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Child Support Enforcement - Sarpy County Nebraska

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Minimum Contacts. An act of sexual intercourse resulting in conception in<br />

<strong>Nebraska</strong> shows sufficient minimum contacts with the forum state for jurisdiction to<br />

attach.<br />

State v. Hausmann, 277 Neb. 819, 765 N.W.2d 219 (2009)<br />

Our <strong>Nebraska</strong> Supreme Court admits it has been talking out of two sides of its mouth!<br />

Judicial efficiency is served when any court, including an intermediate appellate<br />

court, is given the opportunity to reconsider its own rulings, either to supplement its<br />

reasoning or correct its own mistakes.<br />

The district court has the inherent power to vacate or modify its judgments or<br />

orders, either during the term at which they were made, or upon a motion filed within<br />

6 months of the entry of the judgment or order. (prior decisions overruled by this<br />

opinion)<br />

An intermediate appellate court may also timely modify its opinion. An appellate<br />

court has the inherent power to reconsider an order or ruling until divested of<br />

jurisdiction<br />

In the absence of an applicable rule to the contrary, a motion asking the court to<br />

exercise that inherent power does not toll the time for taking an appeal. A party can<br />

move the court to vacate or modify a final order—but if the court does not grant the<br />

motion, a notice of appeal must be filed within 30 days of the entry of the earlier final<br />

order if the party intends to appeal it. And if an appeal is perfected before the<br />

motion is ruled upon, the district court loses jurisdiction to act.<br />

State v. Merrill, 273 Neb. 583, 731 N.W.2d 570 (2007)<br />

Facts: State filed "affidavit of Lien for <strong>Child</strong> support" with the clerk of district court in<br />

obligated parent/defendant‘s criminal child abuse case, seeking to recover his appearance bond<br />

to help pay his child support arrears in a separate court case. After the defendant‘s conviction<br />

and prison sentence his father, who had actually put up the bond money, notified the court that<br />

he wanted his money back. The State objected and following hearing the district court ordered<br />

the bond money returned to the defendant‘s father. The State attempted to appeal that<br />

decision. This case, though representing a failed effort to snatch up bond money, is<br />

nevertheless instructional.<br />

[T]he state is seeking to enforce whatever lien it may have on the bond money<br />

through a garnishment proceeding in the child support case. The district court<br />

correctly noted that the state's remedy is in the civil case. Regardless of the<br />

status of that civil proceeding, the state has no specific statutory authorization to<br />

appeal the order entered in this criminal case directing the clerk to return the posted<br />

bond money to (the person who posted the bond).<br />

We conclude that the state was not authorized to appeal the …order in this criminal<br />

case and that therefore, this court lacks jurisdiction over this appeal. … Absent<br />

specific statutory authorization, the state, as a general rule, has no right to appeal an<br />

adverse ruling in a criminal case.<br />

State v. Norwood, 203 Neb. 201, 277 N.W.2d 709 (1979)<br />

A court must take judicial notice of its own records in the case under consideration.<br />

[A court] has a right to examine its own records and take judicial notice of its own<br />

proceedings and judgment in an interwoven and dependent controversy where the<br />

same matters have already been considered and determined.<br />

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