Summary judgment procedure was first used in England under a rule adopted in 1855 and was applicable only to actions upon bills of exchange and promissory notes. Apparently, New York was the first State in the United States to adopt the procedure, following the English model. Clark,
Summary Judgments,
While neither the federal rules nor the North Carolina rule excludes the use of the procedure in negligence actions, it is generally conceded that summary judgment will not usually be as feasible in negligence cases where the standard of the prudent man must be applied. Barron and Holtzoff, Federal Practice and Procedure (Wright Ed.) Vol. 3, § 1232.1; Gordon, The New Summary Judgment Rule in North Carolina, supra. But summary judgment is proper where it appears that even if the facts as claimed by the plaintiff are proved, there can be no recovery, Barron and Holtzoff, Federal Practice and Procedure, supra, thus providing a device for identifying the factually groundless claim or defense.
In
Bland v. Norfolk and Southern Railroad Co., Inc.,
In the case now before us, defendants used plaintiff’s adverse examination as a deposition in support of their motion. Plaintiff testified that she and defendants were next-door neighbors and that she had been in their home on other occasions, that on the afternoon of her injury she went to defendants’ home for the purpose of paying the feme defendant Hughes $10.60 for some perfume which Mrs. Hughes had purchased for plaintiff at Montaldo’s, that she entered the house at the front door, went through the living room to the dining room and sat down and talked for a while with Mr. Hughes, that the living room was lighted, that the floors were pretty and shiny but she could not say she was certain there was wax on the floor, that she did not notice the whole floor but in the area where she was sitting the floor looked the same and did not appear to be more shiny in one spot than another, that she waited a few minutes for Mrs. Hughes and started to leave, that as she started out the front door she slipped on a throw rug and fell across the arm of a chair and to the floor on the rug.
Plaintiff offered no evidence of any kind. Section (e) of Rule 56 clearly states that the unsupported allegations in a pleading are insufficient to create a genuine issue of fact where the moving adverse party supports his motion by allowable evidentiary matter showing the facts to be contrary to that alleged in the pleadings. Gordon, The New Summary Judgment Rule in North Carolina, supra.
The burden is on the moving party to establish the lack of a triable issue of fact. The evidentiary matter supporting the moving party’s motion may not be sufficient to satisfy his burden of proof, even though the opposing party fails to present any competent counter-affidavits or other materials.
Griffith v. William Penn Broadcasting Co.
(E.D. Pa. 1945)
We are of the opinion that defendants have, by plaintiff’s adverse examination, sufficiently met their burden of proof. Nothing else appearing, defendants would be entitled to a directed verdict at trial.
Jenkins v. Brothers,
Affirmed.
