Narron v. Union Camp Corp.

344 S.E.2d 64, 81 N.C. App. 263, 1986 N.C. App. LEXIS 2267
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJune 3, 1986
Docket857SC1053
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 344 S.E.2d 64 (Narron v. Union Camp Corp.) 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
Narron v. Union Camp Corp., 344 S.E.2d 64, 81 N.C. App. 263, 1986 N.C. App. LEXIS 2267 (N.C. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

EAGLES, Judge.

The trial court dismissed this action for failure to post bond as required by a prior order, and plaintiffs appeal. The litigation stretches back almost ten years; it has never come to trial in that time.

The Previous Litigation

Plaintiffs began litigation in 1977 seeking damages and in-junctive relief for Union Camp’s alleged wrongful cutting of timber on their land. Plaintiffs sued the Boykins in 1981, seeking to quiet title and to extinguish any claims the Boykins might make to the same land. The cases were consolidated and the court appointed a surveyor to perform the “complicated survey” required to resolve the dispute. Pretrial conference was set for July 1982. The case was continued several times on plaintiffs’ motion. Plaintiffs’ attorney withdrew by consent order in December 1983. Union Camp’s motion for peremptory setting was allowed, and the cases came on for hearing in April 1984. Plaintiffs appeared and asked for continuance, not being prepared to proceed, and the court dismissed their claims, without prejudice, for failure to prosecute.

The Present Litigation

In July 1984 plaintiffs commenced the present action, realleg-ing substantially the same cause of action previously dismissed. *265 Defendants answered, and third party defendants Stone moved to compel plaintiffs to post a prosecution bond. The Stones alleged that surveys would be necessary to resolve the dispute and that these would cost about $3,000.00. On 9 January 1985 Judge Frank R. Brown, after hearing, found that surveys costing approximately $2,500.00 would be necessary and allowed the motions. He ordered plaintiffs to post the $200.00 bond specified in G.S. 1-109 and “that such bond should be increased by the amount of $2,500.00 making a total of $2,700.00.” Plaintiffs did not appeal the order, nor did they post the bond. The case was calendared and came before Judge Winberry on 29 April 1985. The record is not clear whether the case was calendared for trial or simply for a motion hearing. Judge Winberry inquired as to why no bond had been posted, and found that no cause was presented why the action should not be dismissed. Judge Winberry, ex mero motu, dismissed the action with prejudice, relying on G.S. 1-109. Plaintiffs appeal. After the action had been dismissed, plaintiffs posted the bond.

I

Plaintiffs argue that the trial court lacked authority to require a bond in the amount of $2,700.00 and to dismiss the action for failure to post that bond. Plaintiffs additionally argue that they were denied due process by having their action dismissed ex mero motu without notice that their noncompliance with the bond order would be the subject of the 29 April 1985 hearing. They do not contend that there was any other good cause for their failure to post the bond. Unless the amount of the bond was itself unlawful, we are bound by Judge Winberry’s finding that there was no sufficient cause.

II

We turn first to the statute, G.S. 1-109:

At any time after the issuance of summons, the clerk or judge, upon motion of the defendant, shall require the plaintiff to do one of the following things and the failure to comply with such order within 30 days from the date thereof shall constitute grounds for dismissal of such civil action or special proceeding:
*266 (1) Give an undertaking with sufficient surety in the sum of two hundred dollars, with the condition that it will be void if the plaintiff pays the defendant all costs which the latter recovers of him in the action.
(2) Deposit two hundred dollars ($200.00) with him as security to the defendant for these costs, in which event the clerk must give to the plaintiff and defendant all costs which the latter recovers of him in the action.
(3) File with him a written authority from a superior or district court judge or clerk of a superior court, authorizing the plaintiff to sue as a pauper: Provided, however, that the requirements of this section shall not apply to the State of North Carolina or any of its agencies, commissions or institutions, or to counties, drainage districts, cities and towns; provided, further, that the State of North Carolina or any of its agencies, commissions or institutions, and counties, drainage districts, cities and towns may institute civil actions and special proceedings without being required to give a prosecution bond or make deposit in lieu of bond.

This language is similar in its operative provisions to G.S. 1-111, which deals with defendant’s bond. Were we to apply G.S. 1-109 literally without the benefit of earlier decisions, we might conclude that plaintiffs are correct in their assertion that the court may require a bond of $200.00 and no more.

However, our Supreme Court has construed this statutory language otherwise. The operative portions of G.S. 1-109 and G.S. 1-111 have been in effect for many years. 1 Revisal of 1908 of N.C. Section 450 (Pell ed. 1908); 1 Code of N.C. Sections 209, 237 (1883); Public Statutes of N.C., Code of Civ. P. Sections 71, 382 (Battle rev. ed. 1873). A line of older authority, never overruled and unaffected by subsequent, merely formal amendments, has consistently construed these statutes as allowing the court in its discretion to require additional security for costs beyond the $200.00 statutory figure.

In Kenney v. Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co., 166 N.C. 566, 82 S.E. 849 (1914), the court approved orders requiring an additional bond to cover costs of an appeal to the Supreme Court:

*267 If it should appear that the costs of this Court will probably exhaust the prosecution bond, and leave those of the court below unsecured, there is ample remedy to avoid the supposed unjust result by application to increase the penalty of bond —a not unusual procedure in the courts. [Citations.]

Id. at 571-72, 82 S.E. at 850. In Vaughan v. Vincent, 88 N.C. 116 (1883), the court affirmed an order striking defendant’s answer for failing to post additional bond. In Rollins v. Henry, 77 N.C. 467 (1877), the court approved setting the bond in excess of the statutory amount to protect innocent parties against damage from what it apparently considered unnecessarily vexatious litigation. See also In re Winborne, 231 N.C. 463, 57 S.E. 2d 795 (1950) (general discretionary authority of trial court in matters of prosecution bonds); Adams v. Reeves, 76 N.C. 412 (1877) (motion for additional security addressed solely to discretion of trial judge). These precedents establish the court’s authority to set bond in an amount above the $200.00 statutory limit. Defendant’s motion for an additional bond was timely and plaintiffs have not disputed the facts found by the court to support the additional bond required. Judge Brown’s order was proper. It follows from the clear language of the statute that plaintiffs’ failure to post the bond subjected their action to dismissal. See Vaughan v. Vincent, supra.

Ill

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Bluebook (online)
344 S.E.2d 64, 81 N.C. App. 263, 1986 N.C. App. LEXIS 2267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/narron-v-union-camp-corp-ncctapp-1986.