Case Name: Phillip Horn, appellant, v. Jason G. Miller, appellee
Court: Nebraska Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Nebraska
Decision Date: 1886-07
Citations: 20 Neb. 98
Docket Number: 
Parties: Phillip Horn, appellant, v. Jason G. Miller, appellee.
Judges: Cobb, J., concurs.
Reporter: Nebraska Reports
Volume: 20
Pages: 98–106

Head Matter:
Phillip Horn, appellant, v. Jason G. Miller, appellee.
Appeal: limitations as to time. In actions in equity either party may appeal from the judgment or decree rendered or final order made by the district court to the supreme court. In order to do so the party appealing shall, within six months after the date of the rendition of the judgment or decree, procure from the cleric of the district court, and file in the office of the .cleric of the supreme court, a certified transcript of the proceedings had in the cause in the district court.
-: -. The time within which to perfect such appeal begins to run at the date of the rendition of the judgment or decree, which is the date on which the court formally announces its conclusion and judgment, and not the date on which the clerk in vacation enters the judgment on the journal bearing the date of the annunciation by the court.
Motion to dismiss appeal from Cass county district-court.
Marquett, Deweese & Hall, for the motion.
Samuel M. Chapman and George W. Coveil, contra.

Opinion:
Reese, J.
This is a motion to dismiss the appeal in this cause for the reason that the transcript was not filed in this court until more than six months had elapsed after the rendition of the decree.
, The record shows that the cause was decided by the district court on the 29th day of April, 1884, and that the transcript was filed in this court on the 18th day of November of the same year — more than six months after the former date.
Upon the part of appellant it is shown by affidavit that the journal entry of the decree was not made by the clerk until the 15th day of Juné, 1884, and upon.a suggestion of a diminution of the record a transcript of the proceedings of December, 1885 term is filed showing the following entry:
"Phillip Horn, Plaintiff, Jason G. Miller, Defendant,
j j
December term, A.D. 1885.
And now on this 19th day of December, 1885, it being the 8th.day of said December term, a.d. 1885, this cause came on to be heard upon the motion filed herein, to amend the record so as to show the true date of the entry and enrollment of the final order and decree in said cause, supported by the affidavits of the clerk of this court and of Samuel M. Chapman, Esq; And the court being fully advised in the premises does find the facts set forth in said application, and proofs offered in evidence in support of said motion, to be true, and does order that said record be made to show that 'said decree and judgment was entered and made of record June 15th, 1884, and that said record be entitled.to full force and credit from June 15th, 1884, that being the date of the entry of the same."
The original record and journal entry is in the usual form and appears to have been entered on the 29th day of April, 1884. After the title of the case the recital is as follows:
"And now on this 29th day of April, a.d., 1884, it being the first day of said term of said court, this cause comes on for hearing on the pleadings and evidence, and was submitted to the court j on consideration whereof," etc. Then follows, in the usual form, the decree.
The single question presented is, when was the decree rendered from which the time in which to appeal would be given to run? If from April 29th, 1884, the motion must be sustained. If from June 15th of the same year, it must be overruled. We think clearly the former date. If the decree was rendered of that date the subsequent ac tion of the court by another judge could not change the-fact.
In Nuckolls v. Irwin, 2 Neb., 68, Judge Crounse, in writing the opinion of a majority of the court, uses the following forcible language: " The court, prefacing its judgment with the remark that no record of judgment appears,, does not destroy the fact, if one did appear. We will suppose the court to have overlooked it, or to have been misled by counsel. To call a judgment a finding makes it none the less a judgment. A summons is not an execution nor an almanac a pleading, even if called so on authority of a court." If the decree was rendered on the 29th day of April, 1884, the proceedings of December 19th, 1885, could not change the fact.
But the facts in this case are conceded to be that the decree or decision of the district court was announced from, the bench on the 29th of April, but that the journal entry was not written until the later date, at which time the-court was not in session.
Bouvier, under the sub-head of Requisites of Judgment,, says: " To be valid, a judicial judgment must be given by a competent judge or court at a time and place appointed by law, and in -the form it requires." Now, if the court was not in session, or the judge not in the county, on the 15th of June, it can hardly be claimed that a judgment or-decree could be rendered on that day.
"A judgment is the final determination of the rights of the parties in an action." Civil code, section 428. That determination must be made while the judge is present and the court in session. " All judgments and orders must be-entered on the journal of the court, and specify clearly the relief granted or order made in the action." Id., sec. 448.
" When the judicial acts or other proceedings of any court have not been regularly brought up and recorded by the clerk thereof, such court shall cause the same to be-made up and recorded within such time as it may direct. When they are made up, and upon examination found to be correct, the presiding judge of such court shall subscribe the same." Id., 447. This evidently includes judgments and decrees. Section 675 provides: " That in actions in equity either party may appeal from the judgment or decree rendered, or final order made by the district court, to the supreme court of the state; the party appealing shall, within six months after the date of the rendition of the judgment .or the decree, or the making of the final order, procure from the clerk of the district court, and file in the office of the clerk of the supreme court, a certified transcript of the proceedings had in the cause in the district court, containing the pleadings, the judgment or decree rendered or final order made thereon, and all the depositions, testimony, and proofs offered in evidence on the hearing of the cause, and have the said cause properly docketed in the supreme court; and on failure thereof the judgment or decree rendered or the final order made in the district court shall stand and be proceeded in as if no appeal had been taken."
It must be observed that the transcript must be filed in the supreme court within six months from the " date of the rendition of the judgment or decree." That date was April 29. The court must render the judgment or decree, while the clerk, whose acts are ministerial only, must enter them upon the records, thereby perpetuating the evidence of the fact.
Rendering a judgment is the annunciation or declaring the decision of the court indicated by the rule for judgment. Fleet v. Youngs, 11 Wend., 528. See also McCourtney v. Fortune, 42 Cal., 387.
In Freeman on Judgments it said that: "Expressions cccasionally find their way into reports and text-books indicating that the entry is essential to the existence and force of the judgment. These expressions have escaped from their authors when writing of matters of evidence and applying the general rule that in each case the best testimony which is capable of being produced must be received, to the exclusion of every means of proof less satisfactory and less authentic. The rendition of a judgment is a judicial act; its entry upon the record is merely ministerial. A judgment is not what is entered, but what is ordered and considered. The entry may express more or less than was directed by the court, or it may be neglected altogether; yet in neither of these cases is the judgment of the court any less its judgment than though it was accurately entered. In the very nature of things the act must be perfect before its history can be so; and the imperfection or neglect of its history fails to modfy or obliterate the act. That which the court performs judicially, or orders to be performed, is not to be avoided by the action or want of action of the judges or other officers of the court in their ministerial capacity." Sec. 38.
In speaking of the entries of judgments in the judgment books the same author says: "The authority of the clerk to make this formal entry is founded on a judgment already valid, and whose validity is not destroyed by his failure to enter it. In many eases the record is not completed until after the adjournment of the term, and this practice seems to have prevailed at common law. As the judgment is final before its formal entry in this book, a statute providing that an appeal may be perfected within a specified time from the 'rendition' of the judgment, certainly commences to run from the time of the drawing up and signing of the judgment, and filing it among the papers in the case."
" The language used, in the opinion of the court, in the case of Genella v. Relyea, 32 Cal., 159, though not necessary to a decision of that case, is worthy of citation as founded upon reason. It indicates that the time for appeal begins to run, though no judgment be filed. 'The court announced its judgment, and the order for judgment was entered in the minutes of the court on the 15th of August, 1865. The judgment was therefore rendered and the time for taking an appeal commenced to run on that-day.' " Sec. 40.
The practice of the judge, writing out, signing, and filing with the clerk, his decisions does not obtain in this state as in many others, but instead thereof, the law provides for a trial docket (Sec. 321 Civil Code) which in effect supersedes the necessity of the judgment roll, or other memoranda by the judge. The formality of drawing up, signing and filing of judgments and decrees by the trial judges, and incorporating them in the judgment rolls, has been wholly abandoned. The court announces its conclusions, renders its judgment, and makes a memorandum thereof in the trial docket, which serves as a guide to the clerk in the performance of the ministerial part of writing the judgment or decree in the journal.
The judgment or decree is rendered by the court. From "the date or rendition of the judgment or decree" the. time within which to appeal begins to run.
Nor can the provision of the section referred to, which requires that the transcript shall contain a copy of the judgment or decree, serve to extend the time by reason of a failure of the clerk to make the proper entries at the time of its rendition. The law requires him to enter the judgments'and decrees upon the journal, and, as we have seen, provides that he may be required to do so by the court, or judge, without any proceedings being instituted by interested parties to compel action. The question as to what would be the effect in case of the absence of the clerk from the state, or his refusal to journalize the proceedings of the court, does not arise in this case, for it appears that ample time intervened between the entry of the decree upon the journal and the expiration of the six months within which the appeal might have been perfected. In such case the right to appeal cannot be destroyed by the default of the court. Dobson v. Dobson, 7 Neb., 296. But in a case where a party has not been deprived of the right •by the act of the court or its officers, and where sufficient time has elapsed in which to procure a transcript of the recorded entries, the court has no power to extend the time in which an appeal may be taken. Nuckolls v. Irwin, 2 Neb., 65. Glore v. Hare, 4 Id., 131.
In Glore v. Hare, it is said by Chief Justice Lake, that " if the clerk below fails to make up the transcript in time, the appellant should appear here and suggest that fact. If he files transcript after the time prescribed he cannot complain of the negligence of the clerk."
It is apparent that the appeal was not taken "within six months after the date of the rendition of the decree," as is required by the statute, and the motion to dismiss will be sustained.
Motion sustained.
Cobb, J., concurs.