Previously, our courts discussed the facts of this case in
Creech v. Melnik,
Dr. Melnik, a neonatologist, directed the newborn nursery at the hospital where Justin was bom. Justin’s birth began with unstable vital signs necessitating care in the intensive care nursery. Indisputably, oxygen deprivation caused Justin to suffer brain damage, blindness, quadriplegia, cerebral palsy, profound mental retardation, and microcephaly. Plaintiffs alleged that after Justin’s admission to intensive care, his condition was significantly worsened by Dr. Melnik’s failure to properly care for him from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. on 23 September 1980.
Before filing this action, W. Paul Pulley, Jr., plaintiffs’ attorney, talked with Dr. Melnik on several occasions. Dr. Melnik contended *473 that during those conversations, Mr. Pulley assured her that if she spoke with him concerning the events surrounding Justin’s birth, plaintiffs would not sue her. She stated that with that assurance, she gave information and opinions concerning the care provided for Justin.
Based on evidence of that assurance, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Dr. Melnik under the affirmative defenses of equitable estoppel and breach of implied contract not to sue. This Court affirmed, see Creech I; however, our Supreme Court remanded the action for trial to resolve genuine issues of material fact that precluded summary judgment. See Creech II. This appeal by plaintiffs arises from the resulting jury verdict in favor of Dr. Melnik on the grounds that plaintiffs breached their implied contract not to sue her. 1
Plaintiffs challenge the jury’s verdict of breach of an implied contract on the grounds that (1) no evidence showed that Mr. Pulley had authority to contract on behalf of the minor with Dr. Melnik, and (2) no evidence showed that a court reviewed and approved the alleged contract on behalf of the minor.
Preliminarily, we address the issue of whether the earlier decisions in Creech I and II set forth a doctrine of law that decides the issues in this appeal — whether Mr. Pulley had authority to contract on behalf of the minor, and whether the alleged contract on behalf of the minor required court approval. We conclude that they do not.
As a general rule, when an appellate court passes on questions and remands the case for further proceedings to the trial court, the questions therein actually presented and necessarily involved in determining the case, and the decision on those questions become the law of the case ....
Tennessee-Carolina Transp. Inc. v. Stride Corp.,
In this case, neither
Creech I
nor
Creech II
addressed issues concerning the attorney’s authority to act on behalf of the minor, and whether the contract made on behalf of the minor required court approval. Indeed, in
Creech I,
this Court observed that “[s]ince neither party addresses the question of whether the attorney under the facts of this case could lawfully bind his clients to a contract, we need not reach that issue in this appeal.”
Creech I,
Although plaintiff brings forth two issues, we need only address the one that disposes of this appeal: Whether court approval was required to find a valid contract involving a minor. We answer, yes; the failure to present proof of court approval of a contract on behalf of a minor is fatal at any stage of a proceeding seeking to enforce such a contract. Since the record shows no evidence that the “implied” contract with the subject minor was approved by a court, we must reverse the jury verdict finding a breach of an implied contract not to sue.
Historically, courts have long provided special protections for minors in general contractual relationships. “Recognized at common law as early as 1292, and little changed in this century, the .. . infancy doctrine allows the minor to avoid or disaffirm contracts ... The common law’s view has traditionally been that children are naive and unsophisticated, especially in the marketplace.” Robert E. Richards,
Children and the Recorded-Message Industry: The Need for a New Doctrine,
72 VA. L.R. 1325, 1332-33 (1986). “From our earliest history infants have been regarded as entitled to the especial protection of the State and as wards of the court. In a sense courts . . . are the supreme guardians of all infants and are charged with the protection alike of their personal and property rights.”
Latta v. Trustees of Gen. Assembly of Presbyterian Church in United States,
The general rule is that the contract of an infant is not binding on him.
See Freeman v. Bridger,
[S]o careful is the law to guard the rights of infants, and to protect them against hasty, irregular and indiscreet judicial action. Infants are, in many cases, the wards of the courts, and these forms, enacted as safeguards thrown around the helpless, who are often the victims of the crafty, are enforced as being mandatory, and not directory only. Those who venture to act in defiance of them must take the risk of their action being declared void, or set aside.
*476
Moore v. Gidney,
“Consequently, ancient common-law rules regarding an infant’s lack of contractual capacity have endured in the United States and in North Carolina with considerable vitality.” John N. Hutson, Jr. & Scott A. Miskimon, North Carolina Contract Law § 1-26, 30 (2001).
3
In North Carolina, agreements or contracts, except for those dealing with necessities and those authorized by statute, “are voidable at the election of the infant and may be disaffirmed by the infant during minority or within a reasonable time of reaching majority.”
Bobby Floars Toyota, Inc. v. Smith,
Our courts continue to afford special safeguards to minors and incompetents when it comes to contracting away their interests. The rationale for allowing minors to avoid contracts is that until they are adults “they are not supposed to have the mental capacity to make them.”
Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Chantos,
In contrast, when competent adults are conducting business, a binding contract is created by an agreement involving mutual assent of two parties who are in possession of legal capacity, where the agreement consists of an exchange of legal consideration (mutuality of obligation). Richard A. Lord, Williston on Contracts § 1:20 (4th ed. 1993). “Infancy, fraud, mistake, duress and some kinds of illegality all afford grounds for rescinding or refusing to perform a contract.”
Id.
However, because a minor lacks legal capacity there cannot be a valid contract in most transactions, unless it is for necessaries or the statutes make the contract valid.
See Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co. v. Chantos, 293
N.C. at 443,
Therefore, courts have “inherent authority over the property of infants and will exercise this jurisdiction whenever necessary to preserve and protect children’s estates and interests. The court looks closely into contracts or settlements materially affecting the rights of infants [.]”
Sigmund Sternberger Foundation, Inc. v. Tannenbaum,
Although this point was not addressed in the briefs, we note that, irrespective of what construction is put on the covenant signed by Marguerite M. Hotchkiss, mother and natural guardian of plaintiff Barbara Sell, minor, defendant could not use it as a defense to the minor’s suit against such a covenant as the one we have here. The settlement of an infant’s tort claim became effective and binding upon him only upon judicial examination and adjudication.
Id.
(citations omitted);
see also, Gillikin v. Gillikin,
In the present case, neither the record on appeal nor the brief on behalf of Dr. Melnik points to any evidence showing that the alleged implied contract on behalf of the minor was reviewed or approved by the trial court. Since it is well established in North Carolina that a covenant not to sue negotiated for a minor is' invalid without investigation and approval by the trial court, we must reverse the jury’s finding of a contract on behalf of the minor not to sue Dr. Melnik, and remand for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The jury found against Dr. Melnik on her alternative defense of equitable estoppel; that issue is not before us.
. Astutely, during the Creech II oral arguments, Justice Whichard recognized the issue of whether court approval was required in a minor’s covenant not to sue:
Justice Whichard: We’re dealing with a minor here too which makes this a much more troubling case to me. You would — Mr. Pulley could not have settled this case without court approval.
Mr. Byrd: No, sir, he could not.
Justice Whichard: So how can he contract it away without some sort of court approval? And yet in the posture the case is in — tell me if I’m right — it looks to me like the very best thing this court could do for you would be to send it back for a trial on issues of fact....
. “Under the common-law, persons, whether male or female, are classified and referred to as Infants until they attain the age of twenty-one years.”
Gastonia Personnel Corp. v. Rogers,
