The period prescribed for the commencement of an action for wrongful death under G.S. 28-173 is two years. G.S. 1-53(4). Intestate was killed in North Carolina on 21 April 1963. The first action to recover damages for his death was instituted against defendants by his Virginia administrator in the United States District Court of the Western District of Virginia on 13 April 1964 — less than one year after his death. That case was nonsuited on 2 July 1965, and this action was brought on 13 July 1965 —more than two years after intestate’s death, but less than one year after the judgment of nonsuit in the Federal Court in Virginia. In pertinent part, G.S. 1-25 provides that if an action is commenced within the time prescribed therefor, and plaintiff is nonsuited, he or his representative may begin a new action within one year after such non-suit if he has paid costs of the original action before the commencement of the new suit.
Plaintiff contends that, since he instituted this action within one year after the nonsuit in the U. S. District Court in Virginia, G.S. 1-25 repels defendants’ plea of the statute of limitations. This appeal, therefore, presents the question whether G.S. 1-25 prevents the bar of the statute of limitations where an action is brought in this State within one year after a judgment of nonsuit has been entered in the original action which was instituted in another jurisdiction.
Since this cause of action arose in North Carolina, we are concerned only with the statutes of this State. “Where the action is regarded as controlled by the statute of limitations of the forum, it has usually been held that a plaintiff invoking the saving statute of the forum may not rely upon a nonsuit in an earlier action brought in another state.” Annot., Statute permitting new action, after failure of original action timely commenced, as applicable where original action was filed in another state,
In
Riley v. Union Pac. R. Co.,
In
Morris v. Wise,
We adhere to the general rule that a statute of the forum which permits a suit to be reinstituted within a specified time after dismissal of the original action otherwise than upon its merits has no application
when the original suit was brought in another jurisdiction.
This rule, however, has no application to an action which was originally instituted in the Superior Court of this State and was thereafter transferred to a United States District Court, where it was later terminated by a nonsuit, or “dismissed without prejudice.” In
Brooks v. Lumber Co.,
“(W)here an action has been removed from the State court to the Federal Court, under the act of Congress providing for such removal, and a voluntary nonsuit is taken by plaintiff in the action while same is pending in the Federal Court, he may bring a new action upon the same cause of action in the State court within one year from the date of such nonsuit, by reason of the provisions of C.S. 415 (G.S. 1-25).” Id. at 143,138 S.E. at 533 .
Accord, Motor Co. v. Credit Co.,
*317
Highway Comm. v. Transportation Corp.,
In this case, the allegations in the complaint disclose that,
prima jade,
plaintiff’s cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations. It contained no averments (such as were made in
Blades v. R. R.,
The judgment of nonsuit is
Affirmed.
