Ewbank v. Turner.

46 S.E. 508, 134 N.C. 77, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 204
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 18, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 46 S.E. 508 (Ewbank v. Turner.) 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
Ewbank v. Turner., 46 S.E. 508, 134 N.C. 77, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 204 (N.C. 1903).

Opinion

*78 Clark, O. J.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff graduated with distinction in the dental department of the Baltimore Medical College, an institution of high and well recognized standing, after prosecuting his studies in dentistry therein for the prescribed period of three years; that thereafter he made application to the proper authorities for license to practice dentistry in South Carolina, and after examination he was found duly proficient and qualified, and license was issued to him, under which he practiced in that State; that thereafter on removal to this State he made application for1 examination and licaise under our laws; that the board not being in session, under the provision of the statute he was examined by a single member of the board, was found duly qualified and proficient and ivas given a temporary license 26 January, 1902, which for certain reasons was renewed by a second temporary license till the meeting of the full board 19 June, 1903; that under these licenses he practiced dentistry for nearly a year and a half and built up a lucrative practice; that on 19 June, 1903, he was examined by the full board, and though he, as he avers, showed on such examination that he “possessed the necessary and required proficiency in the knowledge and practice of dentistry and underwent a satisfactory examination, as required by the statute in such case made and provided, as will abundantly appear from an inspection of his examination papers, the said board and the majority of the defendants composing said board unlawfully, unjustly and arbitrarily, and without just cause or reason and abusing the discretion with which they were clothed by the laws of North Carolina,, refused and yet refuse upon the repeated demands of the plaintiff to- issue and grant to him a certificate of proficiency, to which he was and is entitled, and which it was and is the duty of the defendants to issue and grant.”

The above is the gist of the complaint, which further avers *79 that by reason of such refusal to issue him a certificate of proficiency upon such examination, the defendants composing the Board of Examiners of the North Carolina Dental Society “thereby wrongfully, arbitrarily, unjustly and unlawfully prevented him from engaging in tire practice of dentistry in this State, to his great damage, to-wit, in the stun of five thousand dollars or more,” and prays for a mandamus to compel said board to issue to the plaintiff “a certificate of proficiency in the knowledge and practice of dentistry,” and that “he have such other and further relief as he may be entitled to in the premises.” An answer was filed denying that the plaintiff had passed a satisfactory examination or was entitled thereon to a certificate of proficiency, and denying that the action of the board could be reviewed by the courts.

The summons was made returnable at Chambers. The plaintiff moved (1) That the Court submit the issues raised by the pleadings to a jury at the next term, under the proviso in The Code, see. 623. (2) That the plaintiff be permitted an inspection and to take a copy of his examination papers. (3) That he be permitted to take a copy of the examination papers prepared and submitted by certain parties named, .which were submitted to the hoard upon their examination to practice dentistry at the same time and place when the plaintiff was rejected. These motions were each refused, and the plaintiff excepted.

The defendant moved to dismiss for want of jurisdiction on the ground that this was an action for a money demand and the summons had been made returnable before tbe Judge at Chambers. The plaintiff thereupon moved to strike out the words “to his great damage, to-wit, in the sum of five thousand dollars or more.” The Court denied this motion upon the ground that it had no power to allow such amendment, and the plaintiff excepted. The Court thereupon dis *80 missed tbe action on the ground that it bad no- jurisdiction thereof. The plaintiff again excepted and appealed.

When the summons in a case of which the Superior Court has jurisdiction is brought before the Clerk -to term, or before the Judge at Chambers, it is equally in the Superior Court, and there is no defect of jurisdiction. If brought before the Clerk when it should have been brought to term, it is said in Elliott v. Tyson, 117 N. C., at p. 116, when it gets “into the Superior Court by appeal or otherwise, the latter has jurisdiction of the whole cause and can make- amendment of process to give effectual jurisdiction. Such amendment will be presumed, or the Supreme Court even can amend' the process if necessary,” quoting McLean v. Breese, 113 N. C., 390, citing Capps v. Capps, 85 N. C., 408; Cheatham v. Crews, 81 N. C., 343; Robeson v. Hodges, 105 N. C., 49, and adding: “Unlike the court of the justice of the peace, the Clerk is really a part of the Superior Court, and a case wrongfully instituted before him upon appeal only needs an amendment of process to justify the original service.” The same principle as to the jurisdiction of the Superior Court is recognized by chapter 276, Laws 1887, amending section 255 of The Code (see Clark’s Code, 3d Ed., sec. 255), and cases cited in Roseman v. Roseman, 127 N. C., at p. 497, reaffirmed In re Hybart, 129 N. C., at p. 131; Ury v. Brown, 129 N. C., 271; In re Anderson, 132 N. C., at p. 247; Railroad v. Siroud, 132 N. C., at p. 416. For the same reason, if a case is before the Judge at Chambers, if there are issues of fact appearing upon the pleadings, the cause should not be dismissed but should be transferred to term for trial before a jury; The Code, sec. 623; just as the Clerk might so transfer it; The Code, sec. 256. As said in cases above cited, it would be strange to dismiss an action already in the Superior Court because before the Clerk or the Judge at Chambers, and tell the plaintiff to come back into the same Court before the same *81 Judge, tbe same Clerk being present, at term, by service of another summons upon tbe same parties. Tbe remedy is not to dismiss., but (the parties being already in Court by service of summons) simply to transfer tbe cause to tbe proper docket. This does no one any detriment, saves time and costs and avoids the unseemly countermarching incident to tbe old practice when a plaintiff was put out of one court by one door, if be wrongfully brought an action for assumpsit, for instance, and was left to guess by which door be should come back into tbe same room, whether by labeling bis action trover, trespass, detinue or other process, tbe correctness of which guess be could only prove by a costly process of elimination. Even when an action is brought in the Superior Court, but in tbe wrong county, there being general jurisdiction, the action is now not dismissed, but is transferred to the court in the proper county.

The Court erred in dismissing the action for want of jurisdiction. It was in the Court that had jurisdiction. No amendment was necessary, but if it were desirable, it was error to hold that the Court bad no power to allow it. Piercy v. Watson, 118 N. C., 976; Thomas v. Womack, 64 N. C., 657.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.E. 508, 134 N.C. 77, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewbank-v-turner-nc-1903.