Mitchell v. Jones, 520
Decision Date | 12 January 1968 |
Docket Number | No. 520,520 |
Citation | 272 N.C. 499,158 S.E.2d 706 |
Court | North Carolina Supreme Court |
Parties | Lewin D. MITCHELL v. Ira JONES, Alfred N. Gray, Glasgow & Davis Company and Willie Lee Radford. |
Smith, Leach, Anderson & Dorsett, by Henry A. Mitchell, J., Raleigh, for plaintiff appellee.
Gardner, Connor & Lee, by Cyrus F. Lee, Wilson, for defendant appellants.
If none of the parties to an action for personal injuries reside in the State at the time of its commencement, it may be tried in any county designated by the plaintiff in his summons and complaint. If the plaintiff is a nonresident and any defendant is a resident of the State, the action must be tried in the county in which that defendant resided at the time suit was instituted. G.S. § 1--82. Should, however, the plaintiff not bring the suit in the proper county, the defendant will waive his right to have it tried there unless, before the time for answering expires, he demands in writing that the trial be conducted in the proper county. G.S. § 1--83. When demand is made in apt time, and in the required manner, the court has no discretion as to removal. Casstevens v. Wilkes Telephone Membership Corp., 254 N.C. 746, 120 S.E.2d 94; Teer Co. v. Hitchcock Corp., 235 N.C. 741, 71 S.E.2d 54; Palmer v. Lowe, 194 N.C. 703, 140 S.E. 718; Roberts & Hoge v. Moore, 185 N.C. 254, 116 S.E. 728; 1 McIntosh, N.C.Practice and Procedure § 832 (2d Ed. 1956).
Defendant Gray's motion (in which defendant Jones joined) was made in writing. The parties and the court below treated it as having been timely made, and we do likewise. Clearly, but for the judgment of nonsuit, which dismissed defendant Gray from the action prior to the ruling on the motion to remove, he would have been entitled to the change of venue which he demanded. It is the contention of appellants, however, that the Clerk of the Superior Court of Wake County was without power after the motion for removal had been filed 'to proceed further in essential matters' until the motion had been determined. This contention has no merit. The taking of the voluntary nonsuit was the act of plaintiff and not that of the court. When the defendant has asserted no counterclaim and demanded no affirmative relief, the plaintiff may take a voluntary nonsuit as a matter of right at any time before the verdict. Southeastern Fire Insurance Co. v. Walton, 256 N.C. 345, 123 S.E.2d 780; Sink v. Hire, 210 N.C. 402, 186 S.E. 494; 4 Strong, N.C.Index, Trial § 29 (1961). 'So long as he is merely a plaintiff, the Court has no means by which he can be compelled to appear and prosecute the suit against his will, and no injury can result from allowing him to abandon it.' Rodman, J., in McKesson v. Mendenhall, 64 N.C. 502, 504.
In Harvey v. Rich, 98 N.C. 95, 3 S.E. 912, the plaintiff instituted suit in Lenoir County against Rich, the sheriff of Buncombe County, and three others on a cause of action growing out of a levy upon the plaintiff's stock of goods. The defendants made a motion to remove the case to Buncombe County under § 191 of the Code (now G.S. § 1--77). 'A Nolle prosequi was entered by the plaintiff as to the said (sheriff).' Whereupon the judge refused the motion. Upon appeal, this Court, speaking through Smith, C.J., said: Ibid. 96--97, 3 S.E. at 912.
It has also been held that a plaintiff is entitled to take a nonsuit at the time of a defendant's application for judgment on the certificate of the Supreme Court reversing an order of the Superior Court denying defendant's motion for a removal as a matter of right. In Carolina Mortgage Co. v. Long, 206 N.C. 477, 174 S.E. 312, the plaintiff instituted in Wake County an action on a note secured by a deed of trust on land in Forsyth County. As a matter of right, the defendants moved for a change of venue to Forsyth County. The judge's ruling denying the motion was reversed on appeal. Before the opinion was certified to the Superior Court of Wake County, the plaintiff took a voluntary nonsuit before the clerk. Thereafter, without notice to the plaintiff, the judge, who had knowledge of the nonsuit, entered a judgment on the mandate of the Supreme Court in which he directed the clerk to transfer the case to Forsyth County. Immediately thereafter, the defendant filed a counterclaim against the plaintiff, who appealed. This Court,...
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...at any time before verdict. G.S. § 1--224 (repealed by N.C. Sess. Laws 1967, Ch. 954, § 4, effective 1 January 1970); Mitchell v. Jones, 272 N.C. 499, 158 S.E.2d 706; Southeastern Fire Insurance Co. v. Walton, 256 N.C. 345, 123 S.E.2d 780; Southern Cotton Oil Company v. Shore, 171 N.C. 51, ......
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McCarley v. McCarley, 90
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