Donald R. HOLLOWELL
v.
Robert Edward CARLISLE and Charles Edward Carlisle.
No. 938SC618.
Court of Appeals of North Carolina.
June 21, 1994.*682 Bailey & Dixon, by Gary S. Parsons, Patricia P. Kerner and Kenyann G. Brown, Raleigh, and George Lee Jenkins, Kinston, for plaintiff-appellant.
Wallace, Morris, Barwick & Rochelle, P.A., by Thomas H. Morris and Elizabeth H. McCullough, Kinston, for defendant-appellees.
ORR, Judge.
The central question is whether the trial court may, upon a showing of excusable neglect, grant an extension of time under these facts to serve a dormant summons where no alias and pluries summons has been obtained. In the court below, the trial court concluded when neither an endorsement nor an alias and pluries summons was issued within ninety days of the original filing that the action was discontinued pursuant to Rule 4(e), and that the court had no authority to grant the plaintiff's motion for extension of time pursuant to Rule 6(b).
The plaintiff argues to the Court that Lemons v. Old Hickory Council, Boy Scouts of America, Inc., 322 N.C. 271, 367 S.E.2d 655, reh'g denied, 322 N.C. 610, 370 S.E.2d 247 (1988), controls the outcome here. Conversely, the defendants contend that the plaintiff's failure to obtain an alias and pluries summons effectively discontinued the action as was the case in Dozier v. Crandall, 105 N.C.App. 74, 411 S.E.2d 635 (1992).
Rule 4 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure sets forth the requirements for service of process. Under that rule, a summons must be served within thirty days of its issuance. N.C.Gen.Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 4(c) (1990). "A summons not served within 30 days loses its vitality and becomes functus officio, and service obtained thereafter does not confer jurisdiction on the trial court over the defendant.... However, although a summons not served within 30 days becomes dormant and unserveable, under Rule 4(c) it is not invalidated nor is the action discontinued." Dozier, at 75-6, 411 S.E.2d at 636 (emphasis added) (citation omitted). Rule 4(d) permits the action to be continued through an endorsement from the clerk or through the issuance of an alias or pluries summons. As is the case with the original summons, the alias or pluries summons "must be served within thirty days of issuance. Rule 4(e) provides that when there is neither an endorsement nor an alias or pluries summons issued, the action is discontinued as to any defendant who was not served within the time allowed." Lemons, 322 N.C. at 275, 367 S.E.2d at 657 (emphasis added).
In Lemons, our Supreme Court examined the interplay between Rules 4(c) and 6(b) of the Rules of Civil Procedure. There, the plaintiff commenced an action against the defendant on 6 February 1986. A summons was also issued that day, but was not served. An alias summons was issued on 2 May of that year and was served on 5 June, more than thirty days after its issuance. On 13 October 1986, the plaintiff filed a motion for retroactive extension of time, nunc pro tunc, from 2 June until 6 June to serve the alias summons. The Court, noting initially that the Rules of Civil Procedure were adopted "to eliminate the sporting element from litigation", Lemons, at 274, 367 S.E.2d at 657 (citation omitted), held that Rule 4 must be construed in para materia with Rule 6(b), "which addresses the computation of any time period prescribed by the Rules of Civil Procedure." Id., at 275, 367 S.E.2d at 657. Rule 6(b) provides that:
When by these rules ... an act is required or allowed to be done at or within a specified time, the court for cause shown may at any time in its discretion with or without motion or notice order the period enlarged if request therefor is made before expiration *683 of the period originally prescribed or as extended by a previous order. Upon motion made after the expiration of the specified period, the judge may permit the act to be done where the failure to act was the result of excusable neglect.
N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 6(b); Lemons, at 275-76, 367 S.E.2d at 657 (emphasis in original).
As a result of this language, the Court found that the General Assembly intended that a trial judge have within his discretionary powers the ability to "breathe new life and effectiveness into such a summons retroactively after it has become functus officio ", excepting the time periods allowed for motions pursuant to Rule 50(b), Rule 52, Rule 59(b), (d), or (e), and Rule 60(b). Lemons, at 274, 367 S.E.2d at 656. The Lemons Court then found that the Rule permitted an extension of time to serve a dormant summons and thus revive it where the alias summons was served on the defendant after the time for service of process under Rule 4(c) had expired.
By contrast, in Dozier, the plaintiff filed an action on 15 March 1990, alleging personal injuries on 19 March 1987. On 15 June 1990, an alias and pluries summons was issued, ninety-two days after the original summons. The defendant accepted service on 20 August 1990, over sixty days later, and filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings asserting the three-year statute of limitations. The plaintiff moved pursuant to Rule 6 to extend the period for issuance of the alias and pluries summons. This Court held that Lemons was distinguishable from the case before it in that Rule 6(b) does not allow a party to continue an action beyond the ninety-day period specified in Rule 4(e). The court agreed that Lemons held that a court may permit an extension of time to serve a dormant summons and thus revive it, but that the discretion allowed by Lemons did not apply where the defendant was not served within the time allowed by Rule 4(e).
Here, the parties have stipulated that the defendant was indeed served with the original summons and complaint sometime between sixty-eight and ninety days after the issuance of the summons on 31 July 1992, unlike the defendant in Dozier, who was served some five months after the original complaint was filed in March with an alias summons that was issued outside the ninety-day time period required by Rule 4(e). Under Lemons, the trial court may allow an extension of time to serve a dormant summons and complaint upon a showing of excusable neglect, but may not circumvent the express language of Rule 4(e), which discontinues an action after ninety days as to any defendant not served. We have determined that Lemons controls the facts of this case. Since the defendant in the case sub judice was served with a dormant summons within the 90-day limit, rather than notice of a discontinued action, the trial court had the authority pursuant to the language of Rule 6(b) to extend the time for service of process under Rule 4(c), "to permit the act to be done where the failure to do the act was the result of excusable neglect."
We therefore conclude that the trial court, while not required to exercise its discretion, has mistakenly concluded that it had no authority to extend the time for service of the complaint. Pursuant to Lemons, we accordingly reverse and remand to the trial court for a ruling on plaintiff's motion to extend time for service of the original summons.
Reversed and remanded.
WELLS and WYNN, JJ., concur.