Court Opinion

ID: 6649210
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:52:33.411683+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:59:35.974916
License: Public Domain

Irvine, C.
The defendants in error recovered a judgment against the plaintiffs in error before a justice of the peace in Merrick county, from which the plaintiffs in error prosecuted error to the district court, where the judgment of the jústice was affirmed, and plaintiffs in error now bring the case here for review.
The first error assigned both here and in the district court' is the refusal of the justice to sustain a motion to consolidate this action with another. Section 150 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that whenever two or more actions are pending in the same court which might have been joined, the defendant may, on motion and notice to the adverse party, require him to show cause why the same shall not be consolidated, and if no such cause be shown, the said several actions shall be consolidated. In order to justify a consolidation it must, therefore, at least appear that the actions might have been joined. There is nothing whatever in the record before us to show the nature of the other action or the parties thereto, and error in overruling the motion to consolidate, therefore, does not appeal’. ’
The other errors assigned in the petition in error in this court relate to the use of certain depositions. Several errors are assigned upon the action of the district court in sustaining the justice in overruling a motion of plaintiffs to suppress the depositions referred to. In the petition in error in the district court, however, no errors were assigned upon the justice’s ruling upon that motion. The only error *202assigned were upon the justice’s permitting the depositions to be read in evidence at the trial. These assignments áre preserved in this court by the fifth assignment in error, in which it is alleged that the district court erred in sustaining the justice in overruling the objections of plaintiffs to the reading of said depositions. We cannot here consider any errors not presented to the district court by the petition in error there. (Lean v. Andrews, 38 Neb., 656.) This prevents our reviewing the action of the justice in overruling the motion to suppress the depositions. As to his action in overruling the objections to their being read in evidence, this was matter occurring upon the trial. The case was tried to a jury. The plaintiffs in error might have excepted to the justice’s ruling and have procured the settlement of a bill of exceptions. They did not do so, and there is nothing in the record here or in the district court upon which to found this assignment.
Judgment affirmed.