136 N.C. App. 170 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1999
This suit originated with an allegation that defendants mishandled and misappropriated funds belonging to plaintiffs. The issue before us is the propriety of the trial court’s order requiring defendant Samuel Thomas Brame (Brame) to provide testimony in the instant case. Although Brame previously had given relevant testimony at a deposition conducted as part of bankruptcy proceedings, he asserted his Fifth Amendment right not to respond to deposition questions in the case at bar. The trial court granted Centura Bank’s (Centura) motion to compel Brame’s testimony. Brame appeals on the ground that the trial court’s order violates his rights under the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 23 of the North Carolina Constitution. We reverse.
As a preliminary matter, we note that the caption of the 21 August 1998 order appealed from lists only one plaintiff and one defendant in each action and leaves all other parties under the rubric “et al.” Appendix B of the Rules of Appellate Procedure requires that all parties be named in the caption. See Buie v. Johnston, 69 N.C. App. 463, 463 n.1, 317 S.E.2d 91, 92 (1984). The instant case illustrates the importance of this rule; defendant Brame, whose actions constitute the subject of this appeal, is not named in the caption of the order from which the appeal was taken and is only identified as a party defendant on page six of that order. However, the record also contains a 29 July 1998 order that appears to contain the complete caption. We adopt the heading of this order as setting out the correct caption of the case.
The intricate backdrop of this case need not be set out in detail. Plaintiffs Philip A.R. Staton, Ingeborg E. Staton, and Mercedes Staton (the Statons), who lived abroad, inherited a block of stock in the Pan American Beverage Company. Trusts were set up for Ingeborg and Mercedes Staton. The Statons wired funds to an account called the PIM Group Clearing Account at Centura in Winston-Salem in 1993. Defendants Brame and his former wife, Jerri Russell (Russell), who
After the 1996 institution of the Staton cases, the United States Internal Revenue Service informed Brame that he was the target of an ongoing criminal investigation concerning many of the matters relevant to the Staton cases. Subsequently, on 21 December 1998, a federal indictment was returned against Brame in the Middle District of North Carolina.
Centura and other parties to the Staton cases attempted to depose Brame on 27 March 1997. At that point, Brame was aware that a criminal investigation had begun. The deposition did not take place because Brame asserted his privilege against self-incrimination, pursuant to the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution. Centura’s subsequent motion to compel Brame’s deposition testimony, filed on 23 April 1998, was denied. However, on 20 July 1998, Centura filed a Motion to Reconsider, citing Brame’s waiver of his Fifth Amendment privilege at a 1 August 1997 deposition conducted as part of a pending bankruptcy action.
Centura’s Motion to Reconsider and supporting exhibit revealed that on 27 December 1996, Brame filed a petition in bankruptcy in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of North Carolina. Russell, Brame’s former wife, also filed for bankruptcy at the conclusion of the marriage. On 1 August 1997, Brame was deposed in an equitable distribution action, which had been removed to the Bankruptcy Court. He was questioned by an attorney for the Trustee in Bankruptcy and by an attorney for Russell. When questioning began, Brame responded, “I did not decide to talk until late yesterday. I spent several sleepless nights. But it’s time to clear the air. It was the toughest decision I think I’ve ever made in my
The trial court found that by answering questions in the bankruptcy/equitable distribution proceeding, Brame waived his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination in the case at bar. “Having knowingly waived his right for his personal benefit, he should not be allowed [to] assert those same rights in this litigation where it might be beneficial to him not to testify.” The trial court then granted Centura’s Motion to Reconsider and ordered Brame to answer deposition questions. Brame appeals.
Whether Brame’s waiver of his Fifth Amendment rights in a hearing related to bankruptcy binds him for the purposes of this case is a question of law. We review questions of law de novo. See Al Smith Buick Co. v. Mazda Motor of America, 122 N.C. App. 429, 470 S.E.2d 552 (1996). Brame contends the trial court’s order requiring him to provide deposition testimony violates his rights under the United States and North Carolina Constitutions. We begin with a review of pertinent cases. An analogous issue arose in State v. Pearsall, 38 N.C. App. 600, 248 S.E.2d 436 (1978). Pearsall involved an armed robbery in which two defendants were charged, then tried separately. One defendant, Williams, after being convicted, entered notice of appeal. Williams then provided self-incriminating testimony at her co-defendant’s first trial. However, when Williams was called as a witness at the co-defendant’s second trial, she refused to testify, exercising her Fifth Amendment rights. Noting that Williams’ own appeal was still pending at the time she refused to testify when called as a witness in the second trial, we held that her testimony in the first trial did not operate as a waiver of her Fifth Amendment rights in the second trial. “It is the majority view that a witness who testifies to incriminating matters in one proceeding does not thereby waive the right to refuse to answer as to such matters on subsequent, separate, or independent trial or hearing.” Id. at 603, 248 S.E.2d at 438 (citations omitted).
We reaffirmed the Pearsall rule with our holding in State v. Hart, 66 N.C. App. 702, 311 S.E.2d 630 (1984). In Hart, two defendants were charged with drug-related offenses. One defendant, Smith, refused to testify as a defense witness at Hart’s trial because he feared his testimony would incriminate him in his own pending trial. However, Smith previously had executed a written statement to the effect that the drugs were not Hart’s. Despite the existence of this statement, we held that Smith had not waived his Fifth Amendment right to refuse
In light of our prior holdings, the relevant issue before us is whether the federal bankruptcy/equitable distribution proceeding, in which Brame provided testimony, is a separate proceeding from the Staton cases, in which he asserts his Fifth Amendment rights. Centura cites In re Mudd, 95 B.R. 426 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 1989) for the proposition that a civil suit and equitable distribution/bankruptcy proceeding are the same proceeding. In Mudd, the debtor testified at five examinations conducted pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 2004. At the sixth Rule 2004 examination, however, the debtor invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege and refused to answer questions, claiming that additional indictments were pending against him. The court implicitly found that all of the Rule 2004 examinations were the same proceeding and explicitly found that the defendant’s answers in earlier examinations presented a distorted and incomplete picture. The court held that the defendant’s original waiver of his Fifth Amendment privilege in prior examinations constituted a waiver in subsequent examinations conducted pursuant to Rule 2004, in which the trustee sought details of the defendant’s previous testimony, “unless revealing those details would further incriminate him or subject him to new areas of incrimination.” Id. at 431.
Mudd is readily distinguishable. A civil deposition in state court is manifestly different from an equitable distribution/bankruptcy proceeding in federal court. Not only are there significant procedural and jurisdictional differences, the two depositions have different purposes. Brame’s deposition in the bankruptcy matter pertained to resolution of equitable distribution matters between Brame and his former spouse; the attempted deposition in the case at bar apparently related to his authority to act on behalf of plaintiffs. Unlike the defendant in Mudd, Brame was not being asked to provide details underlying earlier testimony he had provided in the same type of proceeding before the same court. Therefore, Brame was entitled to exercise his right against self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution, and the trial court erred when it granted Centura’s motion to compel Brame to answer deposition questions.
Finally, on 25 August 1999, Centura and Poyner & Spruill filed a joint motion pursuant to N.C. R. App. P. 9(b) for leave to amend the record on appeal to include material relating to a superseding indictment returned against Brame on 28 June 1999. The Statons oppose the motion, contending that the records in question originated after the trial court’s order to compel was entered and after notice of appeal was given. The motion for leave to amend is denied.
Reversed.