Reynolds v. Adams
Reynolds v. Adams
Opinion of the Court
This is a proceeding for nunc pro tunc entries in an action formerly pending in the district court for Frontier county. The motion was denied, and the aggrieved parties appeal.
The district court refused to receive any of the evidence offered.- Most of this evidence is documentary, and appears in the bill of exceptions. All of the objections made in the district court by appellees’ counsel are, for practical purposes, identical and amount to this: All of the parties to the action were not notified of the application, the proceeding is barred by the statute of limitations, and the notice did not give warning that oral evidence would be produced. In this court the argument is confined to the alleged failure to notify all parties to the action and a conténtion that strangers to the record are not entitled to the relief demanded.
The entries requested are of an alleged decree 'foreclosing a real estate mortgage and an order confirming a sale by the authority of that decree. The applicants are Jane H. W. Reynolds, Estate of J. E. Seeley, deceased, and Paul S. Seeley. They allege that the action ivas commenced by Jane H. W. Reynolds against John Black, Mary E. Black, Harrison W. Adams, and J. E. Seeley; that Black owned the real estate in 1887, and during that year, after executing a mortgage thereon to
The law is well settled that the district court has the inherent power upon sufficient showing to enter upon its journal an order or judgment as of a prior date, if that order or judgment was made or rendered on that earlier date, but through the negligence or inadvertence of the clerk was not entered on the journal. Garrison v People, 6 Neb. 274; Phelps v. Wolff, 74 Neb. 44.
This proposition is not seriously controverted, but counsel for the Adamses say that the district court could not make that order unless all of the parties to the action were before it, and that the Blacks and J; E. Seeley have
Proof was also offered that the estate of Mr. Adams had been administered and his estate distributed among his heirs. Documentary evidence was offered showing a connected chain of title from the United States to Harrison W. Adams. The deed duly executed by Mrs. Reynolds conveying this land to J. E. Seeley was offered in evidence. So that, if the evidence excluded had been received, the proof unexplained would establish that but four persons had any interest in this land — Mrs. Julia A. Adams, doweress by virtue of her husband’s seizin and death, and the failure to make her a party to the foreclosure action; James W. Adams and Jasper H. Adams, as sole heirs' of Harrison W. Adams, deceased; and Paul S. Seeley, as the sole devisee in the will of J. E. Seeley, deceased. The appellants concede Mrs. Adams a dower interest in the land. So far as the Blacks are concerned, they cannot be affected by the entries requested, and it was not necessary to notify them of this application. Turner v. Christy, 50 Mo. 145. If the action were pending for any purpose, James W. Adams and Jasper H. Adams represent their ancestor. Urlau v. Ruhe, 63 Neb. 883.
The evidence offered should have been received, and, if the allegations in the motion are proved, the court journals should be made to speak the truth.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jane H. W. Reynolds v. Julia A. Adams
- Status
- Published