Court Opinion

ID: 3673032
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:20:46.779987+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:17:13.008906
License: Public Domain

The plaintiff, upon petition, was allowed by the Clerk of the Superior Court to sue in forma pauperis. the petition was verified by the plaintiff.
The defendant moved the court to dismiss the action, upon the ground that the plaintiff had not complied with the requirements of the statute in his petition for leave to sue in forma pauperis, but the record does not show in what particular.
The motion was allowed by the court, and thereupon the plaintiff appealed.
This is an appeal from an order of the Superior Court, dismissing the action for the reason that the plaintiff had not complied with the provisions of the law, regulating suits in forma pauperis.
(266)     As the defendant was not represented by counsel in this court, no particulars were specified in which the plaintiff had failed to comply with the law.
If the objection be that the Clerk could not authorize the plaintiff to sue, as a pauper, in the Superior Court, it is answered by the decision of this court in Rowark v. Gaston, 67 N.C. 291, where it is held that either a Judge or Clerk of the Superior Court may, in proper cases, within the jurisdiction of said court, authorize a person to sue in forma pauperis. But if the objection be that the plaintiff cannot, by his own oath, prove that he has a good cause of action; the reply is, since "a party to an action or special proceeding in any and all courts and before any and all officers and persons acting judicially, may be examined as a witness on his own behalf, or in behalf of any other *Page 209 
party," etc., no reason is perceived why he may not prove, by his own oath, a fact, in order to get into court, which, it is admitted, he may prove when once there; or, in other words, why he may not prove that he has a good cause of action at different stages of the proceeding.
The judgment of the Superior Court is reversed.
Let this be certified, etc.
PER CURIAM.                               Judgment reversed.
(267)