Tlie will of Joseph Creighton, deceased, was contested by the plaintiff in error in this action, who was the daughter and sole heir at law, on different grounds not necessary to enumerate. Her minor children were, by the terms of the will, made devisees of property represented to be of the value of $50,000. An appeal was taken from the order of the county court, denying the probate of the will, to the district court for a trial de novo on the issues involved by the filing of the contest against it being admitted to probate. The defendant in error was duly appointed guardian ad litem for the said minors and devisees under said will. The case was of more than ordinary importance, and apparently urns tried under difficulties, resulting in one trial in which the verdict of the jury was set aside and a second trial of the same issues in which the jury were unable to agree. The two trials consumed twenty or thirty days’ time of those acting as attorneys and litigants. After the second trial in the district court, resulting in the disagreement of the jury, the contestant of the will (the plaintiff in error) and the guardian ad Hi cm effected an arrangement by which she conveyed to her minor children all her interest as heir at law of the deceased testator to the property which by the terms of the will they were to receive. The guardian thereupon made report of the fact to the district court, asked to have his acts approved and to withdraw his pleadings from the case. He also asked that he be allowed a guardian-ad-Niew, fee in such sum as should be reasonable and proper, as compensation for his services in behalf of the minor children of the contestant. An order was entered granting leave to withdraw his pleadings, and the hearing of the *12motion for an allowance of fees as guardian ad litem was reserved. Tlie case then came on to be heard on the issues as between the contestant and another devisee on a motion to dismiss the appeal because of indefiniteness and uncertainty in the provisions of the will as to such other devisee, which upon consideration by the trial court was sustained. Prom the order of dismissal an appeal was prosecuted to this court, where the order was reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings. No action had been taken by the trial court on the application of the guardian ad litem for the allowance of a fee for his services in the litigation when the order of dismissal was entered. On March 16, 1897, and while the controversy was yet pending in the district court, the guardian ad litem filed a formal petition for his allowance of a fee for his services, setting forth the nature of the litigation and the time consumed in its determination, and asking to be allowed the sum of $3,000 for his services. The order mentioned dismissing the appeal on the issue between the contestant and the other litigant was entered March 29, 1897. The term of the district court at which these proceedings were had was adjourned sine die April 10, 1897. At the next term of court, and on June 6,1897, the matter of the application of the guardian ad litem came on to be tried, all parties being represented in person and by counsel, and after the submission of proof, the court allowed the guardian ad Mem the sum of $1,240, and ordered the same to be made a charge upon the estate of the deceased testator and paid out of the funds thereof. .Prom this order error proceeding is prosecuted by the plaintiff in error, alleging as her ground of error that “at the time of the rendition of said final order in said cause the court had no jurisdiction of said cause for the purpose of granting an allowance of guardian ad litem’s fee, for the reason that said cause had been finally adjudicated and dismissed.”
The only question presented is whether the court lost jurisdiction to make the order of allowance of a fee to the *13guardian ad litem for his services, by the act of dismissing the appeal taken from the county court, as heretofore stated. We are of the opinion that it did not. It is entirely clear from the record that as to the matter of allowance of compensation to the guardian ad litem the question was reserved for further consideration, and as to that branch of the case the court retained the jurisdiction it possessed at the time application was made for the allowance. We do not think that the rule as to the taxation of costs as an incident to a judgment rendered in favor of or against a party to the litigation is applicable to the present case. The guardian ad litem had been duly appointed, and he apparently performed the duties devolving upon him with fidelity and ability. He secured for the minors all they would have received under the terms of the will, so that whether it was upheld or not was of no pecuniary consequence to them. He had rendered valuable services and was entitled to compensation. By section 14 of chapter 7, Compiled Statutes, it is made the duty of every attorney to act as the guardian of an infant defendant, when appointed for that purpose, for which he shall be entitled to such compensation as the court shall deem reasonable. An attorney acting under appointment- as a guardian ad litem must look only to the court for the amount of his compensation, to be taxed as a part of the costs in the proceedings, and collected as such. Englebert v. Troxell, 40 Nebr., 195. We do not Understand this to mean that a fee can be recovered only when the infant would be entitled to a recovery of costs ordinarily incurred in matters of litigation, or that the rule as to the taxation of costs generally must control as to the liability for the payment of a. fee allowed a guardian ad litem, but rather that in enforcing the payment of such fee it shall be taxed against any proper party or against certain property as costs and collected as such. In fact,-it is practically conceded in the present instance that the court was authorized to make the order of allowance complained of a charge against the property and *14funds of the estate as was made, save for the alleged want of jurisdiction, because the case on appeal had been dismissed before the allowance of a fee was ordered. In our judgment, the court retained jurisdiction for the purpose of determining the amount of compensation to be allowed the guardian ad litem and was empowered to act tliereo n and with respect thereto as fully and effectually as before the entry of the order of dismissal of the appeal. Smith v. Smith, 69 Ill., 308. Sheahan v. Wayne Circuit Judge, 42 Mich., 69; Jones v. Yore, 43 S. W. Rep. [Mo.], 384; Tyson v. Richardson, 79 N. W. Rep. [Wis.], 439, and cases cited. In a supplemental brief it is argued that the district court was entirely without jurisdiction, because the transcript of the proceedings had before the county court in relation to the contest of the will did not contain the will of Joseph Creighton, deceased, which had been refused probate, or any copy thereof. The suggestion that the district court was without jurisdiction and had no will before it, but only a piece of unauthenticated paper, excites some surprise, in view of the fact that three or four weeks’ time was consumed in a controversy of no insignificant proportions, which finally culminated in a dismissal of the appeal on the ground advanced by the contestant, plaintiff in error here, that the provisions in the will were void for uncertainty. There was, we think, a substantial recognition by the parties of the will in controversy in the district court, being the one offered and refused probate in the county court, from which order an appeal was prosecuted to said district court. The transcript may be incorrect or defective; but if so, it was amendable, and failure to amend would not deprive the district court of its appellate jurisdiction. The transcript was properly certified, contained a record of the proceedings had in the county court relating to the offer of the will for probate and the objections thereto, the proceedings under the contest and the final order complained of refusing and disallowing the will probate in that court, and was, we think, sufficient to give the distinct court *15jurisdiction to hear and try the cause on appeal. While it is suggested that the proceeding had in the district court is in the nature oí an original action begun in that court to secure the probate of the will and, therefore, without jurisdiction, from the entire record, it is obvious that its jurisdiction as an appellate court was exercised and the cause tried on appeal from the order made in the county court, to ivliich it was remanded on the final hearing. thereof.
The .judgment or order complained of is
Affirmed.