On 5 October 1998, the Hertford County Board of Commissioners held a public hearing following which it voted unanimously to rezone a 1,600 acre tract of undeveloped land located along the southern shore of the Chowan River east of Tunis. Before the rezoning, a portion of the property was zoned RA-20 (residential and agricultural use); and, the remainder of the property was zoned RR&C (residential and recreational use).
At the public hearing, the Board of Commissioners voted to rezone the property from RA-20 and RR&C to IH (heavy industrial use). The land lying to the west of the property is also zoned IH. At the same public hearing, the Board of Commissioners also voted to amend certain sections of the municipal zoning ordinance to allow steel mills and recycling facilities, in addition to related uses, within the IH zoning district.
On 4 December 1998, the plaintiffs brought an action against the Board of Commissioners challenging the rezoning of the property and the amending of the zoning ordinance. The Board of Commissioners answered the complaint on 7 January 1999; and on 5 February 1999, it moved to dismiss the action under Rules 12(b)(1), (2), (4), (6) and (7) on grounds that, among other things, the plaintiffs failed to name or serve Hertford County as a defendant. See N.C.R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1), (2), (4), (6) and (7) (1990). In its motion to dismiss, the Board of Commissioners asserted that it was not a proper defendant, that Hertford County was the proper defendant, and that the complaint could not be amended to add or substitute Hertford County as a defendant as the two-month statute of limitations by that time had run.
On 15 February 1999, the plaintiffs moved to amend the summons and complaint by substituting “Hertford County” as the named defendant in place of the Board of Commissioners. On 4 and 5 May 1999, the Board of Commissioners and plaintiffs, respectively, moved for summary judgment.
On 10 June 1999, Superior Court Judge James E. Ragan, III entered an order (1) denying the Board of Commissioners’ motion to dismiss, (2) denying the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, and (3) granting the Board of Commissioners’ motion for summary judgment. It does not appear from the record on appeal that the trial court ever ruled on the plaintiffs’ motion to amend the summons and complaint. From the 10 June 1999 order, plaintiffs appeal and the Board of Commissioners cross-appeals.
On appeal, we consider only the Board of Commissioners’ cross-appeal as its disposition precludes us from considering the plaintiffs’ appeal.
The Board of Commissioners asserts that the trial court erred in denying its motion to dismiss under N.C.R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1), (2), (4), (6) and (7). It contends that Hertford County, rather than the Board of Commissioners, was the only proper defendant to this action, and that it was error for the plaintiffs to
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 153A-11 states in relevant part that “[t]he inhabitants of each county are a body politic and corporate .... Under that
name they . . . may sue and be sued . . . N.C. Gen. Stat. § 153A-11 (1991). In
Fountain v. Board of Comm’rs of Pitt County,
Prior to the amendment by Revisal, § 1310, a suit, for a claim due by a county was required to be brought against its board of commissioners, as Code, § 704, provided that a county should “sue and be sued in the name of the board of commissioners,” while Revisal, § 1310, provides that a county must “sue and be sued in the name of the county.”
Id.
at 114,
Undoubtedly, the real party in interest in this case is Hertford County, not the Board of Commissioners. The plaintiffs acknowledged as much by seeking to amend their complaint in the wake of the Board of Commissioners’ motion to dismiss to substitute Hertford County as the named defendant, despite the plaintiffs’ subsequent contentions that the amendment was filed merely out of an abundance of caution. The question then is whether the defect in the complaint by naming the Board of Commissioners as the defendant instead of Hertford County was sufficient to bar recovery by the plaintiffs and thereby support the defendant’s motion to dismiss, or whether the defect was merely technical in nature and thereby subject to remedy.
In
Fountain,
the plaintiff brought a contract action against “The Board of County Commissioners of the County of Pitt.”
On appeal by the plaintiff, our Supreme Court noted that the county was indeed the proper party to be sued rather than the board of commissioners; nonetheless, the Court reversed the trial court’s decision to dismiss the complaint as time-barred.
Id.
at 114-15,
While the broad statutory power to amend cited by the Court in
Fountain
no longer exists, our current Rules of Civil Procedure allow for discretionary amendments to pleadings by leave of court “when justice so requires.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 15(a) (1990). As this Court stated in
Thorpe v. Wilson,
“Names are to designate person, and where the identity is certain a variance in the name is immaterial.” Patterson v. Walton,119 N.C. 500 , 501,26 S.E. 43 , 43 (1896). Errors or defects in the pleadings not affecting substantial rights are to be disregarded. Id. If, as here, the effect of amendment is merely to correct the name of a person already in court, there is no prejudice.
Id.
at 297,
Having determined that the county was the proper party defendant in the cause of action, and assuming arguendo that the trial court exercised its discretionary power and granted the plaintiffs’ motion to amend the complaint, we must determine whether such amendment to the complaint substituting the county as the party-defendant could have related back to the original complaint, and thereby circumvented the statute of limitations. We find that it could not.
We first note that the plaintiffs’ original complaint was filed on the last date on which they could file a timely complaint. Unless the plaintiffs’ amendment is permitted to relate back to the date of the original complaint, the statute of limitations therefore operates as a defense for the defendant and bars the plaintiffs’ claims against the county. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-54.1 (1996) (imposing a two-month statute of limitations for commencing an action contesting the validity of a zoning ordinance or amendment adopted by a county).
In
Crossman v. Moore,
[Rule 15(c)] speaks of claims and allows the relation back of claims if the original claim gives notice of the transactions or occurrences to be proved pursuant to the amended pleading. When the amendment seeks to add a 'party-defendant or substitute a party-defendant to the suit, the required notice cannot occur. As a matter of course, the original claim cannot give notice of the transactions or occurrences to be proved in the amended pleading to a defendant who is not aware of his status as such when the original claim is filed. We hold that [Rule 15(c)] does not apply to the naming of a new party-defendant to the action. It is not authority for the relation back of a claim against a new party.
In subsequent cases, this Court has construed the
Crossman
decision to mean that Rule 15(c) is not authority for the relation back of claims against a new party, but
may
allow for the relation back of an amendment to correct a mere misnomer. In
White v. Crisp,
In
Wicker v. Holland,
In the present case, the plaintiffs’ original complaint and summons names the Board of Commissioners as defendant. While there is no dispute that Hertford County had notice of the claim prior to the running of the statute of limitations, such notice is irrelevant pursuant to our holding in Wicker. Instead, under our holding in Killian Tire, the question becomes whether the plaintiffs’ amendment had the effect of adding a new party-defendant or merely corrected a misnomer in the original complaint.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 153A-12 provides in relevant part that “[e]xcept as otherwise directed by law, each power, right, duty, function, privilege and immunity of the [county] shall be exercised by the board of commissioners.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 153A-12 (1991). While the Board of Commissioners is statutorily vested with the power to exercise powers and rights on behalf of the county, this is much like a board of directors acting on behalf of a corporation. The corporation, being merely a legal instrumentality, is incapable of acting on its own behalf, and the board is therefore required to exercise the corporate powers. The corporate body is therefore separate and distinct from its board of directors, and a county is likewise an entity separate and distinct from its board of commissioners.
The plaintiffs contend that their amendment merely seeks to correct a misnomer reflected in the original complaint.
See McLean v. Matheny,
We note that the cases cited by the plaintiff all pre-date our Supreme Court’s decision in
Crossman,
and that
Crossman
and its progeny have redefined the standard for what constitutes a misnomer for purposes of the relation-back rule. We are unaware of any case in
our courts decided
post-Crossman
which has allowed an amendment effecting a name change of any sort to relate back to the original complaint. In
Crossman,
the plaintiff originally named Van Dolan Moore as a party-defendant in a personal injury action arising out of an automobile accident, even though it was his son, Van Dolan Moore, II, who was the driver involved in the accident.
In
Franklin v. Winn Dixie Raleigh, Inc.,
We conclude that the plaintiffs’ attempt to amend the summons and complaint in the instant case by changing the name of the party-defendant to Hertford County in place of the Board of Commissioners effectively seeks to add a new party-defendant rather than
merely correct a misnomer, and the relation-back rule therefore cannot apply. As a result, the plaintiffs’ suit against the county was time-barred under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-54.1, and the trial court should have granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss. Since we conclude that the defendant was entitled to have this action dismissed under N.C.R. Civ. P. 12(b), we need not consider the correctness of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendant. Nonetheless, we note that the trial court’s grant of summary judgment has the same practical effect of having granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss. We therefore treat the defendant’s motion for summary judgment as though it were a converted motion to dismiss.
See, e.g., North Carolina Steel, Inc. v. National Council on Compensation Ins.,
Affirmed.
