Plaintiff appeals an order entered 9 May 2000 by Judge Thomas R.J. Newbern dismissing plaintiffs action for equitable distribution. Plaintiff originally filed a complaint on 29 September 1987 requesting a divorce from bed and board, alimony, alimony
pendente lite,
and child support from defendant. Plaintiff also preserved her interest in the equitable distribution of marital property. In his Answer and Counterclaim, filed 2 November 1987, Defendant stated that he would be seeking equitable distribution “[a]t an appropriate time” in the future. Defendant filed a motion on 18 April 2000 to dismiss
Plaintiff and defendant were married in 1964 and had three children. After discord in their relationship increased, plaintiff filed for divorce from defendant. The court entered an order on 30 November 1987 settling issues of child custody, child support, alimony, and temporary possession of marital property. In 1990, the court awarded plaintiff an absolute divorce from defendant. The court never determined plaintiff’s claim for equitable distribution of marital property which was contained in her original Complaint filed 29 September 1987, nor did the court determine defendant’s claim for equitable distribution mentioned in his Answer and Counterclaim filed 2 November 1987. In granting plaintiff an absolute divorce from defendant 18 May 1990, the court noted that plaintiff’s claim for equitable distribution was still pending. After plaintiff sought to have the court approve and sign a Qualified Domestic Relations Order regarding a pension plan of defendant’s, defendant filed a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s claim for equitable distribution on 18 April 2000. After a hearing, the trial court concluded that plaintiff had failed to prosecute her equitable distribution claim, which materially prejudiced the defendant. The court dismissed plaintiff’s claim for equitable distribution with prejudice.
Plaintiff’s only assignment of error asserts that the “trial court erred in dismissing plaintiff’s claim for equitable distribution for failure to prosecute without considering appropriate sanctions short of dismissal.” The trial court dismissed plaintiff’s claim for equitable distribution pursuant to Rule 41(b). Rule 41(b) provides for the involuntary dismissal of a cause of action “[f]or failure of the plaintiff to prosecute or to comply with these rules or any order of court.” In general, a trial court is required to “consider lesser sanctions before dismissing an action under Rule 41(b).”
Goss v. Battle,
Rule 41(b) provides that a claim may be dismissed for one of three reasons: failure to comply with the rules, failure to comply with a court order, or failure to prosecute. Most of the cases cited in the plaintiff’s brief specifically concern dismissals under Rule 41(b) for failure to “comply with these rules or any order of court,” and not dis
missals for failure to prosecute.
See Foy v. Hunter,
We reach this conclusion for two reasons. First, from the cases involving dismissals under Rule 41(b), we can discern no reason to treat a dismissal for failure to prosecute different from dismissals for other reasons permitted by Rule 41(b), when the question is whether lesser sanctions suffice. And second, because the cases concerning dismissal under Rule 41(b), few though they are, appear to compel this conclusion.
Defendant relies upon Foy
v. Hunter
to illustrate the issues North Carolina case law presents on this subject. There, the trial court dismissed plaintiffs’ claims with prejudice based on plaintiffs’ alleged failure to prosecute and on an alleged failure to comply with the Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically Rule 8(a)(2).
See id.
at 619,
However, this Court in
Foy
considered the dismissal for violation of Rule 8(a)(2) separately. The Court noted that when a party violates a rule, the trial court may dismiss for failure to comply with the Rules of Civil Procedure if it has first determined the appropriateness of lesser sanctions.
See id.
at 620,
Here, the trial court made some findings of fact and conclusions of law concerning plaintiff’s failure to prosecute. However, we find that the trial court did not consider in the record whether lesser sanctions were appropriate for plaintiff’s failure to prosecute. “If the trial court undertakes this analysis, its resulting order will be reversed on appeal only for an abuse of discretion.”
Foy,
We also note that the Fourth Circuit has ruled accordingly in interpreting the same rule. Although we are not bound by these cases,
they can have instructional value, especially when considered in conjunction with the preceding state law analysis.
See State v. Adams,
We believe that the factors recognized in
Hillig,
as well as in our previous cases, together give rise to three factors that the trial judge must address before dismissing for failure to prosecute under Rule 41(b). They are: (1) whether the plaintiff acted in a manner which deliberately or unreasonably delayed the matter; (2) the amount of prejudice, if any, to the defendant; and (3) the reason, if one exists, that sanctions short of dismissal would not suffice. Here, the trial court did not fully address any of these factors. The only mention of prejudice to the defendant in the order is contained in finding number 17, which reveals no factual basis and thus is actually a conclusion of law.
See Carpenter v. Brooks,
In sum, we hold that the trial judge must address the three factors previously enumerated before deciding whether to dismiss the plaintiff’s claim with prejudice under Rule 41(b), for failure to prosecute. Accordingly, the trial court’s order dismissing with prejudice plaintiff’s -claim for equitable distribution is vacated, and this case is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
