The primary issue in this appeal is whether the trial court acted properly in awarding summary judgment to defendant. Plaintiff first argues that the doctrine of
res judicata,
asserted as an affirmative defense by defendаnt, does not apply in this case to bar her action to have the judgment lien on her property removed as a cloud on her title. We agree with plaintiff on this point. In order for the doсtrine of
res judicata
to apply, there must be “a final judgment or decree, necessarily determining a fact, question or right in issue, rendered by a court of record and of competent jurisdiction, and ... a lаter suit involving an issue as to the identical fact, question or right theretofore determined, and involving identical parties or parties in privity with a party or parties to the prior suit.” (Citations omitted.)
King v. Grindstaff,
In her third argument, plaintiff contends that the trial judge erred in granting defendant’s motion for summary judgmеnt *527 because another Superior Court judge had previously denied defendant’s motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. Plaintiff argues that by granting summary judgment, one Superior Court judge, in effect, overruled another Superior Court judge. We find no merit to this argument. The motion to dismiss was based on jurisdictional grounds whereas the motion for summary judgment raised the affirmative defense that the present action was bаrred by the judgment in the prior action. Since the basis for each motion was different, the trial judge’s award of summary judgment did not overrule the prior order denying defendant’s motion to dismiss.
Plaintiff’s remaining arguments аre related and will, therefore, be considered together. Plaintiff argues that her action is one to remove a cloud on her title and is not an attack on the Brown’s v. Elmore judgment. The validity of that judgment, plaintiff contends, has nothing to do with the validity of the attachment ancillary thereto that is the cloud on plaintiff’s title. Since plaintiff does not attack the validity of that judgment, she argues, her action cannot be termed a collateral attack on it. Concededly, plaintiff never questions the validity of the judgment in Brown’s v. Elmore, nor does she ask us to invalidate it. Rather, plaintiff argues that she seeks only tо invalidate the attachment of Elmore’s property, to which she now claims title, that occurred prior to that judgment.
Careful scrutiny reveals that these arguments are inconsistent and, in the present context, without merit. Whether plaintiff’s attack on the ancillary attachment constitutes an attack on the judgment proper depends on the same issues that determine whether her аttack would be proper if it were a collateral attack. Further, the question of the validity of the attachment, assuming that plaintiff’s attack on it is properly advanced, would necessarily affect the validity of the judgment.
Plaintiff argues that the judgment in
Brown’s v. Elmore
is not binding as to her because the order of attachment issued against the property that she later acquired from her daughter, defendant Elmore, was not properly executed. Plaintiff points out and the record discloses that the levy by the Sheriff under the order was not carried out within the ten days provided for that purpose by statute. G.S. 1440.16(c). Plaintiff arguеs that this
*528
failure to levy within the time provided by law invalidates the order of attachment. In support of her position, plaintiff cites the case of
Robinson v. Robinson,
When an order of attachment is perfected by a levy, a lien of attachment is created thereby which establishes the lienor’s claim as against all other creditors and subsequent lienors. The date to which the lien relates back and fixes the priority of the claim is established, with respect to real property, is the time at which the notice of the order of attachment is docketed in the record of
lis pendens
in the county where the property is located. G.S. l-440.33(b)(l). A person claiming under a conveyance or encumbrance executed subsequent to the docketing of the notice of the order with respect to the property conveyed or encumbranced takes subject to the action whose pendency was so noted.
Cutter v. Realty Co.,
Plaintiff argues that because the order of attachment was not properly executed, it cannot be the basis of a valid notice of lis pendens such that the principal judgment against her predecessor in title relates back tо the docketing of lis pendens and is binding on plaintiff. We disagree.
Attachment is a proceeding ancillary to a pending principal action, is in the nature of a preliminary execution against property, and is intended to bring the рroperty of the defendant within the legal custody of the court in order that it may be subsequently applied to the satisfaction of any judgment for money which may be rendered against defendant in thе principal action.
G.S. 1-440.1.
Lis pendens,
literally “pending suit,” is a statutory device by which the world is put on notice that an order of attachment has been issued with respect to certain real propеrty owned by a party against whom a monetary judgment is sought and that the lien of attachment may be executed and the property
*529
sold in satisfaction of the judgment. G.S. l-116(a)(3);
Lawing v. Jaynes,
Our research has disclosed no authority supporting plaintiff’s proposition that the improper execution of an order of attachment invalidates the lis pendens docketing of the notice of its issuance. Nor does such a proposition follow logically. Lis pendens is designed to put third parties on notice that a suit is pending. Thus, insofar as the pending suit may adversely affect the claim of a third party, the onus of inquiry is on that third party regarding the nature and merits of the claim against the owner of the property. With regard to attachment, a method is provided by statute by which third parties whose interest in the attached property may be affected by the pending suit may attack the attachment. The statute applies to “any person who has acquired a lien upon or an interest in such property, whether such interest is acquired priоr to or subsequent to the attachment.” G.S. 1-440.43. The statute allows for the making of a motion, at any time prior to judgment in the principal action, to dissolve, G.S. 1-440.36, or modify, G.S. 1-440.37, the order of attachment. Inasmuch as this statutory method of third party attack on an attachment is available, the function of lis pendens would be to put a third party in a position to use it. This is the better view and we so hold. It is unacceptable to hold, as plaintiff would, that the efficacy of lis pendens to perform its designated function should depend on proper execution of the order which caused its entry.
This is not to say that plaintiffs аrgument is entirely without merit. If the attachment of property in the
Brown’s v. Elmore
controversy was essential to the court’s jurisdiction in that case, the failure to properly execute the order would nullify the court’s assertion of jurisdiction and the judgment in that case would be void.
Pifer v. Pifer,
Prior to her purchase of the land from her daughter, plaintiff was on notice, via the lis pendens record in Lenoir County, of the pendency of the action with regard to which the land to which she now claims title had been attached. The same statute that authorized the attachment also provided plaintiff with the means of asserting by motion in the cause the argument she now seeks tо advance by collateral attack. Having had sufficient notice and opportunity to contest the order of attachment properly, plaintiff is estopped from doing so in this indeрendent proceeding. The judgment in Brown's v. Elmore and the attachment ancillary thereto remain in full force and effect as to plaintiff and the land she purchased from her daughter. The judgment appealed from is
Affirmed.
