Court Opinion

ID: 6729081
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 23:09:17.270634+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:37.660236
License: Public Domain

Campbell, J.
The first question to be decided is whether the demurrer filed by the defendant Building was timely filed.
The order of the assistant clerk of court dated 1 July 1968, which had been consented to by the attorney of the plaintiff, permitted the defendants up to and including 20 July 1968 in which to answer, demur or otherwise plead. 20 July 1968 was a Saturday.
G.S. 1-125 provides:
“The clerk shall not extend the time for filing answer or demurrer more than once nor for a period of time exceeding twenty days except by consent of parties.”
In the instant case the clerk had extended the time for filing answer or demurrer more than once, but he did so in the order of 1 July 1968 “by consent of parties.” Thus, the effect of the extension of time by the order of 1 July 1968 became an act “done as provided by law.”
G.S. 1-593 provides:
“How computed. —■ The time within which an act is to be done, as provided by law, shall be computed by excluding the first and including the last day. If the last day is Saturday, Sunday or a legal holiday, it must be excluded.”
Since 20 July 1968 was a Saturday, it should be excluded under the statute, and the following Monday, 22 July 1968, became the proper date to file answer, demurrer or other pleadings.
In addition to this, we have in this case a finding by the trial court:
“6. That the hours of the main Office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Buncombe County, North Carolina, run from 8:30 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. That the Office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Buncombe County, North Carolina, is open on weekends, said Office being located in the basement of the Buncombe County Courthouse, and is maintained by three Deputy Clerks of Superior Court of Buncombe County, one of whom is present at all times in said basement *78office for the purpose of issuing warrants and other court papers. That said Deputy Clerks of the Superior Court are authorized to accept civil papers for filing if the same are presented to them. That the main Office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Buncombe County is closed on Saturdays and was-closed on Saturday, July 20th, 1968. That the Deputy Clerk of the Superior Court maintaining the basement office of said Clerk on Saturday, July 20th, 1968, between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. was Mr. Charles Knighten. That the Deputy Clerks in the basement of the Buncombe County Courthouse do not pick up the mail on Saturdays and Mr. Charles Knighten was not instructed to pick up the mail.”
The trial court did not find by what authority the main office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Buncombe County was closed on Saturdays. We assume such closing was not illegal and was done pursuant to a valid order of the board of county commissioners of Buncombe County. G.S. 2-24.
G.S. 103-5 provides:
“Acts to be done on Sunday or holidays.- — -Where the day or the last day for doing an act required or permitted by law to be done falls on Sunday or a holiday the act may be done on the next succeeding secular or business day and where the courthouse in any county is closed on Saturday or any other day by order of the board of county commissioners of said county and the day or the last day required for filing an advance bid or the filing of any pleading or written instrument of any kind with any officer having an office in the courthouse, or the performance of any act required or permitted to be done in said courthouse falls on Saturday or other day during which said courthouse is closed as aforesaid, then said Saturday or other day during which said courthouse is closed as aforesaid shall be deemed a holiday; and said advance bid, pleading or other written instrument may be filed, and any act required or permitted to be done in the courthouse may be done on the next day during which the courthouse is open for business.”
We hold that since the order of the clerk of court dated 1 July 1968 granting the defendants up to and including 20 July 1968 in which to answer, demur or otherwise plead, since 20 July 1968 fell on a Saturday and since the main office of the clerk of superior court was closed on Saturdays, the defendant Building filed said pleading timely. Compare Hardbarger v. Deal, 258 N.C. 31, 127 S.E. 2d 771.
*79The next question presented is whether the demurrer filed by the defendant Building is frivolous.
G.S. 1-219 provides:
“On frivolous pleading. — If a demurrer, answer or reply is frivolous, the party prejudiced thereby may apply to the court or judge for judgment thereon, which may be given accordingly.”
In Bank v. Duffy, 156 N.C. 83, 72 S.E. 96, Walker, J., stated:
“We have held that a pleading will not be adjudged frivolous, irrelevant, or impertinent, so as to entitle the other party to a judgment non obstante plácito, unless it is clearly and palpably so. . . . If it raises a question, whether of law or fact, fit for consideration or discussion, we will not adjudge it to be irrelevant and as not standing in the way of a summary judgment upon the pleadings. . . . Even under the old system of pleading and practice, the courts hesitated to give judgment upon a pleading unless it plainly raised no real issue of law or fact, for Baron Parke said in Linwood v. Squire, 5 Exch. (W. H. & G.), 234: T do not say that the plea is a good plea, as it is not necessary to decide that question, but a plaintiff has no right to sign judgment if the plea raises a serious question and one which is fit for discussion.’ The courts do not encourage the practice of moving for judgment upon an answer or demurrer as being frivolous.”
The demurrer filed by defendant Building was “that the Complaint of the Plaintiff fails to state a cause of action against the Defendant, (Building), in that it appears from the face of the Complaint that the Defendant, (Building), did not purchase, contract for or agree to pay the Plaintiff for the matters and things alleged in the Complaint.”
The complaint seeks to recover $18,892.26 with interest from 7 July 1966, being the amount contracted to be paid by the defendant Restaurant. The judgment by default final entered by the trial court gave the plaintiff judgment for this amount against the defendant Building as well as against the defendant Restaurant. There is no specific allegation that the defendant Building assumed this indebtedness or succeeded to the liabilities of the defendant Restaurant. While there is an allegation that the defendant Building “purchased all the shares of stock in the corporation (Restaurant) . . . knowing at the time of the purchase of said stock that (Restaurant) was in complete default of said Conditional Sales *80Contract herein referred to”, there is no allegation that thereafter there was a reorganization, consolidation, amalgamation, or union between the two corporations, and no sufficient allegation to assert an implied assumpsit or fraud or a trust fund doctrine or other situation to make the defendant Building become the debtor to the creditors of the defendant Restaurant, c.f. Begnell v. Coach Lines, 198 N.C. 688, 153 S.E. 264.
There is no allegation that Restaurant is no longer in existence. In fact, process was served on it and a judgment obtained against it.
There is an allegation to the effect that the defendant Building “has succeeded to all obligations of (Restaurant) to this Plaintiff under said Conditional Sales Contract,” but no allegation that defendant has become obligated on the note or other evidence of the purchase price.
The allegations of the complaint in this case may be sufficient to establish the right of the plaintiff to seek possession of the merchandise involved. Whether the allegations of the complaint are sufficient to justify a judgment against the defendant Building for the amount of the original purchase price of $18,892.26 with interest thereon from 7 July 1966, which the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant Building, and judgment for which was rendered in the trial court, we do not decide.
It suffices for this decision that the demurrer raises a question fit for consideration or discussion; therefore, it cannot be considered frivolous. Bank v. Duffy, supra.
The demurrer having been timely filed and not being frivolous, we hold that it should be passed upon on its merits. Until that is done and the demurrer disposed of, the time for filing an answer has not expired.
Error and
Remanded.
MallaRD, C.J., and Morris, J., concur.