Shawn E. ex rel. Grace E. v. Diane S.
Shawn E. ex rel. Grace E. v. Diane S.
Opinion of the Court
**290INTRODUCTION
As a matter of first impression, we consider whether a judgment debtor who, using the procedure specified in
BACKGROUND
The State of Nebraska initiated a garnishment action against Shawn, an inmate residing at the Nebraska State Penitentiary, alleging that he owed $3,097.67 in past due child support and $2,499.54 in medical support for a total of $5,597.21. It caused a summons and order of garnishment to be sent to "the garnishee, [the] Nebraska Department of Corrections," to recover money in its possession belonging to Shawn.
Shawn requested a hearing, asserting that he did not owe the amount of the judgment. A hearing was held, during which Shawn appeared telephonically. The State offered certified copies of Shawn's Department of Health and Human Services child support payment history and medical support payment history, which were received into evidence. The court took **291judicial notice of a journal entry establishing Shawn's child support obligation in the amount of $379 per month and cash medical support obligation in the amount of $62 per month. It also took judicial notice of a second journal entry suspending the child support portion of the prior order.
At the hearing, Shawn argued that he did not owe the amount alleged and that there was no way he could make the payments the State claimed he owed. He further alleged that the Department of Health and Human Services "is charging me $62 ... per month ... for services that my daughter is not receiving."
The court noted that the cash medical support obligation was never suspended and that the child support arrearage was for arrearage accumulated prior to the suspension of the child support. It therefore found that Shawn's arguments were not a defense to the fact that the debt was owed or that garnishment was appropriate.
*923Shawn requested a continuance so he could call on witnesses to determine that the "$62 is also suspended" and that the child's mother does not receive services from the Department of Health and Human Services. The district court denied this request and overruled Shawn's objection to the garnishment. In its journal entry and order overruling the objection, it ordered that "the garnishment may proceed."
Shawn appealed and assigned that the district court erred in (1) ordering the garnishment "to proceed on the finding that [he] owes $5,597.27" and (2) disregarding his verbal motion for a continuance.
But, before considering these arguments, the Court of Appeals addressed whether it had jurisdiction in a memorandum opinion filed January 24, 2018. It concluded that because the order did not determine that the State was entitled to funds held by the garnishee and did not order any execution of a garnishment, the order did not affect Shawn's substantial rights. Furthermore, it noted that Shawn's rights could be effectively vindicated in an appeal from the final judgment. Finding no **292final order, the Court of Appeals determined that it lacked jurisdiction and dismissed the appeal.
We granted Shawn's petition for further review.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
Shawn asserts that he appealed from a final order, because the order that the garnishment "may proceed" affected a substantial right and was made in a special proceeding.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A jurisdictional question which does not involve a factual dispute is determined by an appellate court as a matter of law.
ANALYSIS
At oral argument, the State confessed that it was abandoning the garnishment in light of the garnishee's answers to interrogatories showing only $0.07 belonging to Shawn. Thus, the State suggests that the appeal may be moot.
However, an appellate court may choose to review an otherwise moot case under the public interest exception if it involves a matter affecting the public interest or when other rights or liabilities may be affected by its determination.
Shawn argues that the district court's order was a final order, because it affected a substantial right and determined the **293outcome in a special proceeding. While it is well established that garnishment in aid of execution is a legal statutory remedy, we have not always *924been consistent in describing its nature.
It is first helpful to summarize the procedure for a garnishment in aid of execution. Because this appeal does not involve the garnishment of wages, we omit those statutes which impose additional requirements for the garnishment of wages.
GARNISHMENT PROCEDURE
Garnishment in aid of execution is a provisional remedy created by statute directing the procedure to obtain such relief.
**294When the summons and interrogatories are issued, § 25-1011 provides that a judgment debtor has the right to (1) receive notice of garnishment action by certified mail and (2) a hearing if the judgment debtor (a) believes the court should not allow a garnishment either because the funds sought are exempt or because the requested amount is not owed on the judgment and (b) timely requests a hearing on the issue. It is clear from the record that Shawn followed this procedure in challenging the garnishment.
Although the hearing procedure of § 25-1011 became a part of that section in 1988,
The procedure for what follows an unsuccessful § 25-1011 challenge is not specifically laid out by statute. However, § 25-1056(1), which sets forth the general procedure for garnishments, provides in part, "Except when wages are involved, the garnishee shall hold the property of every description and the credits of the defendant in his or her possession or under his or her control at the time of the service of the summons and interrogatories until the further order of the court ." (Emphasis supplied.) This would suggest that even if the challenge is overruled-i.e., the court determines that the funds are not exempt and that the requested amount is owed on the judgment-the court must still enter a final judgment ordering the delivery of the judgment debtor's property to the judgment *925creditor, in which case the judgment debtor's entitlement to his or her property held by the garnishee is not affected until that final judgment.
SUBSTANTIAL RIGHT ANALYSIS
A substantial right is an essential legal right.
In the context of garnishment proceedings, we have held that an order affected a substantial right where it "authorized the seizure of property or money that would otherwise have remained in the [appellants'] ownership and control."
Shawn suggests that the order affected a substantial right by providing that the garnishment "may proceed," "because it implicates all manner of means of attachment provided for under title IV-D of the Social Security Act."
Because the order overruling Shawn's challenge to the garnishment did not affect a substantial right, it was not a final, appealable order. Without a final order, an appellate court lacks jurisdiction and must dismiss the appeal.
CONCLUSION
Shawn prematurely appealed from a nonfinal order. Because the Court of Appeals correctly determined that it lacked jurisdiction, we affirm its decision dismissing the appeal.
AFFIRMED .
Deleon v. Reinke Mfg. Co. ,
Nesbitt v. Frakes,
See, e.g., ML Manager v. Jensen ,
See Barnett v. Peters ,
See Western Smelting & Refining Co. v. First Nat. Bank ,
See Cattle Nat. Bank & Trust Co. v. Watson ,
Early v. Belgrade-Hord Co. ,
See 1988 Neb. Laws, L.B. 1030, § 14.
See Cattle Nat. Bank & Trust Co. v. Watson , supra note 7.
Id . at 968,
Brief for appellant in support of petition for further review at 4.
Connelly v. City of Omaha ,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- SHAWN E. ON BEHALF OF GRACE E., a minor child v. DIANE S. and State of Nebraska
- Cited By
- 109 cases
- Status
- Published