Dеfendants contend that this action is barred by the statute of limitations. Plaintiffs urge that under the facts of this case, the statute of limitations dоes not bar their claims of fraud. We agree with plaintiffs.
I
We note first that defendants’ motion to dismiss was considered by the trial court as hаving been brought under G.S. 1A-1, Rule 8(c). Rule 8(c) is limited by its own terms to responsive pleadings. Defendants’ motion here was made and granted prior to their filing any responsive pleading.
Dickens v. Puryear,
Since defendants’ motion is essentially one under G.S. 1A-1, Rule 12(b)(6), to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint for failure to state a claim for relief, the issues before the court are whether the complaint alleges the elеments of at least some legally recognized claim and whether it provides sufficient notice of the events giving rise to the claim to enable the defendants to understand and respond to it.
Orange Co. v. Dept. of Transportation,
G.S. 1-46, in conjunction with G.S. 1-52(9), provides that “an action . . . [f]or relief on the grounds of fraud or mistake” must bе commenced within three years and that the “cause of action shall not be deemed to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud or mistake.” In considering the trial court’s dismissal of plaintiffs’ fraud claims,
Vail v. Vail,
Fraud has no all-embracing definition. Because of the multifarious means by which human ingenuity is аble to devise means to gain advantages by false suggestions and concealment of the truth, and in order that each case may be determined on its own facts, it has been wisely stated “that fraud is better left undefined,” lest, as Lord Hardwicke put it, “the craft of men should find a way of сommitting fraud which might escape a rule or definition.” . . . However, in general terms, fraud may be said to embrace “all acts, omissions, аnd concealments involving a breach of legal or equitable duty and resulting in damage to another or the taking of undue or unconscientious advantage of another.”
Id.
at 113,
Because fraud is difficult to define, it is likewise difficult to establish with certainty when the statute of limitаtions on a claim of fraud begins to run.
Vail v. Vail
holds that where a person is aware of facts and circumstances which, in the exercisе of due care, would enable him or her to learn of or discover the fraud, the fraud is discovered for purposes of the statute of limitations. “[T]he law regards the means of knowledge as the knowledge itself.”
Id.
at 116,
Ill
The only pleadings befоre the trial court here were plaintiffs’ complaint and defendants’ motion. The complaint appears to establish a
prima facie
case of fraud.
See Johnson v. Phoenix Mutual Ins. Co.,
The applicable statute оf limitations runs from the point when the fraud was, or should have been, discovered.
Vail v. Vail, supra.
We believe that plaintiffs’ assertion that they did not discover the fraud until September of 1981 is sufficient to establish the approximate date from which the statute of limitations began to run on their claims. Defendants’ unsupported assertion to the contrary merely creates a conflict that, in the procedural сontext of this case, must be resolved in plaintiffs’ favor.
Durham v. Vine,
Moreover, plaintiffs have alleged the existence of a speсial relationship between themselves and defendants that could excuse their failure to exercise due diligence. Defendants were plaintiffs’ accountants. By virtue of this relationship, plaintiffs reposed a certain amount of trust and confidencе in defendants and even executed a power of attorney in favor of defendant Lindsey. The fact that plaintiffs terminated their business relationship with Masters Lumber Company in August of 1979 does not mean that they terminated their special relationship with defendants аs their accountants. Nor does termination of the business relationship with Masters Lumber Company mean that there was no longer a business relationship between plaintiffs and the individual defendants that could be shown to excuse plaintiffs’ failure to exercise due diligence. Accordingly, we hold that plain *717 tiffs’ action has not been shown to be barred by the statute of limitations.
IV
Plaintiffs also assign as еrror the dismissal of the fifth and sixth counts of their complaint, the claims of unfair and deceptive trade practice. For the rеasons set forth above, we hold that their claims are not barred by the statute of limitations and that they were incorrectly dismissed. We note further that G.S. 75-16.2 provides a four year statute of limitations for actions arising under G.S. 75-1 et seq., dealing with unfair trade practices. The fifth and sixth сlaims are based on the same facts that plaintiffs alleged in support of their fraud claims. Even if the fraud claims were barred by the three year limitation of G.S. 1-52, the unfair trade practice claims, being controlled by a four year statute, would not necessarily be barred.
For the reasons set forth above, the order of the trial court dismissing plaintiffs’ action is
Reversed.
