Defendant assigns as error the trial court’s granting of plaintiffs motion for partial summary judgment. Before we address defendant’s assignment of error, we must first determine if defendant’s appeal is premature at this stage of the proceedings. G.S. 1A-1, Rule 56(d) clearly contemplates that summary judgment may be entered upon less than the whole case and that the court may make a summary adjudication that is not final.
Patrick v. Hurdle,
The trial judge entered summary judgment as to defendant’s counterclaim for equitable distribution, leaving for trial plaintiffs claim for absolute divorce and defendant’s remaining counterclaims for child custody and child support. The granting of the summary judgment motion is not appealable, G.S. 1A-1, Rule 54(b) unless the appeal is provided for elsewhere in the statute. Defendant may immediately appeal from this interlocutory order if it affects a substantial right. G.S. 1-277. It has been held that an order which completely disposes of one of several issues in a lawsuit affects a substantial right.
Oestreicher v. Stores,
At this point, we address defendant’s assignment of error that the trial court erroneously concluded there was no genuine issue of material fact and entered summary judgment as to the issue of equitable distribution.
A
Defendant first contends that the parties’ reconciliation voided the separation agreement. It is well settled in our law that a separation agreement between husband and wife is terminated for every purpose insofar as it remains executory upon their resumption of the marital relation.
The parties entered into a separation agreement on 3 March 1981, which contained the following pertinent provisions relating to distribution of marital property:
II. Personal Property. The parties have previously agreed between themselves on the division of personal property, including motor vehicles, and said agreement is ratified.
Each party shall retain sole ownership of all stocks, bonds, securities, insurance policies, club memberships or other like property which such party heretofore owned individually.
III. Proceeds from Personal Injury Settlement. In the summer of 1980, Husband and the parties’ minor child received a substantial settlement for injuries each suffered in an automobile collision. Husband entrusted Six Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($6,500.00) of said settlement proceeds to wife. Simultaneously with the execution of this Agreement, Wife will return Two Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($2,500.00) to Husband.
IV. Real Property. The parties are presently owners as tenants by the entirety of a home located at 3105 Shallowford Drive, Greensboro, North Carolina. Simultaneously with the execution of this Agreement, Husband shall deed all of his rights, title and interest in said property to Wife by a quitclaim deed.
On the same day the separation agreement was executed, defendant conveyed his interest in the homeplace to plaintiff. Defendant’s conveyance occurred prior to the parties resuming the marital relationship, which rendered the provision concerning real property executed, not executory, and therefore not terminated by the resumption of the marital relationship. The remaining provisions of the separation agreement were likewise already executed, thus not terminated.
An “executory contract” is one in which a party binds himself to do or not to do a particular thing in the future. When all future performances have occurred and there is no outstanding promise calling for fulfillment by either party, the contract is no longer “executory,” but is “executed.” (Citations omitted.) Thus when our cases speak of the “ex-ecutory provisions” of a separation agreement, they are referring to those provisions which require a spouse to do some future act in accordance with the terms of the agreement. . . .
Whitt v. Whitt,
B
Defendant next attacks the validity of the separation agreement by contending that contrary to paragraph II,
supra,
of the separation agreement, the parties did not agree upon a division of their personal property. A separation agreement is a contract and, therefore, its meaning is ordinarily determined by the same
rules used to interpret any other contract.
Lane v. Scarborough,
C
Defendant contends the separation agreement was executed before the equitable distribution statute was enacted, thus he could not bargain away his right to equitable distribution of marital property since such a right did not exist at the time of the execution of the separation agreement. The parties entered into a separation agreement on 3 March 1981. The Equitable Distribution Act (hereinafter Act) was enacted thereafter, G.S. 50-20 (Supp. 1983), and applies to all divorce actions instituted on or after 1 October 1981. Plaintiff filed this action for an absolute divorce on 22 February 1983. It is North Carolina’s public policy that “an equitable distribution of property shall follow a decree of absolute divorce.” G.S. 50-21(a). However, a resort to the equitable distribution law is not the only recognized way for married people to dispose of their marital property. An alternative is in G.S. 50-20(d):
Before, during or after marriage the parties may by written agreement, duly executed and acknowledged in accordance with provisions of G.S. 52-10 and 52-10.1, or by a written agreement valid in the jurisdiction where executed, provide for distribution of the marital property in a manner deemed by the parties to be equitable and the agreement shall be binding on the parties.
Hendrix v. Hendrix,
D
Defendant’s final contention is that summary judgment was improperly entered while discovery was still pending. “Ordinarily it is error for a court to hear and rule on a motion for summary judgment when discovery procedures, which might lead to the production of evidence relevant to the motion, are still pending and the party seeking discovery has not been dilatory in doing so.”
Conover v. Newton,
A request for equitable distribution of property may not be granted in the face of a prior, valid agreement disposing of the parties’ marital property, G.S. 50-20(d).
Buffington v. Buffington,
We conclude that the trial court properly granted summary judgment for plaintiff. The order is
Affirmed.
