IN THE MATTER OF THE WILL OF MOLLIE PARKER, DECEASED
No. 847SC1149
COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
Filed 17 September 1985
76 N.C. App. 594
1. Wills § 14— prosecution bond by caveator not authorized
The propounder, not the caveator, functions as a plaintiff in a caveat proceeding, and the trial court thus had no discretion to require the caveator to post a prosecution bond pursuant to
2. Rules of Civil Procedure § 41— failure to comply with erroneous order — no dismissal with prejudice
A
APPEAL by caveator from Tillery, Judge. Order entered 1 June 1984 in Superior Court, NASH County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 15 May 1985.
Fields, Cooper, Henderson & Cooper, by Milton P. Fields, for propounder appellee.
Michael P. Peavey, for caveator appellant.
BECTON, Judge.
I
This case presents an appeal from an order dismissing with prejudice the caveat of Lucille Carey to the alleged will of Mollie Parker. The factual and procedural history follows.
Mollie Parker died in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on 3 January 1983, at the age of 81. She had apparently lived in Nash County, North Carolina, for most of her life. On 24 September 1982, she was taken from Wilson Memorial Hospital in Wilson, North Carolina, where she had been hospitalized since 7 August 1982, to Philadelphia, by her cousin, Lucille Carey. There was evidence that Carey had not visited with Parker in North Carolina for about 50 years prior to June 1982, when she learned of Parker‘s illness.
A will dated 15 January 1981 was admitted to probate in Nash County on 12 January 1983, naming Peoples Bank & Trust Company as executor of her estate and naming Vivian Garcia, a longtime friend of Parker‘s, as her sole beneficiary. Parker had no surviving children or spouse. A caveat to the will was filed by Carey on 26 January 1983, based in part upon a Pennsylvania probate of a will dated 28 August 1982. This subsequent will named Lucille Carey as sole beneficiary. Discovery ensued, and on 24 January 1984, pursuant to a 5 January 1984 motion made by Garcia, the trial court issued its order directing Carey to complete the citation of interested parties within 60 days, and to post an additional $5,000 bond as security for costs within 30 days. Garcia filed a subsequent motion to dismiss the caveat on the grounds of noncompliance with this order, and on 7 June 1984, the trial court entered the order which is the subject of this appeal. In this
Carey, the caveator, appeals, alleging that (1) it was error to require her to post an increased prosecution bond, and that therefore (2) it was error to dismiss the caveat for failure to comply with an invalid order; (3) that it was error to dismiss the caveat because Rule 41(b) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure does not apply to a caveator in a caveat proceeding, and in the alternative, (4) that the order of involuntary dismissal was defective for failing to separately state necessary conclusions of law. For the following reasons, we reverse and remand.
II
[1] In its order, the trial court ordered Carey to increase security for costs to $5,000 pursuant to
In North Carolina, a propounder has the option to probate a will in either common form or solemn form. Common form is an ex parte proceeding, normally without notice except to the witnesses of the will. Solemn form, on the other hand, involves the citation of all interested persons to the probate proceeding. While both common and solemn form protect the will against collateral attacks, only solemn form protects against direct attacks. When a will has been probated in common form, a caveat is a demand that the propounder proceed in solemn form.
When any action is instituted to contest a will the clerk of the superior court will require the prosecution bond required in other civil actions: Provided, however, that provisions for bringing suit in forma pauperis shall also apply to the provisions of this section.
Although a caveat proceeding is an in rem proceeding without a plaintiff and a defendant as such, it is the propounder who has the initial burden of proof, namely, to prove that the instrument in question was executed with proper formalities required by law. Once this has been established, the burden shifts to the caveator to show that the execution of the will was procured by undue influence. In re Will of Coley, 53 N.C. App. 318, 280 S.E. 2d 770 (1981). In addition, like a plaintiff, the propounder puts on its evidence first. Cf. In re Will of Simmons, 43 N.C. App. 123, 133, 258 S.E. 2d 466, 472-73 (1975), disc. rev. denied, 299 N.C. 121, 262 S.E. 2d 9 (1980). This leads to the conclusion that it is the propounder, and not the caveator, who functions as a plaintiff in a caveat proceeding. Our conclusion is supported by the only written commentary we were able to discover on
Other indicia support our conclusion that
III
[2] Ordinarily, an action may be involuntarily dismissed with prejudice, under Rule 41(b) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, for failure to comply with “any order of court.” However, our Supreme Court recently held that a Rule 41(b) dismissal with prejudice cannot be premised on a party‘s failure to comply with an erroneous order. Thornburg v. Lancaster, 303 N.C. 89, 277 S.E. 2d 423 (1981). As indicated above, the trial court order increasing the caveator‘s bond for court costs to $5,000 was without authority and must be set aside.
It is true that the trial court based its Rule 41(b) dismissal with prejudice on Carey‘s failure to post the increased bond and her failure to cite additional parties, pursuant to the 18 January 1984 order. The order required the caveator to post the unauthorized bond “within 30 days” and to cite all persons interested in the estate “within 60 days.” Consequently, as a practical matter, it seems pointless to require the caveator to cite additional parties when she faces the imminent dismissal of her case for failure to comply with the directive regarding the increased bond.
Reversed and remanded.
Judge PHILLIPS concurs in the result.
Judge EAGLES concurs.
Judge PHILLIPS concurring in the result.
Though I agree with the result reached by the majority I do not agree with some of the things said in getting there. That
