Starr Electric Co. v. Lipe Motor Lines, Inc.

47 S.E.2d 848, 229 N.C. 86, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 432
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 19, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 47 S.E.2d 848 (Starr Electric Co. v. Lipe Motor Lines, Inc.) 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
Starr Electric Co. v. Lipe Motor Lines, Inc., 47 S.E.2d 848, 229 N.C. 86, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 432 (N.C. 1948).

Opinion

Winborne, J.

It is appropriate, at the outset, as preliminary to, and basis for proper consideration of the principal question on this appeal, as hereinafter stated, to advert to the following certain provisions of the statutes pertaining to the court in which this action was commenced, and the procedure prescribed for appeals from its judgments in civil actions:

The Municipal Court of the city of Greensboro was established pusuant to an act of the General Assembly of North Carolina, Public Laws 1909, Chapter 651. (See Miles Co. v. Powell, 205 N. C., 30, 169 S. E., 828.) By amendment to the act, as amended in the meantime, the name of the court was changed in the year 1939 to “The Greensboro Municipal-County Court,” Public Laws 1939, Chapter 300. Originally the court had limited criminal jurisdiction. Later limited civil jurisdiction was conferred by Section 1 of Chapter 126, Private Laws 1931, amending the original act, as amended, by adding thereto new sections 32 to 56, both inclusive.

In these sections provision for appeal is made, and procedure in respect to appeal is prescribed. Section 49 provides that “from any judgment rendered in said court any party may appeal to the Superior Court of Guilford County, where the trial shall be de novo.” Section 50 provides that “The giving of notice of the appeal, the return to the notice of appeal, the cash deposit, and the perfecting of the appeal shall be as is now or may hereafter be prescribed by law for appeals from courts of justices of the peace to the Superior Court”; and that “when the return is made the clerk of the Superior Court of Guilford County shall docket the case on his trial docket for a new trial of the whole matter at the ensuing term of said court as is provided by Section Six hundred and sixty-one of the Consolidated Statutes of North Carolina,”—now G. S., 1-300. And Section 54 provides that “Except as otherwise provided in this act, all laws relative to civil actions, matters and proceedings in courts of justices of the peace, including all laws relative to *89 process, rules of practice, procedure, orders, writs, decrees, judgments and appeals, but excluding none of such laws not specifically mentioned, shall be applicable to the civil division of the municipal court in the exercise of its jurisdiction as the same is set forth in this act . . .”

In summary, it may be stated that appeals and procedure in respect to appeals from civil division of The Greensboro Municipal-County Court to the Superior Court of Guilford County, shall be in accordance with law and procedure prescribed for appeals from judgments of justices of the peace to the Superior Court. This is conceded by counsel for all parties to the present action. Thus the statutes of this State and decisions of this Court pertaining to practice and procedure on appeals from judgments of justices of the peace are pertinent and applicable herein the light of these provisions, applied to the facts of case in hand, this is the question for decision here: Notice of appeal to Superior Court of Guilford County from judgment of The Greensboro Municipal-County Court having been given in open court on 13 October, 1947, and the clerk of The Greensboro Municipal-County Court, through no fault of appellant, having failed to make return to the Superior Court of Guilford County and to file with the clerk thereof the papers, etc., within ton days after the sendee of the notice of appeal on him, in accordance with the provisions of G. S., 1-181, but having on 30 October, 1947, made a return to Superior Court and filed with the clerk thereof the papers, etc., specified in said statute, and the clerk of Superior Court having thereupon on 30 October, 1947, docketed the case on the trial docket during the term of said Superior Court to which the appeal would go in orderly procedure, that is, a term commencing more than ten days next after service of notice of appeal, and at a time when appellant could harm moved, but had not moved, for writ of recordari to require the clerk of The Greensboro Municipal-County Court to make the return and to file the papers, etc., should the appeal so docketed be dismissed, on motion of appellee?

In other words, when the return had been made and the case docketed at a time when appellant could harm applied for a writ of recordari, was it required to apply for such writ to compel the clerk of The Greensboro Municipal-County Court to make a return? To so hold, would be to require the clerk to do that which lie had already done. And to hold that the docketing so made is valid puts appellee to no greater disadvantage than he would have been if the return had been made and the papers sent up under compulsion of a writ of recordari. Hence we hold that the appeal was not subject to dismissal.

In accordance with practice and procedure in courts of justices of peace, applicable here, an appeal to the Superior Court means to the next term of the Superior Court to which an appeal in orderly and regular course would go. Hahn v. Guilford, 87 N. C., 172; Boing v. R. R., 88 *90 N. C., 62; Sondley v. Asheville, 110 N. C., 84, 14 S. E., 514; Summerell v. Sales Corp., 218 N. C., 451, 11 S. E. (2d), 304, in the last of which numerous other cases are cited.

And under the facts of the present case, it is conceded on all hands that the term of the Superior Court of Guilford County, Greensboro division, commencing on 27 October, 1947, would be the term to which the appeal would go in orderly and regular course of practice.

Thus in accordance with the practice and procedure in courts of justices of the peace, a party desiring to appeal from a judgment of a justice of the peace, has ten days after judgment in which to serve notice of appeal. G. S., 7-179. But, if notice of appeal be given in open court, the adverse party being present in person or by attorney at the time appeal is prayed, no written notice is required. G. S., 7-180. The justice of the peace from whose judgment the appeal is taken, has ten days after service of the notice of appeal on him, within which to make a return to the Superior Court and to file with the clerk thereof the papers, proceedings and judgment in the case, with notice of appeal served on him, and he may be compelled to make such return by attachment. G. S., 7-181. And it is provided by statute, G. S., 1-800, formerly Code, 880, and C. S., 661, that when the return is made from a justice’s court the clerk of the appellate court shall docket the case on his trial docket for a new trial of the whole matter at the ensuing term of said court. And it is also provided by statute, G. S., 1-299, formerly Code, 565, 881, and C. S., 660, that when an appeal is taken from the judgment of a justice of the peace to a Superior Court, it shall be therein reheard on the original papers, and that “an issue shall be made up and tried by a jury at the first term to which the case is returned, unless continued.” However, Rule 24 of the Rules of Practice in the Superior Courts of North Carolina provides that “Appeals from justices of the peace in civil actions will not be called for trial unless the returns of such appeals have been docketed ten days previous to the term, but appeals docketed less than ten days before the term may be tried by consent of the parties.”

Considering these statutes, G. S., 1-300, formerly Code, Section 800, and G.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 S.E.2d 848, 229 N.C. 86, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starr-electric-co-v-lipe-motor-lines-inc-nc-1948.