AUTO FINANCE COMPANY OF NORTH CAROLINA v. Simmons

102 S.E.2d 119, 247 N.C. 724, 1958 N.C. LEXIS 303
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 26, 1958
Docket666
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 102 S.E.2d 119 (AUTO FINANCE COMPANY OF NORTH CAROLINA v. Simmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AUTO FINANCE COMPANY OF NORTH CAROLINA v. Simmons, 102 S.E.2d 119, 247 N.C. 724, 1958 N.C. LEXIS 303 (N.C. 1958).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

This is a civil action instituted in the Durham County Civil Court to recover the sum of $300 on a conditional sale contract covering the defendant Simmons’ 1949 Lincoln automobile. As an ancillary remedy in the action, the plaintiff sued out a writ of claim and delivery to recover possession of the automobile.

The Durham County Civil Court was organized under Article 35 of Chapter 7 of the North Carolina General Statutes, with jurisdiction limited to $1,500.

The defendant Simmons filed answer denying the material allegations of the complaint, and by way of counterclaim alleged a series of transactions against the plaintiff and Weeks *726 Motors, Inc. The relief claimed by the defendant Simmons in his counterclaim is in excess of the jurisdictional limit of the County Court. On this ground, he moved the Court that the case be removed to the Superior Court for trial.

The Judge of the Durham County Civil Court, on motion of the defendant Simmons, entered an order bringing Weeks Motors, Inc., in as a party defendant.

Thereafter, the plaintiff and Weeks Motors, Inc., by separate motions, moved to strike all the defendant’s further answer and counterclaim on these grounds: (1) irrelevancy and redundancy under G.S. 1-153, (2) failure to state facts constituting either a defense or counterclaim, and (3) that the “purported counterclaim asserted is in an amount in excess of the jurisdiction” of the County Court.

The motions to- strike were not heard in the County Court. The Judge of that Court first took up for consideration the motion made by the defendant Simmons to remove the action to the Superior Court. The motion was denied on the grounds that Simmons by filing answer and moving to make a new party had submitted to the jurisdiction of the court. He excepted and appealed to the Superior Court.

On appeal, the presiding Judge held that the counterclaim set up by Simmons in excess of the jurisdiction of the County Court entitled him to have the entire case removed to the Superior Court. The order entered in the Superior Court by Judge Williams decrees: (1) that the order of the County Court denying removal be reversed, and that the case be placed on the civil issue docket of the Superior Court; (2) that the order naming Weeks Motors, Inc., as an additional party be affirmed; and (3) that the motion of the plaintiff to strike the counterclaim be disallowed. From the order so entered, the plaintiff appealed.

The crucial question presented by the appeal is this: Did the filing of the counterclaim by the defendant Simmons in which he claims relief in excess of $1,500 oust the jurisdiction of the Durham County Civil Court over the plaintiff’s claim and entitle Simmons to a removal of the whole case to the Superior Court for trial? We think not. There is no provision to that effect in the statutes under which the Court was organized. G.S. 7-351 through 7-383. And the general rule is that in the absence of such provision, the filing of a counterclaim in excess of a lower trial court’s limited jurisdiction does not oust the court of jurisdiction of the plaintiff’s claim, and the court should proceed to hear and determine that claim. 14 Am. Jur., Courts, Sec. 221; Anno: 37 L.R.A. (N.S.) 607. Cf. Leonard v. Coble, 222 N.C. 552, 23 S.E. 2d 841; Cheese Co. v. Pipkin, 155 N.C. 394, 71 S.E. 442.

*727 It necessarily follows that the order of removal entered in the Superior Court must he held for error. The case should have remained in the Durham County Civil Court for trial of the plaintiff’s cause of action. This being so, the rulings made in the Superior Court on the plaintiff’s motion to strike the counterclaim and on the question whether Weeks Motors, Inc., should he retained as a party defendant will be treated as stricken out without prejudice to either side, to the end that these motions may be heard and determined in the first instance in the County Court. The ruling of the County Court denying removal of the cause will be sustained. Since the reasons given for the ruling are unimportant, they will be treated as stricken out, so that neither side will be prejudiced when the motions to strike, and any other motions, are heard. The appeal from the County Court presented for review the single question whether the ruling was correct, and not whether the reasons given therefor or the grounds on which it was based are sound or tenable. Hayes v. Wilmington, 243 N.C. 525 (tenth headnote), 91 S.E. 2d 673 (twelfth headnote). See also Temple v. Temple, 246 N.C. 334, 98 S.E. 2d 314.

In the Supreme Court the plaintiff demurred ore terns to the counterclaim, for failure to state a cause of action. This brings into focus the series of events alleged by the defendant Simmons by way of further defense and counterclaim. The events alleged are not stated as separate causes of action, but rather as though they were a connected story. We glean from the pleading allegations which may be restated in separate counts as follows:

1. That the defendant Simmons never intentionally executed the conditional sale contract sued on in the main action; that he obtained the Lincoln automobile described in the conditional sale contract in an exchange of cars with Weeks Motors, Inc., and agreed.to pay $50 to boot, and that this sum was then paid cash in closing the deal; that he is a man of limited education and cannot read; that if he signed the conditional sale contract, it was signed by trick or fraud of Weeks Motors, Inc., under representation that he was signing title papers. In this count it appears that Simmons has alleged a cause of action for rescission, based _ on fraud allegedly perpetrated by Weeks Motors, Inc. And, since the allegations charge fraud in the factum, the plea is valid not only against Weeks Motors, Inc., but also against the plaintiff, assignee of the conditional sale contract. Finance Corp v. Rinehardt, 216 N.C. 380, 5 S.E. 2d 138; Furst v. Merritt, 190 N.C. 397, 130 S.E. 40.

2. That, if the defendant Simmons executed the conditional sale contract to Weeks Motors, Inc., he received nothing therefor and it was therefore without consideration; that in the event *728 of a recovery against him by the plaintiff, he should have judgment over against Weeks Motors, Inc., for the full amount of the recovery.

3. That the plaintiff Finance Company and Weeks Motors, Inc., conspired and, by common plan and design between them, charged and have attempted to collect from Simmons interest in excess of the rate allowed by law, the excessive charges be-, ing “$263.00 upon one occasion and $300.00 upon another occasion.” Here Simmons alleges, or attempts to allege, one or more cause of action in usury for “charging a greater rate of interest than six per centum,” for which he demands forfeiture of all interest. G.S. 24-2. The allegations that the usurious interest charges were made by common plan and design of the plaintiff and Weeks Motors, Inc., make the usury count good against both of these parties. Aside from this, however, the rule is that a note tainted with usury retains the taint in the hands of a subsequent holder. Faison v. Grandy, 126 N.C. 827, 36 S.E. 276; Ward v. Sugg, 113 N.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 S.E.2d 119, 247 N.C. 724, 1958 N.C. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/auto-finance-company-of-north-carolina-v-simmons-nc-1958.