Opinion
(October Term, 1885.)
Practice — Nonsuit.
The plaintiff may, at any time before the defendant has pleaded a counterclaim, submit to a nonsuit, and withdraw his suit.
( Hill v. Overton, 81 N.C. 393; Johnson v. Murchison, 60 N.C. 83; Pescud v. Hawkins, 71 N.C. 299; Graham v. Tate, 77 N.C. 120; Tate v. Phillips, ibid., 126; Bank v. Pettigrew, 74 N.C. 326; Francis v. Edwards, 77 N.C. 271; McKesson v. Mendenhall, 64 N.C. 502, cited and approved.)
THIS was a civil action tried before MacRae, J. at the Spring Term, 1884, of UNION.
The case is sufficiently stated in the opinion of the Court.
Payne Vann and Haywood Haywood for plaintiff.
Covington Adams and J. W. Hinsdale for defendant.
The plaintiff's action is upon two promissory notes of the defendant, and to the verified complaint filed at the term to which the summons was returnable, the defendant demurred, specifying the several alleged defects therein. At a subsequent term the following entry appears in the cause:
Plaintiff called and failed; judgment, nonsuit without prejudgment judgment against plaintiff for costs; same day defendant moved (403) to be allowed to file answer. Thereupon the judgment of nonsuit was stricken out and the defendant allowed to withdraw his demurrer and file his answer. From this last order the plaintiff appeals.
The question presented is not so much the power of the court to modify, amend, or revise its own orders during the term, but to deny to the plaintiff his right to abandon his action at this stage of its progress by entering a judgment of nonsuit of a nol. pros. According to the ancient forms a nonsuit was the appropriate mode of terminating the suit when the trial was about to be entered into, and the plaintiff could elect to submit to it any time before the verdict was rendered. A nol. pros. could be entered at any time previous as to all or some of the defendants, and might be restricted to a part of the series of counts which made up the declaration. But a misnomer of the entry in calling a nol. pros. a nonsuit would not affect its office when applied to a judicial proceeding, for its legal efficiency would designate its appropriate name, and so it is held in Hill v. Overton, 81 N.C. 393. But the modern practice authorizes the plaintiff to submit to a nonsuit even before the defendant's appearance or the return of the process, as is declared upon an examination of the authorities in Johnson v. Murchison, 60 N.C. 83. "Whenever in the progress of a cause," in the language of Bynum, J., "the plaintiff perceives that the judge or the jury are against him, or that he will on a future occasion be able to establish a better case, he may elect to be nonsuited." Pescud v. Hawkins, 71 N.C. 299.
"A plaintiff can at any time before verdict," remarks Pearson, C. J., "withdraw his suit or, as it is termed, take a nonsuit by absenting himself at the trial term." Graham v. Tate, 77 N.C. 120. Again, in Tate v. Phillips, ibid., 126, when the defendant, under the authority of a statute, proposed to use bank notes as a set-off to the action, while he was not allowed to recover for the excess, the same eminent judge repeats the rule and adds: "So, according to the course of the court, the plaintiff had a right to pay up the costs and walk out of court." If, however, the defendant sets up a counterclaim, entitling him to judgment for its excess over the plaintiff's demand, and it is not (404) a mere defense to defeat the action, the plaintiff's cannot of right put an end to the suit, and in such a case a nonsuit would be a withdrawal of his own claim, and leave him exposed to a recovery of the counterclaim. Bank v. Pettigrew, 74 N.C. 326; Francis v. Edwards, 77 N.C. 271.
The law is so clearly laid down in McKesson v. Mendenhall, 64 N.C. 502, by Rodman, J., that we reproduce a portion of the opinion: "It is sometimes said," he remarks, "that a judgment of nonsuit can only be at the instance of the defendant. But the cases cited for that only prove that the court will not give it mero motu, but only at the instance of one of the parties; and the proposition can only be maintained to the extent that the court will not allow a plaintiff to become nonsuit to the prejudice of the defendant, and in a case in which, although nominally a plaintiff, he is substantially a defendant. As the plaintiff possessed the power of becoming nonsuit when called before verdict, it became a general practice to allow him to do so at any time before verdict, when he desired, for any reason to abandon his action. So long as he is merely plaintiff, the court has no means by which he can be compelled to appear and prosecute his suit against his will, and no injury can result from allowing him to abandon it."
These references clearly recognize the right of a plaintiff before any counterclaim is set up to terminate his action and retire from the court or, in the language of the late Chief Justice, to "walk out of court."
The cause was depending upon the issued raised by the demurrer when the action was taken by the plaintiff, and consequently no such claim had been asserted by the defendant as entitled him to have it retained. The answer is unnecessarily sent up, since it is a question of legal right, wholly outside of any intended defense, upon which the appeal requires us to decide. So that while the answer was intended, as we see from its terms, to bring forward a counterclaim for usurious charges (405) entering into the notes, the defendant was then relying upon imperfections in the statement of the plaintiff's cause of action, and it was his own choice, not earlier to put in his answer. Nor if, as suggested in the argument, the statutory law might interfere in any future assertion of the defendant's demand, that would not now be in his way nor warrant the court in denying to the plaintiff the exercise of his legal right to withdraw his suit. The counterclaim could have been the subject of an independent action, and thus the law have been avoided. Whatever may be the purpose of this course on the part of the plaintiff, or its results, we have nothing to do with them and cannot compel him to remain in court and prosecute his suit. There is error in setting aside the nonsuit and permitting the answer to be filed after the cause was not out of court by the nonsuit. The judgment of nonsuit must therefore stand, and it is so adjudged.
Error. Reversed.
Cited: McNeill v. Lawton, 97 N.C. 20; Bynum v. Powe, ibid., 377; Pass v. Pass, 109 N.C. 486; Wilkins v. Suttles, 114 N.C. 558; Hickory v. R. R., 138 N.C. 315; Yellowday v. Perkinson, 167 N.C. 146; Sink v. Hire, 210 N.C. 403.