78 N.C. 4 | N.C. | 1878
This action was commenced on 3 October, 1874. The original defendants were N.W. Woodfin, administrator of McDowell, R. M. Pearson, N.W. Woodfin, administrator of John W. Woodfin, and W. F. McKesson. Pearson having died, his executor was made a party in this Court.
The complaint alleges, in substance, that at Spring Term, 1869, of Burke Superior Court the relator recovered a judgment against N.W. Woodfin, administrator of McDowell, and that a part of it is still unpaid; that McDowell died in 1859; N.W. Woodfin was appointed his administrator, and gave bond in the usual form (5) with Pearson, McKesson, and John W. Woodfin as his sureties. The relator assigns as a breach, that N.W. Woodfin, the administrator, received a large amount of personal property, more than sufficient to have paid all the debts of McDowell and the costs of administration, and that he failed to pay the debt to the relator, but delivered the property to the legatees without taking refunding bonds, to the damage of the relator, etc.
At spring Term, 1875, N.W. Woodfin and Pearson filed separate answers. The plaintiff replied. At Fall Term, 1875, the death of N.W. Woodfin was suggested, and it was ordered that notice issue to his administrator. At Spring Term, 1876, the administrator of N.W. Woodfin, and the administrator de bonis non of McDowell, were made parties. The plaintiff then by leave of the court amended the complaint *4 by assigning as a further breach the nonpayment of the note upon which the aforesaid judgment was recovered. The note was dated 28 December, 1858, and payable one day after date.
At Fall Term, 1876, Pearson, not abandoning his answer, demurred to the amended complaint and alleged as ground that John Gray Bynum, the administrator de bonis non of McDowell, was the only proper relator in an action on the administration bond of Woodfin, and the relator Crawley cannot maintain the action. At a special term in November, 1877, the defendant Pearson withdrew his demurrer, and moved to dismiss the action, which motion was refused, and the defendants appealed to this Court.
It has been several times held in this Court that no appeal will lie from the refusal of a motion to dismiss an action, or to nonsuit (6) a plaintiff. Stith v. Lookabill,
In those cases, as in this, the counsel argued the cases upon their merits as appearing on the complaints, which might be deemed a waiver of a right to dismiss the appeal on the ground that no appeal would lie from such a refusal. But the consent of the counsel cannot give this Court jurisdiction of an appeal where it has none, or prevent the inconveniences of such a practice. It is clear that it is not one of the cases in which an appeal is allowed by C. C. P., sec. 299. The refusal affects no substantial right; the defenses of the defendant are all as open to him as they ever were. If appeals are allowed in such cases, litigation will be immensely protracted and the costs increased. By a motion to dismiss, or to nonsuit, the court is asked to give an opinion upon a state of facts which the defendant at the same time denies to be true. A demurrer which pro hac vice admits the facts alleged is the only mode known to the law in which a judgment of a court can be obtained upon the sufficiency in law of a complaint.
A Superior Court is not a mere moot court to give opinions which have no practical effect. Its duty is to decide real controversies, and to give such judgments therein as may be enforced, thus doing practical work and ending litigation, which is always an evil.
No case has been found, and probably none can be, either where the common-law practice or The Code prevails, in which an appeal is allowed in such a case; and for this uniformity of holding there must be some good reason. If this Court should, after laborious thought and research, express its opinion on the facts alleged in the complaint, it would be idle, for the facts are denied. It will be time enough for us to apply the law to the facts when the facts are found or admitted, so that we can give some effective judgment thereon.
PER CURIAM. Appeal dismissed. *5
Cited: Sutton v. Schonwald,
(7)