29 N.C. App. 316 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1976
Defendant’s first assignment of error is that the trial court improvidently granted plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment in the action by the plaintiff to enforce the South Carolina judgment.
In support of its motion the plaintiff offered its complaint which incorporated by reference a copy of the proceedings, including the default judgment, in South Carolina, but no affidavits or other materials were submitted in support of the motion. The defendant, in resisting the motion for summary judgment offered only its unverified answer and counterclaim.
If the South Carolina court did not have jurisdiction, then its judgment is void, and this State is not required to give “full faith and credit” to the judgment under Art. IV, § 1 of the Federal Constitution. The full faith and credit clause does not prevent inquiry into the jurisdiction of the South Carolina
Though the South Carolina judgment recited that it had jurisdiction over the defendant corporation, a mere recital in the judgment that the court rendering it had jurisdiction is not conclusive and, notwithstanding such recital, the court of another state, in which the judgment is asserted as the cause of action, or as a defense, may, within limits, make its own independent inquiry into the jurisdiction of the court which rendered the judgment. But if jurisdiction is, itself, an issue which has been fully litigated in, and determined by, the foreign court which rendered the judgment, the judgment is entitled to full faith and credit. Hosiery Mills v. Burlington Industries, 285 N.C. 344, 204 S.E. 2d 834 (1974).
In the present case it appears that the plaintiff is a South Carolina corporation; that defendant is a Florida corporation; that they entered into a contract whereby defendant was to prepare plans for the construction of a dam by defendant in North Carolina; and that plaintiff was to be paid a fixed sum. In its answer to the complaint in this case, the defendant alleges that the contract was executed in Florida; that the dam construction was in North Carolina; that it did no business in South Carolina and had no agent there; and that the South Carolina judgment was void in that the court did not have in personam jurisdiction over the defendant.
Clearly, the defendant’s answer raised the issue of the jurisdiction of the South Carolina court which rendered the judgment. Defendant had the right to raise this issue in this case in North Carolina because the issue had not been fully litigated in, and determined by, the South Carolina court, because the defendant did not appear in the South Carolina action, and because there is nothing in the record to indicate that it consented to the jurisdiction of that court.
On the motion for summary judgment the test is whether the pleadings and materials offered in support of the same show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact. If there is no such issue, then the sole question for the court’s determination is whether the party is entitled to the judgment as a
We find that the plaintiff’s complaint and the copy of the proceedings in the South Carolina court which were offered in support of its motion for summary judgment were not sufficient to establish the lack of the genuine issue of material fact, to-wit the in 'personam jurisdiction of the South Carolina court over the defendant.
The trial court also granted the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment on the defendant’s counterclaim. Whether the defendant is entitled to pursue his counterclaim against the plaintiff is dependent upon the determination of the issue of jurisdiction by the South Carolina court. If the South Carolina court did have in personam jurisdiction over the defendant, it is possible that the defendant, having failed to prosecute his counterclaim in South Carolina, would be precluded from prosecuting the same in this action. We, therefore, find that the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment on the defendant’s counterclaim was improvidently granted.
The summary judgment for the plaintiff on its action to enforce the South Carolina judgment, and for the plaintiff on the defendant’s counterclaim, is
Reversed and Remanded.