Duke University v. Chestnut

221 S.E.2d 895, 28 N.C. App. 568, 1976 N.C. App. LEXIS 2757
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 18, 1976
Docket7514SC793
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 221 S.E.2d 895 (Duke University v. Chestnut) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duke University v. Chestnut, 221 S.E.2d 895, 28 N.C. App. 568, 1976 N.C. App. LEXIS 2757 (N.C. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

VAUGHN, Judge.

The parties have stipulated that the action was started more than three years after the services were rendered and that at all times in question defendants were residents of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.

G.S. 1-21, in pertinent part, is as follows:

“If when the cause of action accrues . . . against a person, he is out of the State . . . and if, after such cause of action accrues . . . such person . . . resides out of this State, or remains continuously absent therefrom for one year or more, the time of his absence shall not be a part of the time limited for the commencement of the action. ...”

*570 The parties have stipulated that defendants resided out of the State at the time the cause of action arose and at all times since. Under the express terms of G.S. 1-21, therefore, the statute of limitations has not started to run so as to bar plaintiff’s claim.

One of the purposes of G.S. 1-21 was said to be to prevent defendants from having the benefit of the lapse of time — the statute of limitations — while they remain beyond the limits of the State and allow their debts to remain unpaid, it not being the policy of the State to drive its citizens to seek their legal remedies abroad. Armfield v. Moore, 97 N.C. 34, 2 S.E. 347.

. . In 1967 the General Assembly enacted what is now codified as Article 6A of G.S. Chapter 1. Under this article (and earlier legislative enactments providing for service on foreign corporations doing business with the State, nonresident motorists and certain others) the courts of this State can acquire personal jurisdiction over defendants by other than, personal service of process' within the State, if the defendants have had the required “minimum contact” with this State.

In the case at bar, defendants’ obligation- is to pay plaintiff for services rendered to defendants within the State for defendants’ benefit."These, circumstances "permit the'acquisition of personal jurisdiction over defendants under the- authority of G.S. 1-75.4(5).

The question raised on this appeal may be.stated as follows:

Did the enactment of G.S. 1-75.1 et seq. result in the repeal of G.S. 1-21 insofar as G.S. 1-21 would have otherwise' permitted this plaintiff to start this .action against these individual nonresident defendants more thhn three years after the cause of action arose? ,, ,

Many other states have enacted similar , long arm statutes designed to give their courts all the personal jurisdictional powers permitted-under the due process clause of the Constitution. Many of those states, at the time of the enactment of long arm statutes, also had saving statutes, similar to our G.S. 1-21, which operated to toll the statute against those who could not be personally served with, process, within the state because of their absence from the state.

The courts of many of these states have had the opportunity to consider whether the statute of limitations is tolled *571 during a party’s absence from the state when that party was, nevertheless, amenable to service of process that would have subjected him to the personal jurisdiction of the state. See Annot., Absence As Tolling Statute of Limitations, 55 A.L.R. 3d 1158. It appears that a majority of those courts have held the tolling statute to be inoperative. Others have held that enactment of long arm statutes did not preclude application of tolling statutes similar to our G.S. 1-21.

The precise question raised on this appeal does not appear to have been resolved by the Supreme Court of this State.

In Green v. Ins. Co., 139 N.C. 309, 51 S.E. 887, the Court held that the availability of service of process against nonresident insurance companies by service upon the Commissioner of Insurance did not abrogate the suspension of the running of the statute against a nonresident insurance company. The Court through Clark, Chief Justice, said: “That service can thus be had upon a nonresident corporation may be a reason why the General Assembly should amend section 162 of The Code, so as to set the statute running in such cases, but it has not done so and the courts can not.”

Later, in Volivar v. Cedar Works, 152 N.C. 656, 68 S.E. 200, the Court said it was then of the opinion that the earlier cases were not “well decided.” In Volivar the Court held that the three years statute barred a claim against a foreign corporation that, at all relevant times, maintained a process agent in the State upon whom service could be had. A similar result was reached in Smith v. Finance Co., 207 N.C. 367, 177 S.E. 183, where service on a Delaware corporation could have been made by leaving a copy of the process with the Secretary of the State who was required to mail the process to the appropriate corporate officer.

In a later case, suit was started against individual nonresident defendants after the statute of limitations would have ordinarily run. The Court used the following language:

“Being a nonresident of the State, he may not be permitted to invoke the protection of the statute of limitations, even though he may spend some time each year in the State.
Nor could this rule be affected by the fact that he owned property in North Carolina (Grist v. Williams, 111 *572 N.C., 53), or had an agent in this State (Williams v. Building & Loan Assn., 131 N.C., 267; Green v. Ins. Co., 139 N.C., 309); Volivar v. Cedar Works, 152 N.C., 34.” Hill v. Lindsay, 210 N.C. 694, 696, 188 S.E. 406.

The language of the Court, however, goes beyond the decision in the case because there is nothing to indicate that the nonresident defendants had theretofore been subject to service of process that would have conferred personal jurisdiction.

Broadfoot v. Everett, 270 N.C. 429, 154 S.E. 2d 522, involved, among other things, the question of whether, under the law of Pennsylvania, a nonresident defendant was entitled to assert that state’s one year statute of limitations in a wrongful death action. A Pennsylvania statute, enacted in 1895, provided for the suspension of the running of the statute of limitations during a defendant’s nonresidence in the state. The Secretary of the Commonwealth was, under another statute, a nonresident’s agent for the service of process in any action brought against him in the courts of Pennsylvania by reason of an accident there. The Supreme Court of North Carolina, applying the case law of Pennsylvania, held that the nonresident was entitled to the benefit of the one year statute and that it ■was not tolled by his absence from the State.

We are in full accord with those who have said that the application of a tolling statute when defendant has at all times been subject to the service of process by which the court would have acquired personal jurisdiction is inimical to the general purposes of statutes of limitations.

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.E.2d 895, 28 N.C. App. 568, 1976 N.C. App. LEXIS 2757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duke-university-v-chestnut-ncctapp-1976.