Edward A. Ganey and Minor Son, Vance Alfred Ganey v. Napoleon B. Barefoot and Charles E. Rice, III

749 F.2d 1124, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 16149
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 5, 1984
Docket83-6281
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 749 F.2d 1124 (Edward A. Ganey and Minor Son, Vance Alfred Ganey v. Napoleon B. Barefoot and Charles E. Rice, III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edward A. Ganey and Minor Son, Vance Alfred Ganey v. Napoleon B. Barefoot and Charles E. Rice, III, 749 F.2d 1124, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 16149 (4th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

HAYNSWORTH, Senior Circuit Judge:

This is a proceeding against two North Carolina state trial judges in which Ganey questions the constitutionality of a North Carolina statute. The statute requires that an appellant in a civil case be allowed to proceed in forma pauperis only upon presentation of a certificate of a lawyer that he has examined the appellant’s case and is of the opinion that the trial court’s action “is contrary to law.” The district court held that the challenged provision did not *1125 violate the federal Constitution, though it did so without discussion.

We think the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to decide the question. In neither proceeding was Ganey denied the right to proceed on appeal in forma pauperis. His appeals were dismissed for failure to perfect them. Perhaps more importantly, Ganey attempted to substitute the United States District Court for the North Carolina Court of Appeals in its role of appellate supervision of the trial courts of that state.

I.

The cases grew out of a controversy over custody of a child and termination of Ga-ney’s parental rights.

Ganey and Cynthia Brunjes were married in 1967. The couple separated on December 5, 1970, and thereafter Cynthia lived with her mother and father. Approximately a month and a half after the separation, however, Cynthia bore a son, Vance Alfred Ganey.

Cynthia obtained a divorce from her husband on February 28, 1972 by a decree of the General Court of Justice, Fifth District Court Division, New Hanover County, Ga-ney v. Ganey, 71 CvD 2490. The court found that during 1971 Cynthia’s father, Alfred Brunjes, had supported her and her child and that Edward A. Ganey, Jr. had contributed nothing to his son’s support. Custody of the child was awarded to Cynthia.

In October 1974, Cynthia was a school teacher. On the 16th day of that month, she was accosted by her former husband in the parking lot of the school where she taught. He shot and killed her. He entered a plea of guilty to second degree murder, and a sentence of life imprisonment was imposed upon him.

Thereafter, the child has continued to reside in the home of his maternal grandparents who have provided for his care and in a proceeding in the juvenile section of the General Court of Justice of New Hanover County, the grandparents sought to have Edward Ganey’s parental rights terminated, In the Matter of Vance Alfred Ganey, 77 CvD 1712. In that proceeding, a privately retained lawyer filed an answer for Ganey. The lawyer also filed a motion in the old divorce case on behalf of Ganey and his mother, Cleo J. Ganey, as third party plaintiffs against Mr. and Mrs. Brunjes as third party defendants. Ganey sought to have the child placed in the custody of his mother, but the court awarded custody to the maternal grandparents, with whom the child had lived since his birth. Judge Barefoot, one of the defendants in this proceeding, did award reasonable visitation rights to Cleo Ganey and to the child’s two Ganey uncles and their wives, but specified that the plaintiff would have no right to have the child visit him in prison.

After a hearing on the motion in the old divorce case but before Judge Barefoot’s decision, Ganey discharged his lawyer. He sought and obtained from Judge Barefoot leave to “appeal in forma pauperis in accordance with N.C.G.S. 1-288.” He was allowed fifty-five days within which to make up and serve the case on appeal.

Apparently, Ganey did nothing to perfect that appeal.

Approximately a year later, the parental rights termination proceeding was brought to a hearing before Judge Rice, the other defendant. In that hearing, Ganey represented himself. Judge Rice found, of course, that it was in the best interest of the child to remain in the care and custody of his maternal grandparents with whom he had lived since his birth. Ganey gave notice of appeal in open court, and Judge Rice’s order provided that he “is allowed to proceed with his appeal in forma pauperis and cost bond is waived.”

Ganey then filed in the North Carolina Court of Appeals a “petition for writ of certiorari and motion for consolidation and for suspension of rules” in the divorce case and a petition for writ of mandamus in the parental rights termination case. He sought appellate review of both proceedings on a consolidated basis. There was a *1126 general claim that Judge Barefoot had violated his constitutional rights, but his principal complaint seems to have been that the order had been prepared by counsel for the maternal grandparents and was “full of lies.” He also filed a separate petition for a writ of mandamus against Judge Rice in which he again alleged that the order had been prepared by counsel for the maternal grandparents, and was “full of lies.” He sought an order directing Judge Rice to prepare his own order, and to provide him with a transcript of the hearings in both cases. Without a transcript, he said he was unable to prepare exceptions or to write a brief.

The next day, Ganey filed a “motion for order” in Judge Rice’s court. Though Judge Rice had granted him leave to proceed in forma pauperis, the motion sought another order granting such leave under N.C.G.S. 1-288. In support of the motion, he alleged that he had been advised by his former lawyer that the judgment was contrary to law. Confronted with that motion, Judge Rice responded that Ganey had not met the requirement of the statute that a certificate of the lawyer be presented.

Ganey then promptly prepared the complaint in this case, against the two judges only, in which, for the first time, he alleged that the requirement that he present a lawyer’s certificate of legal error in the judgment is in violation of his federal due process and equal protection rights.

After passage of the fifty-five days within which Ganey should have prepared his record on appeal, the maternal grandparents filed a motion to dismiss the appeal. The motion was granted, and the appeal was dismissed for failure to perfect the appeal within the fifty-five days.

There was a stipulation that if Ganey had filed a record on appeal then the clerk of the trial court would have made it up and sent it on to the Court of Appeals, unless by some chance the copy of Judge Rice’s letter to Ganey had come to her attention. Had that happened, she would have consulted the judge. If the record had been sent up to the Court of Appeals, Judge Rice’s order would have sufficed to have the case placed on the docket of that court. If the absence of the lawyer’s certificate was brought to the attention of the clerk of the Court of Appeals by a motion to dismiss or otherwise, the question would have been one for the judges to determine.

If only Ganey had known it, the door of the Court of Appeals was ready to open for him, subject to a possible later motion to dismiss the appeal. He seems to have thought he knew more about the requirements in North Carolina for an order permitting one to proceed on appeal in forma pauperis than did Judge Rice, and clearly a lawyer’s certificate is a requirement of the statute. Still, if only he had prepared his case on appeal, the ease would have gotten to the Court of Appeals, and if there had been a motion to dismiss, Ganey could have responded with the constitutional contention he brings here.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Allen v. Bellamy
841 F.2d 1122 (Fourth Circuit, 1988)
William H. Glazebrook v. Harry L. Carrico
833 F.2d 309 (Fourth Circuit, 1987)
Brown v. Trompter
808 F.2d 834 (Fourth Circuit, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
749 F.2d 1124, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 16149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-a-ganey-and-minor-son-vance-alfred-ganey-v-napoleon-b-barefoot-ca4-1984.