Tbe order refusing a reference shows on its face tbat tbe court denied tbe motion for a compulsory reference as a matter of discretion. This being so, the appeal necessarily proceeds on tbe assumption tbat the court should have granted a compulsory reference because tbe defendant was entitled to demand tbat mode of trial as a matter of right in tbe action at bar.
Tbe statute which controls tbe granting of compulsory references is embodied in G.S. 1-189. It provides tbat “where tbe parties do not consent, the court may, upon tbe application of either, or of its own motion, direct a reference” in certain enumerated classes or types of civil suits, among them being cases necessitating tbe taking of an account; cases involving a complicated question of boundary, or requiring a personal view of tbe premises; and cases “where tbe issues of fact and questions of fact arise in an action of which tbe courts of equity of tbe state bad exclusive jurisdiction prior to tbe adoption of tbe constitution of one thousand eight hundred and sixty-eight, and in which tbe matter or amount in dispute is not less than the sum or value of five hundred dollars.”
For the purpose of this particular decision, it is taken for granted without so adjudging that the instant case falls within each of the classes or types of actions just mentioned, and that by reason thereof the court had power under the statute to refer it.
The statute stipulates that “the court may . . . direct a reference” in certain classes or types of cases. It is manifest that the verb “may” is used in this connection in its ordinary sense as implying permissive, and not mandatory, action or conduct.
Curlee v. Bank,
This conclusion finds support in our decisions.
Delafield v. Construction Co.,
This brings us to the question of the appealability of the order refusing to direct a compulsory reference. Under the statute, an interlocutory order or judgment of a Superior Court Judge is not reviewable by appeal unless it is a judicial decision affecting a substantial right claimed in the action or proceeding. G.S. 1-277.
The court had the discretionary power to direct a compulsory reference in the instant case. The appellant had the right, therefore, to insist that the judge exercise his discretion, i.e., that he choose between the granting and the refusing of the reference proposed by it. But the appellant’s right did not extend beyond that point. It could not demand as a legal right that the judge should do what it asked, i.e., direct the reference. For this reason, the order refusing the reference does not affect a substantial right of the appellant, and is not appealable. 4 C.J.S., Appeal and Error, section 129. See, also, in this connection: McIntosh on North Carolina Practice and Procedure in Civil Cases, section 676.
The defendant cites
Royster v. Wright,
For the reasons given, the appeal must be dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
