The owners of ACE Chemical Dependency Services (hereinafter ACE or plaintiff) initiated this action against Charter Medical Corporation of Raleigh (hereinafter Charter or defendant) on 1 August 1988. ACE asserted claims for breach of contract, fraud, attempted monopolization, abuse of civil process, malicious prosecution and unfair and deceptive trade practices. The trial court granted defendant’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss plaintiff’s unfair and deceptive trade practices claim and dismissed on summary judgment the rest of plaintiff’s claims. Plaintiff appeals. We affirm the dismissal of all claims.
In North Carolina no person may develop a new institutional health service without first obtaining a certificate of need (hereinafter CON) from the Department of Human Resources (hereinafter Department). N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-178(a) (1988). In 1982, ACE and Charter, along with several other organizations, submitted applications for a CON to provide chemical dependency treatment facilities in the Wake County area. In the fall of 1982, the Department approved Charter’s application. ACE contested this approval and pursued its administrative remedies.
In 1988 the Department determined that additional chemical dependency facilities were needed. ACE submitted an application for the CON. ACE planned to lease the facility to another organization, CHAPS Health Services, Inc. (hereinafter CHAPS). Charter then opposed ACE’s new application and pursued its administrative remedies. Thus, while ACE was opposing Charter’s application in a contested case hearing, Charter was opposing ACE’s through an identical procedure. However, on 15 April 1985, the parties *720 entered into a Settlement Agreement which was to settle the parties’ “interests and claims with regard to the projects.” ACE agreed to cease its opposition to Charter’s project. In return, Charter agreed to cease its opposition to ACE’s and CHAPS’ pending application and not to contest the CON if it was awarded to ACE.
Over the next two years, Charter developed its project while ACE suffered a number of pre-construction delays. ACE attempted to enter into a financing relationship with American Treatment Centers, Inc. (hereinafter ATC). Pursuant to the Settlement Agreement, ACE dismissed its contested case hearing regarding Charter’s development. On 18 April 1985, Charter wrote to the CON section of the Department requesting that the project proposed by ACE, CHAPS and ATC be subjected to a full certificate of need review.
The Department viewed ACE’s new financing relationship as a CON transfer, a decision which would have necessitated the withdrawal of the first CON and a full, lengthy CON review. ACE proposed a new financing relationship, which the Department eventually found acceptable and extended the timetable on ACE’s CON. Charter continued to raise questions about ACE’s CON by writing to the Department on 31 July 1985 and 3 September 1985. On 1 May 1986, Charter filed with the Department a formal petition alleging ACE had unlawfully transferred its certificate. When that petition was denied, Charter filed in superior court on 11 July 1986 a Petition for a Contested Case Hearing. Charter also filed in superior court a Petition for Judicial Review and Complaint. The superior court filings were ultimately resolved in ACE’s favor, and the ACE project was completed and began operation in 1986.
On 1 August 1988, plaintiff filed this action, basing its claims upon Charter’s efforts to secure full CON review of the proposed project after ACE changed its financing arrangement.
On appeal, plaintiff contests the trial court’s dismissal of the unfair and deceptive trade practices claim and the granting of summary judgment for defendant on the breach of contract claim and the malicious prosecution claim. We shall address the breach of contract claim first.
Plaintiff contends that the letter and the spirit of the settlement agreement required Charter to refrain from any further challenges to ACE’s certificate of need and that Charter’s letters, administrative petitions and judicial petitions violated the agree *721 ment. Defendant argues that the statute of limitations bars ACE’s contract claim. We agree with defendant.
The statute of limitations for contract actions is three years. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52(1) (1983). The statute begins to run when the claim accrues; with a breach of contract action, the claim accrues upon breach.
Pearce v. N.C. Hwy. Patrol Vol. Pledge Comm.,
The controlling case is
Parsons v. Gunter,
In the present case, the agreement, if breached at all, was breached initially on 18 April 1985. On that date, Charter’s attorney wrote the chief of the CON section and requested a full review of the new arrangement proposed by CHAPS, ACE, and ATC. In a letter to Charter’s attorney, ACE itself declared the 18 April letter to be a breach of the settlement agreement. Thus, according to Parsons, if a claim for breach of contract arose, it did so on 18 April 1985. ACE did not bring its breach of contract action until 1 August 1988 and is thus barred by the statute of limitations.
Plaintiff’s next argument is that, since Charter’s administrative and judicial petitions were filed in the absence of or contrary to the governing statutes and regulations and jeopardized a CON, the trial court should have denied defendant’s motion for summary judgment as to plaintiff’s malicious prosecution claim. We do not agree.
*722
In North Carolina, a claim of malicious prosecution requires proof of four elements: (1) that the defendant initiated the proceedings, (2) that the defendant did so maliciously and without probable cause, (3) that the proceeding terminated in plaintiff’s favor, and (4) that there are special damages beyond the ordinary expense and inconvenience of litigation.
Stanback v. Stanback,
Finally, plaintiff maintains that the trial court’s dismissal of the unfair and deceptive trade practices claim was erroneous. In the complaint, plaintiff alleges that the actions of defendant in seeking review of plaintiff’s application for the CON constituted an unfair and deceptive trade practice in violation of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 75-1.1. In response, defendant argues that § 75-l.Hb) exempts professional services rendered by a member of a learned profession and that it is exempted as a professional health care provider. We find merit to defendant’s argument.
In an action which stemmed from a hospital’s denial of hospital staff privileges to two doctors, a panel of this Court concluded that the “consideration of whom to grant hospital staff privileges is a necessary assurance of good health care; certainly, this is the rendering of ‘professional services’ which is now excluded from the aegis of G.S. 75-1.1.”
Cameron v. New Hanover Memorial Hosp.,
In conclusion, we find that the trial court’s orders dismissing this action were proper.
Affirmed.
