Plaintiffs attempt to appeal from an order dismissing their complaint. Since the court granted plaintiffs leave to amend, however, the purported appeal is interlocutory, and we therefore dismiss.
The complaint alleged that plaintiff Day’s interest in various tracts of land was fraudulently conveyed to defendants’ predecessors in title. Plaintiffs sought removal of the cloud on their alleged title or damages for the lost value of the land, as well as lost rents and timber profits. They alleged in addition damage re-
We confront, apparently for the first time under our Rules of Civil Procedure, the question of the appealability by plaintiffs of an order which dismissed their complaint but allowed leave to amend. It is established under our Rules of Civil Procedure that orders allowing amendments cannot be appealed by the opposing party. O’Neill v. Southern Nat’l Bank,
Decisions of the federal courts under Rule 12 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure have uniformly held that when an action is dismissed with leave to amend, the proceeding is still pending and an appeal is interlocutory. See Kozemchak v. Ukrainian Orthodox Church,
The fact that plaintiffs have alleged unfair trade practices does not affect this result. Assuming without deciding that such a claim is proper, the action would lie, if at all, against Harve Austin, the perpetrator of the fraud, or his estate. N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 75-1.1, -16 (1981); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 28A-18-1 (1976); see Ellis v. Smith-Broadhurst, Inc.,
Appeal dismissed.
