The procedural context and operative facts of this case are fully set forth in
Stephenson v. Bartlett,
Following entry of the trial court’s order, plaintiffs gave “notice of appeal to the Supreme Court of North Carolina from the portion of the Order ... by which the court denied plaintiffs’ motion for attorney’s fees.” However, our Supreme Court denied plaintiffs’ motion to allow direct appeal.
Stephenson v. Bartlett,
Parties permitted by law to appeal from a judgment or order must do so by filing an appropriate notice of appeal. N.C.R. App. P. 3. Subdivision (d) of Rule 3 governs the content of the notice of appeal and provides as follows:
*241 The notice of appeal required to be filed and served by subdivision (a) of this rule . . . shall designate the judgment or order from which appeal is taken and the court to which appeal is taken....
Id.
“In order to confer jurisdiction on the state’s appellate courts, appellants of lower court orders must comply with the requirements of Rule 3 of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.”
Bailey v. State,
Though defendants raised no objection to plaintiffs’ designation of the Supreme Court as the “court to which appeal is taken,” we raised this issue sua sponte at oral argument. Notwithstanding the opportunity to do so, plaintiffs did not claim the error was a mere mistake in drafting, and, indeed, claimed their mistaken notice of appeal was sufficient to confer jurisdiction on this Court under Rule 3(d).
“[W]e may liberally construe a notice of appeal in one of two ways to determine whether it provides jurisdiction.”
Von Ramm v. Von Ramm,
First, “a mistake in designating the judgment, or in designating the part appealed from if only a part is designated, should not result in loss of the appeal as long as the intent to appeal from a specific judgment can be fairly inferred from the notice and the appellee is not misled by the mistake.” Smith v. Independent Life Ins. Co.,43 N.C. App. 269 , 274,258 S.E.2d 864 , 867 (1979), citing 9 Moore’s Federal Practice § 203.17[2], 3-80 — 3-82 (2d ed. 1990) (footnotes omitted) (emphasis added). Second, if a party technically fails to comply with procedural requirements in filing papers with the court, the court may determine that the party complied with the rule if the party accomplishes the ‘functional equivalent” of the requirement. Torres, at 317,101 L.E.2d at 291 (overlooking a party’s failure to comply with a federal notice of appeal requirement of designating the petitioner’s name) (emphasis added).
*242
Id.
at 156-57,
Mistakes by appellants in following all the subparts of Appellate Procedure Rule 3(d) have not always been fatal to an appeal. For example, Rule 3(d) requires the appellant to “designate the judgment or order from which appeal is taken.” In
Strauss v. Hunt,
Similarly, Rule 3(d) requires the notice of appeal to “specify the party or parties taking the appeal,” but appellants’ omissions of this requirement have not prevented our assuming jurisdiction on appeal. In
Hummer v. Pulley, Watson, King & Lischer, P.A.,
In the instant case, plaintiffs failed to specify the Court of Appeals as the “court to which appeal is taken,” per Rule 3(d). Despite this failing, we find the intent to appeal to this Court can be fairly inferred from plaintiffs’ notice of appeal and the notice achieved the functional equivalent of an appeal to this Court. 1 Indeed, defendants were not misled by plaintiffs’ mistake, as they inferred from the notice that the appeal would proceed in this Court. Furthermore, we can find no reason to treat one subpart of Rule 3(d) differently from another subpart. As in Strauss and Evans, where we found jurisdiction despite mistakes in designating the correct judgment or order from which appeal is taken, the mistake here falls under the same subpart, indeed within the same semi-coloned section, of Rule 3(d). Accordingly, we assume jurisdiction to decide this appeal under the logic óf Von Ramm.
We turn now to the merits of plaintiffs’ appeal. The trial court’s ruling denied plaintiffs’ request for attorney fees, declining to endorse plaintiffs’ reliance on 42 U.S.C. § 1988, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 6-19.1 (2005), and the private attorney general doctrine.
Neither N.C. Gen. Stat. § 6-19.1 (2005) (permitting award of attorney fees to parties appealing or defending against agency action) (emphasis added) nor 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (permitting an award of attorney fees to a prevailing party in an action or proceeding to enforce certain enumerated federal statutes listed therein) authorize an award of attorney fees under, the facts of the instant case. Plaintiffs candidly conceded to the trial court that no court has applied the statutes upon which they rely in this manner. We, like *244 wise, decline to hold these statutory provisions applicable to the facts of the instant case.
The private attorney general doctrine is an equitable exception to the general American rule that each party bear its own attorney fees absent statutory or contractual authorization for a court to award the same. Under this doctrine, which serves as an incentive for the initiation of public interest litigation by a private party, a court may award attorney fees to a party vindicating a right that (1) benefits a large number of people, (2) requires private enforcement, and (3) is of societal importance. Ann K. Wooster, Annotation,
Private Attorney General Doctrine
— State
Gases,
The large majority of our sister states that have considered the issue have declined to adopt the private attorney general doctrine.
See id. See, e.g., State Bd. of Tax Comm’rs v. Town of St. John,
Our own Supreme Court has unequivocally noted that “all costs are given in a court of law in virtue of some statute [,] [and the] simple but definitive statement of the rule is: [C]osts in this State are
*245
entirely creatures of legislation, and without this they do not exist.”
City of Charlotte v. McNeely,
Notwithstanding this clear directive, plaintiffs direct the attention of this Court to
Bailey v. State of North Carolina,
First,
Bailey
expressly reiterated the general rule that attorney fees “are ordinarily taxable as costs only when authorized by statute.”
Id.
Notwithstanding, the Court further observed that the “ ‘common-fund doctrine’ is a long-standing exception to the general rule in this country that every litigant is responsible for his or her own attorney’s fees.”
Id. Bailey’s
adherence to a long-standing exception of the common fund doctrine has no application in this case, in which plaintiffs candidly concede, as they must, that there is no common fund resulting from the litigation. Second,
Bailey
involved a class action in which the attorney fees borne by the representatives of the class were then shared or equally distributed to the bene-fitted class by exaction out of the recovery of the litigation.
Id.
at 162,
*246 Affirmed.
Notes
. The United States Supreme Court allows circuit courts to liberally construe similar rules in federal appellate procedure.
See, e.g., Foman v. Davis,
