ATLAS BRADSHAW ET ALS. v. CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK ET ALS.
IN THE SUPREME COURT
6 December, 1916
172 N.C. 632
(Filed 6 December, 1916.)
- Appeal and Error—Motion to Dismiss Action—Final Judgment.
An appeal from the refusal of a motion to dismiss an action is premature and will not lie, the proper procedure being for the movant to except, and reserve the exception in appealing from an adverse judgment rendered, after a trial or hearing upon the merits of the case, with proper assignment of error.
- Nonsuit—Statutes—Costs—New Action.
Revisal, sec. 370, providing, among other things, that a new action upon the same subject-matter between the same parties may be commenced within one year after nonsuit, as amended by chapter 211, Laws 1915, with proviso that the costs in such action shall have been paid before the commencement of the new suit, etc., does not forbid the commencement of a second action without paying the costs of the first, but annexes this as a condition to bringing the new action free from the bar of the statute, if pleaded; and a motion to dismiss it before answer filed, upon the ground that the costs of the former one had not been paid, will be denied.
CLARK, C. J., concurs in the result.
CIVIL ACTION heard, on motion to dismiss, by Shaw, J., at April Term, 1916, of MITCHELL.
The following facts were found by the judge:
“Prior to 1 January, 1915, a suit between the same parties, plaintiffs and defendants, as those in this case was instituted in the Superior Court of Yancey County, and was not brought in forma pauperis, but the plaintiffs gave bond in that suit for the costs. The action in the Superior Court of Yancey County and this action were both brought for the identical relief by plaintiffs against defendants; that prior to 1 March, 1915, the plaintiffs in the suit in Yancey County took a voluntary nonsuit; that on 12 October, 1915, the plaintiffs in the suit in Yancey County brought this action in the Superior Court of Mitchell County, against the parties who were defendants in that suit; that the costs of the suit in Yancey County were not paid before the commencement of this action, nor as late as 11 April, 1916.”
The court refused to dismiss the action, and defendants appealed.
S. J. Ervin and Pless & Winborne for plaintiffs.
Hudgins & Watson, J. Bis Ray and A. Hall Johnston for defendants.
WALKER, J., after stating the case: The appeal was prematurely taken, or, to be more accurate, an appeal does not lie from the refusal
The defendants’ motion to dismiss was based on the ground that
The contention necessarily is that, by this section, the bringing of a second action at all, after nonsuit in the first, is forbidden except upon condition that the plaintiff, at the time of commencing the second, has paid all the costs of the first action. But this is, we think, too narrow a construction. A nonsuit did not prevent the bringing of a new action, 14 Cyc., 393, as it decided nothing on the merits, and therefore did not operate as res judicata or as an estoppel. “A nonsuit is in many instances of importance, because it gives the party the right to commence the same suit again, and alter its status by additional testimony, whereas if he answers and hears the verdict he must stand on the case as then presented and rely upon his exceptions and upon obtaining a reversal of the judgment on appeal.” 14 Cyc., 393, note 8, citing Hall v. Schuchardt, 34 Md., 15. Our doctrine is the same, a fresh action after nonsuit, for the same cause, being permitted, even when the first suit is dismissed for want of jurisdiction. Anonymous, 3 N. C., 231 (2 Hayw., 63); Pearse v. House, ibid., 588 (386); Skillington v. Allison, 9 N. C., 347; Straus v. Beardsley, 79 N. C., 59; Dalton v. Webster, 82 N. C., 279; Harris v. Davenport, 132 N. C., 697. “At common law suits frequently abated for matter of form. In such cases plaintiff was allowed a reasonable time within which to sue out a new writ. This time was theoretically computed with reference to the number of days which the parties must spend in journeying to the court. Hence the name, ‘journey‘s account.’ Such renewed suit was but a continuance of that which had abated, and of necessity was in the same court, against the same parties, and for the same cause of action. This ancient remedy is not now recognized in this country, but in lieu thereof nearly every State has provided by statute for the renewal of actions which have failed for some matter not involving the merits. Such a statute does not contemplate a revival or a continuance of a former suit as at common law under ‘journey‘s account,’ but that a new and distinct suit may be brought. The statutes on this subject vary greatly in their scope. Some limit the right to bring a second action to cases in which there has been an involuntary nonsuit; others to dismissals by the court for some matter of form not involving the merits; others to dismissals as the result of a reversal; others to cases where the judgment in favor of plaintiff has been been arrested or set aside; still others include various combinations of the above provisions.” 25 Cyc., 1313, and also pp. 1314, 1319, where the subject is fully discussed. But the section in which the proviso was inserted by the amendment
Appeal dismissed.
CLARK, C. J., concurring in result:
This is a condition precedent, on noncompliance with which the defendant was entitled to have the action dismissed, as on failure to give prosecution bond,
