{
  "id": 8520997,
  "name": "DWIGHT CALDWELL, Executor of the Estate of CARMEL F. CALDWELL v. JORETTA C. CALDWELL, and ALLEY, HYLER, KILLIAN, KERSTEN, DAVIS & SMATHERS",
  "name_abbreviation": "Caldwell v. Caldwell",
  "decision_date": "1991-07-02",
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  "first_page": "380",
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  "last_updated": "2023-07-14T17:27:13.805826+00:00",
  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
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  "casebody": {
    "judges": [
      "Chief Judge HEDRICK and Judge LEWIS concur."
    ],
    "parties": [
      "DWIGHT CALDWELL, Executor of the Estate of CARMEL F. CALDWELL v. JORETTA C. CALDWELL, and ALLEY, HYLER, KILLIAN, KERSTEN, DAVIS & SMATHERS"
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "COZORT, Judge.\nPlaintiff filed a complaint in Superior Court alleging that defendants had been unjustly enriched by alimony and attorney\u2019s fees previously paid by plaintiff. The court granted summary judgment for the plaintiff. We find the Superior Court lacked jurisdiction, and we reverse.\nCarmel Caldwell and Joretta Caldwell, defendant herein, were married 7 July 1974 and separated on 11 May 1984. Joretta filed an action in the District Court of Haywood County seeking alimony without divorce and attorney\u2019s fees. On 5 November 1984, the court entered an order granting Joretta temporary alimony. On 10 July 1986, the District Court awarded permanent alimony and attorney\u2019s fees in favor of Joretta. Carmel Caldwell appealed the District Court\u2019s Judgment of 10 July 1986. Finding that Joretta Caldwell was not a \u201cdependent spouse\u201d as defined by N.C. Gen. Stat. \u00a7 50-16.1(3) (1987), this Court reversed the trial court. Caldwell v. Caldwell, 86 N.C. App. 225, 227, 356 S.E.2d 821, 823 (1987). On 12 January 1988, Carmel Caldwell filed a motion seeking a refund of temporary and permanent alimony as well as the attorney\u2019s fees awarded by the Order of 10 July 1986. In March 1988, Carmel was killed in an automobile accident, and on 3 June 1988, the executor of his estate, Dwight Caldwell, plaintiff herein, filed a motion requesting that he be substituted for the decedent. On 29 June 1988, he filed a motion to amend the motion filed 12 January 1988. On 25 August 1988, the court entered an order substituting Dwight Caldwell as a party defendant to the original suit filed in August 1984 and granting his motion to amend the January 1988 motion.\nOn 29 June 1988, plaintiff Dwight Caldwell filed this action in Haywood County Superior Court. This action, like the motion filed in District Court on 12 January 1988, sought recovery of the alimony and attorney\u2019s fees awarded pursuant to the District Court\u2019s Orders of November 1984 and July 1986. Defendant Joretta Caldwell\u2019s attorneys were included as parties defendants in the Superior Court action. Before answering, defendants filed a motion pursuant to Rule 12(b) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, requesting dismissal of plaintiff\u2019s suit on the basis that it is the subject of a prior pending action. The defendants raised that issue again in their answer. After further pleadings and motions, the Superior Court granted summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff on 1 February 1990. Defendants appeal.\nOn appeal defendants contend the trial court erred in entering summary judgment for plaintiff. We agree.\nNorth Carolina follows the rule \u201cthat the pendency of a prior action between the same parties for the same cause in a state court of competent jurisdiction abates a subsequent action in another court of the state having like jurisdiction.\u201d Weaver v. Early, 325 N.C. 535, 538, 385 S.E.2d 334, 336 (1989). As our Supreme Court has noted:\n[T]he ordinary test for determining whether or not the parties and causes are the same for the purpose of abatement by reason of the pendency of a prior action is whether the two actions present a substantial identity as to parties, subject matter, issues involved, and relief demanded. This rule has been applied not only when there is a prior civil action pending which is identical to the subsequent action but also when there is a prior action in which a party could by motion in the cause achieve what he is attempting to achieve in the subsequent action.\nId. (emphasis added).\nIn the case below the District Court had subject matter jurisdiction over Joretta Caldwell\u2019s action for alimony without divorce. The court acquired and retained personal jurisdiction over the parties to the suit. In January 1988, plaintiff\u2019s decedent filed a motion in District Court seeking exactly the relief plaintiff subsequently sought in Superior Court, namely,\n1. That the court enter judgment in [Carmel Caldwell\u2019s] favor awarding him a refund of both temporary and permanent alimony as was previously ordered by this court.\n* \u2021 \u2021 *\n3. That [Carmel Caldwell] have and receive a refund of the attorney\u2019s fees paid to the plaintiffs counsel and that he have interest from and after the date of payments until the entering of this Judgment.\nOn 3 June 1989, plaintiff, as executor of Carmel Caldwell\u2019s estate and the real party in interest, moved in the District Court to be substituted as a party in the pending alimony action. Thus, in the two suits presented there is substantial identity as to parties, subject matter, issues involved, and relief demanded. The rights plaintiff asserted in his action in Superior Court, filed 29 June 1988, may be litigated in the prior, pending action, which thus abates his action in Superior Court.\nDespite the identity of relief sought in the two suits, plaintiff contends that the doctrine of prior action pending does not control because Joretta\u2019s attorneys were not parties to the first action in District Court but were named in the second action in Superior Court. Their argument is unavailing. As the Supreme Court noted in Weaver, the doctrine applies when, in the prior action, \u201ca party could by motion in the cause achieve what he is attempting to achieve in the subsequent action.\u201d 325 N.C. at 538, 385 S.E.2d at 336. Both the motion in District Court and the subsequent action in Superior Court requested a refund of attorney\u2019s fees. The plaintiff may by motion in the cause enforce his right to a refund of alimony and attorney\u2019s fees erroneously awarded.\nAs for. plaintiff\u2019s argument that the doctrine does not apply to the case below because the District Court did not approve his motion to be substituted as party plaintiff until after he had filed suit in Superior Court, it is sufficient to observe that his motion to be substituted correctly noted that \u201cthe action herein survives the death of [Carmel Caldwell].\u201d See N.C. Gen. Stat. \u00a7 28A-18-1 (1984). The action of plaintiff\u2019s decedent survived, and plaintiff himself invoked the jurisdiction of the District Court by motions before as well as on the date he filed suit in Superior Court. He will not now be heard to assert that the District Court did not have jurisdiction to adjudicate the cause.\nSummary judgment for plaintiff is reversed. The cause is remanded to Superior Court for dismissal of the action.\nReversed and remanded.\nChief Judge HEDRICK and Judge LEWIS concur.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "COZORT, Judge."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "McLean & Dickson, P.A., by Russell L. McLean, III, for plaintiff appellee.",
      "Hyler & Lopez, P.A., by George B. Hyler, Jr., and Robert J. Lopez, for defendant appellants."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "DWIGHT CALDWELL, Executor of the Estate of CARMEL F. CALDWELL v. JORETTA C. CALDWELL, and ALLEY, HYLER, KILLIAN, KERSTEN, DAVIS & SMATHERS\nNo. 9030SC623\n(Filed 2 July 1991)\nAbatement, Survival, and Revival of Actions \u00a7 11 (NCI4th)~ return of alimony and attorney fees \u2014motion in cause \u2014action in superior court \u2014 abatement because of prior action pending\nWhere the appellate court held that defendant wife was not entitled to alimony without divorce and attorney fees because she was not a dependent spouse, the husband, now deceased, filed a motion in the cause in the district court seeking a refund of alimony and attorney fees already paid, and plaintiff executor was substituted as party defendant in the alimony action, the doctrine of prior action pending abated an action filed by plaintiff executor in the superior court to recover the alimony and attorney fees paid prior to the appellate court decision even though defendant wife\u2019s attorneys were not parties to the alimony action but were named as defendants in the superior court action.\nAm Jur 2d, Divorce and Separation \u00a7\u00a7 176-178, 611.\nAppeal by defendants from Judgment entered 1 February 1990 by Judge Claude S. Sitton in HAYWOOD County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 11 March 1991.\nMcLean & Dickson, P.A., by Russell L. McLean, III, for plaintiff appellee.\nHyler & Lopez, P.A., by George B. Hyler, Jr., and Robert J. Lopez, for defendant appellants."
  },
  "file_name": "0380-01",
  "first_page_order": 410,
  "last_page_order": 414
}
