J.

This suit was instituted in the district court of Colfax county by the Schuyler Building & Loan Association, to foreclose a certain mortgage to it executed and delivered by Harriet Fulmer and Henry M. Fulmer. The Fulmers filed an answer to the petition, setting up usury in the transaction. Trial was had on the issues in the case on August 10, 1896. The court found that the' condition of the mortgage had been broken by the Fulmers-, that there was due plaintiff thereon the sum of $363, and directed the sale of the property, in the case of failure to pay the amount due within twenty days, the decree being in the form usual in foreclosure suits. On September 28 following, and during the same term, plaintiff filed a motion in the case, asking the court to set aside the findings and order so made, on the ground that the same were not supported by sufficient evidence, and were contrary to law. Shortly afterwards the court adjourned ■vine dir, without having acted upon this motion. At the next regular term, however, the court granted the motion, set. aside its former decree, and thereupon entered a new decree against the Fulmers in a larger amount, to-wit, in the sum of $893.60, and directed the mortgaged premises sold, as was ordered done in the first decree. The Fulmers appealed, claiming that the district court had no jurisdiction either to set aside the first decree by it rendered, or to enter the second decree, since the one first entered was a final judgment and, as such, could not be set aside, even at the term when pronounced, except by the court of its own motion, or upon the granting of a motion for a new trial, which motion should have been filed within three days of the entry of said decree, it not having been based on newly-discovered evidence, as provided by the Code; that the district court had no jurisdiction to set it aside at a succeeding term, except on a motion for a new trial having been properly filed by the plaintiff, and that the proceeding was, therefore, void. To this counsel for plaintiff answers as follows: “The finding and order of sale, called a decree, in this, as in all foreclosure suits under our Code, is not a judgment. It does not finally dispose of the case. The sale follows under the order entered, and is reported, and if confirmed, then, and not until then, is the real final judgment in the case entered. Up to that time the case is open for such corrections, amendments and orders as justice to the parties may require.” To this course of reasoning we can not assent. It is too clear to need the citation of authorities,-Fiat a decree in foreclosure cases is a final judgment. The reports of this state teem with appeals and cases brought here on error proceedings from decrees so entered, and we do not remember that any counsel has ever before so much as doubted the proposition that such decrees are final judgments. Such decrees are final orders or judgments within the meaning of the Code and are reviewable before sale and confirmation. This being the case, the lower court could only set aside the first decree entered by granting a motion for a new trial, which should have been filed within three days after the entering of said decree. That not having been done, and the term of court at which the first decree was entered having terminated without any action on the part of the court to set it aside on its own motion, it lost jurisdiction to vacate or in anywise modify it. Hence the action of the lower court in attempting to set aside the decree of August 10,. and in entering the second decree, was void and of no effect, and said second decree is, therefore, set aside and reversed, and the former decree reinstated.

Reversed.