IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA17-596
Filed: 20 March 2018
Forsyth County, No. 16 CVS 7555
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, Plaintiff,
v.
ROBERT B. STIMPSON; and BANK OF AMERICA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
Defendants.
Appeal by Plaintiff from orders entered 23 February 2017 and 25 April 2017
by Judge John O. Craig, III in Superior Court, Forsyth County. Heard in the Court
of Appeals 13 November 2017.
Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General James
M. Stanley, Jr., Assistant Attorney General J. Aldean Webster, III, Assistant
Attorney General Alexandra M. Hightower, and Assistant Attorney General
William A. Smith, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Hendrick Bryant Nerhood Sanders & Otis, LLP, by Matthew H. Bryant, T. Paul
Hendrick, Timothy Nerhood, W. Kirk Sanders, and Kenneth C. Otis III, for
Defendant-Appellee Robert B. Stimpson.
McGEE, Chief Judge.
I. Factual and Procedural History
A. General
This appeal involves Article 2E, Chapter 136 of the North Carolina General
Statutes, “Transportation Corridor Official Map Act,” (the “Map Act”), that has been
the source of substantial litigation involving hundreds of real property owners. These
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
“Map Act” cases have been before this Court and our Supreme Court on multiple
occasions, and the general factual and procedural history has been repeatedly and
thoroughly addressed many times. See, e.g., Beroth Oil Co. v. N.C. Dep’t of Transp.,
220 N.C. App. 419, 725 S.E.2d 651 (2012) (“Beroth I”), aff’d in part, vacated in part,
Beroth Oil Co. v. N.C. Dep’t of Transp., 367 N.C. 333, 757 S.E.2d 466 (2014) (“Beroth
II”); Beroth Oil Co. v. N.C. Dep’t of Transp., __ N.C. App. __, 808 S.E.2d 488 (2017)
(“Beroth III”); see also Kirby v. N.C. Dep’t of Transp., 239 N.C. App. 345, 769 S.E.2d
218 (2015) (“Kirby I”), aff’d by separate opinion, Kirby v. N.C. Dep’t of Transp., 368
N.C. 847, 786 S.E.2d 919 (2016) (“Kirby II”).
B. Procedural History of the Present Matter
The present matter involves real property located in Forsyth County (the
“Property”) owned by Robert B. Stimpson (“Defendant”). Pursuant to its authority
under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 136-44.50 (2015) of the Map Act, the North Carolina
Department of Transportation (“DOT”) recorded a Transportation (roadway) Corridor
Map for State Project 34839 (the “Corridor Map”) with the Register of Deeds, Forsyth
County, on 26 November 2008, as part of DOT’s Northern Beltway Project (the
“Project”).1 The Property was included in the Corridor Map, and thus subject to the
1 Effective 11 July 2016, all transportation corridor maps were rescinded. Act of July 1, 2016,
ch. 90, sec. 17(a), 2016 N.C. Sess. Laws 2016 (“All transportation corridor official maps adopted
pursuant to Article 2E of Chapter 136 of the General Statutes, and any amendments thereto, are
hereby rescinded, and all restrictions under Article 2E of Chapter 136 of the General Statutes shall no
longer apply to properties or portions of properties within the affected transportation corridors.”).
-2-
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
provisions of the Map Act related to the Project.2 Defendant filed a complaint in an
earlier action (“Defendant’s Action”) on 9 May 2016, seeking, inter alia, a declaratory
judgment that the Property had been taken through inverse condemnation by DOT
pursuant to DOT’s actions under the Map Act, and requesting DOT be ordered “to
purchase [the] Property for the inverse condemnation[.]” Defendant moved for
judgment on the pleadings, and the trial court consolidated Defendant’s Action with
a number of additional related actions pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 42.3
Beroth Oil Co. v. N.C. Dep’t. of Transp, 2016 WL 9234026, *1 (N.C. Super. 2016)
(“Beroth Order”). With regard to the motion in Defendant’s Action, the Beroth Order
determined that (1) the Property was located in the area of the Project; (2) certain
property rights of Defendant’s were taken by DOT pursuant to inverse condemnation;
(3) the trial court was not prepared to rule on whether the taking constituted a fee
simple taking; and (4) the issue of the nature of the taking and damages would be
revisited. Id. at *1-2. The trial court ordered DOT to comply with the procedural
requirements of Article 9, Chapter 136, “Condemnation,” for all the plaintiffs;
including filing plats, obtaining appraisals, and depositing good faith estimates of the
value of the properties involved. Id. at *2-3. DOT appealed the Beroth Order, but
2 Two companion cases, with opinions filed concurrently with this opinion, also involve
property recorded in the Corridor Map of the Project on 26 November 2008. Those cases are COA17-
597, Dep’t of Transp. v. Chapman and COA17-598, Dep’t of Transp. v. MDC Invs., LLC.
3 Along with Defendant, other plaintiffs added in the consolidation included the defendants in
the companion cases, Chapman and MDC; the Beroth plaintiffs, and the Kirby plaintiffs.
-3-
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
this Court dismissed the appeal as an improper interlocutory appeal. Beroth III, __
N.C. App. at __, 808 S.E.2d at 502.
DOT filed the complaint in the present action on 13 December 2016, seeking
to take the Property pursuant to its powers of direct condemnation under Article 9,
Chapter 136. Defendant filed a motion to dismiss on 11 January 2017 arguing, inter
alia: “As there is a prior pending action [Defendant’s Action] and judgment on the
exact property and area and interest/interest valuation, and involving the same
parties, the Prior Pending action and judgment for taking precludes [DOT] filing and
prosecuting this action.” The trial court granted Defendant’s motion to dismiss by
order entered 23 February 2017. DOT filed a motion for relief from judgment
pursuant to Rule 60(b)(6) on 24 March 2017. The trial court entered an order on 25
April 2017 denying DOT’s motion to reconsider its 23 February 2017 ruling
dismissing the action. DOT appeals.
II. Analysis
A. Condemnation
In order to address the relevant issues brought forth in the present case, we
review the provisions of Article 9, Chapter 136, which concerns condemnation by
DOT, both direct and inverse. See N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 136-103(a) and -111 (2017). It
is the duty of DOT to institute an action when it determines condemnation of real
property for DOT purposes is necessary. N.C.G.S. § 136-103(a) (“In case
-4-
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
condemnation shall become necessary [DOT] shall institute a civil action by filing in
the superior court of any county in which the land is located a complaint and a
declaration of taking declaring that such land, easement, or interest therein is
thereby taken for the use of [DOT].”). When DOT properly initiates an action
pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 136-103, the relevant property is deemed condemned, title to
the property immediately vests in DOT, and DOT obtains all associated rights. N.C.
Gen. Stat. § 136-104 (2017).
However, if DOT fails to initiate condemnation proceedings pursuant to
N.C.G.S. § 136-103, a person with an interest in a property may initiate inverse
condemnation proceedings to determine whether a taking by DOT has occurred:
Any person whose land or compensable interest therein has
been taken by an intentional or unintentional act or
omission of [DOT] and no complaint and declaration of
taking has been filed by [DOT] may, within 24 months of
the date of the taking of the affected property or interest
therein or the completion of the project involving the
taking, whichever shall occur later, file a complaint in the
superior court . . .; said complaint shall . . . allege with
particularity the facts which constitute said taking
together with the dates that they allegedly occurred; said
complaint shall describe the property allegedly owned by
said parties and shall describe the area and interests
allegedly taken. . . . . The procedure hereinbefore set out
shall be followed for the purpose of determining all matters
raised by the pleadings and the determination of just
compensation.
N.C.G.S. § 136-111 (emphasis added). Therefore, the procedures set forth in Article
9 pertain to takings established pursuant to both N.C.G.S. § 136-103 and N.C.G.S. §
-5-
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
136-111. See also Berta v. Highway Comm., 36 N.C. App. 749, 754, 245 S.E.2d 409,
412 (1978). Although N.C.G.S. § 136-111 does not expressly state when an inverse
condemnation taking established pursuant to that section is deemed to have occurred,
this Court has held that, once a taking has been established pursuant to N.C.G.S. §
136-111, the taking shall be deemed to have occurred at the time the injury to the
property resulting in the taking occurred. Berta, 36 N.C. App. at 753–54, 245 S.E.2d
at 411–12. Our Supreme Court held in Kirby II that, for the properties affected, a
taking occurs at the time DOT records corridor maps pursuant to the Map Act. Kirby
II, 368 N.C. at 856, 786 S.E.2d at 926 (“By recording the corridor maps at issue here,
which restricted plaintiffs’ rights to improve, develop, and subdivide their property
for an indefinite period of time, NCDOT effectuated a taking of fundamental property
rights.”).
“To prevail on [an] inverse condemnation claim, [the] plaintiffs must show that
their ‘land or compensable interest therein has been taken.’” Beroth II, 367 N.C. at
340, 757 S.E.2d at 472 (citation omitted). In the present case, the Beroth Order
established that a compensable interest in the Property was taken by DOT through
inverse condemnation. Beroth Order, 2016 WL 9234026, *2. DOT does not contest
that a taking of a compensable interest in the Property occurred pursuant to the 26
November 2008 recordation of the Corridor Map. In an action for either direct
-6-
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
condemnation or inverse condemnation, the trial court first makes a determination
of all issues other than damages:
[T]he [trial] judge . . . shall, either in or out of term, hear
and determine any and all issues raised by the pleadings
other than the issue of damages, including, but not limited
to, if controverted, questions of necessary and proper
parties, title to the land, interest taken, and area taken.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 136-108 (2017). As this Court has stated:
Inverse condemnation is simply a device to force a
governmental body to exercise its power of condemnation,
even though it may have no desire to do so. It allows a
property owner to obtain compensation for a taking in fact,
even though no formal exercise of the taking power has
occurred. [The inverse condemnation statute] provides the
private property owner with a means to compel
government action.
Smith v. City of Charlotte, 79 N.C. App. 517, 521, 339 S.E.2d 844, 847 (1986) (citations
omitted). In order to fulfill the intent of Article 9, the General Assembly has granted
the trial court broad discretion to conduct its proceedings in the manner it believes
will best achieve the purposes of the Article:
In all cases of procedure under this Article where the mode
or manner of conducting the action is not expressly
provided for in this Article or by the statute governing civil
procedure or where said civil procedure statutes are
inapplicable the judge before whom such proceeding may
be pending shall have the power to make all the necessary
orders and rules of procedure necessary to carry into effect
the object and intent of this Chapter and the practice in
such cases shall conform as near as may be to the practice
in other civil actions in said courts.
-7-
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 136-114 (2017) (emphasis added). We now apply this law to the
facts before us.
B. Defendant’s Prior Action
Defendant’s Action, filed 9 May 2016, requested, inter alia, that the trial court
rule the Property had been taken by DOT upon recordation of the Corridor Map for
the Eastern Loop portion of the Project on 26 November 2008. Defendant requested
that DOT “be compelled to purchase [the] Property for the inverse condemnation;”
and further requested damages for the alleged taking, including compensatory
damages, various fees and costs incurred, interest accrued since the alleged 26
November 2008 taking, and reimbursement for “all taxes and expenses paid on the
Property from the date of taking[.]”
The decisions in Kirby I and Kirby II, reversing the ruling of the trial court,
held that recordation of the relevant corridor maps effectuated takings by DOT of
fundamental property rights of the Kirby plaintiffs and remanded the matter for
further proceedings. Accordingly, Kirby II held that the trial court had improperly
dismissed the Kirby plaintiffs’ inverse condemnation claims. Kirby II, 368 N.C. at
856, 786 S.E.2d at 926. The Beroth Order addressed certain outstanding issues
related to Defendant, defendants in the companion cases, the Kirby plaintiffs, the
Beroth plaintiffs, and multiple additional plaintiffs. Relying on the Kirby opinions,
the trial court, inter alia, granted Defendant’s motion for partial judgment on the
-8-
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
pleadings as to DOT’s “liability for a taking in inverse condemnation under N.C.G.S.
§ 136-111 . . ., in accordance with Rule 12(c) of the Rules of Civil Procedure.” Beroth
Order, 2016 WL 9234026 at *4. The trial court stated:
Using the powers afforded this [c]ourt under N.C.G.S. §
136-114 to fashion such rules and procedures necessary to
carry out the object and intent of Article 9 of Chapter 136
of the North Carolina General Statutes, the [c]ourt will
establish a procedure and timetable for []DOT to file plats,
make deposits with the required statutory interest, and, if
any plaintiff rejects []DOT offer, scheduling Section 108
hearings if either party requests it, in order to implement
and comply with the requirements of N.C.G.S. § 136-111.
Id. at *1. Although the trial court stated it was “not prepared at this stage of the
proceedings to rule that the takings are in the nature of fee simple valuation; . . . so
the [trial] court will deny [Defendant’s] motion[] at this time in this regard[,]” it
further stated that the issue of whether DOT’s taking of Defendant’s property would
be declared a fee simple taking could, and likely would, be addressed “at the Section
136-108 hearing phase.” Id. at *2.
Pursuant to the authority granted by N.C.G.S. § 136-114, the Beroth Order set
a specific procedure to follow in preparation for the N.C.G.S. § 136-108 hearing phase,
including ordering “that it is now incumbent upon []DOT to comply with N.C.G.S. §
136-111 by filing its plats and making good faith deposits with interest at the
statutory rate from the date of taking with the Forsyth County Clerk of Court[.]” Id.
The trial court set further procedures and timetables for DOT and the plaintiffs to
-9-
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
follow. Id. at *2-4. The trial court further ruled: “Upon [DOT] filing the plat, making
the deposit, delivery of the appraisal, and notice from the property owner that []DOT
valuation is rejected, either party may ask for Section 108 hearings if there is a
controversy regarding the necessary and proper parties, title to the land, interest
taken, or area taken.” Id. at *4.
As noted above, DOT’s appeal of the Beroth Order was held to be an improper
interlocutory appeal and was dismissed. Beroth III, __ N.C. App. at __, 808 S.E.2d
at 502. Therefore, the Beroth Order remains in force and currently controls on the
issues decided therein.4 As this Court stated in Beroth III:
At this juncture, it is []DOT that must follow the [Beroth
Order] appealed herein and file plats or maps, without
further delay, identifying interests and areas taken to
comply with G.S. § 136-111 and with the clear mandates of
this Court in Kirby I, and our Supreme Court in Kirby II.
Following this, as per the appealed order, either party may
schedule a hearing pursuant to Section 108 from which the
trial court would determine any and all issues raised by the
pleadings other than the issue of damages. The measure
of damages can then be determined by a jury pursuant to
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 136-112, to which the trial court shall add
interest accrued from the date of the taking to the date of
judgment pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 136-113, as well as
reimbursement of costs, disbursements, and expenses
pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 136-119.
Id. at __, 808 S.E.2d at 502 (emphasis added).
4 The Beroth Order is not before us, so we make no determinations regarding the correctness
of that order in this appeal.
- 10 -
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
C. The Present Case
In the present case, DOT filed a declaration of taking and a complaint on 13
December 2016 indicating it was initiating a direct condemnation action against
Defendant pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 136-103, and depositing with the trial court the
amount of money DOT estimated Defendant was entitled to for the taking of the
Property. According to Article 9, proper compliance with the provisions of N.C.G.S. §
136-103 causes title to the subject property to immediately vest in DOT. N.C.G.S. §
136-104. However, DOT initiated the present direct condemnation action on 13
December 2016, approximately two and a half months after entry of the 29 September
2016 Beroth Order. In his motion to dismiss, Defendant argued that, because he filed
an action for inverse condemnation pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 136-111 on 9 May 2016,
and because Defendant’s inverse condemnation action concerns substantially the
same parties and subject matter as DOT’s 13 December 2016 direct condemnation
action, DOT’s action must be abated. See Jessee v. Jessee, 212 N.C. App. 426, 438,
713 S.E.2d 28, 37 (2011) (citations omitted) (“‘Under the law of this state, where a
prior action is pending between the same parties for the same subject matter in a
court within the state having like jurisdiction, the prior action serves to abate the
subsequent action.’”). We note that the trial court’s 23 February 2017 order granting
Defendant’s motion to dismiss DOT’s direct condemnation action against Defendant
- 11 -
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
was entered “without prejudice to []DOT’s right to file a permissive counterclaim in
[Defendant’s inverse condemnation action.]”
1. Prior Pending Action Doctrine
“The ‘prior pending action’ doctrine involves ‘essentially the same questions as
the outmoded plea of abatement[.]’” Id. at 438, 713 S.E.2d at 37 (citation omitted).
The doctrine is
intended to prevent the maintenance of a “subsequent
action [that] is wholly unnecessary” and, for that reason,
furthers “the interest of judicial economy.” “The 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 the prior action is this: Do the two actions
present a substantial identity as to parties, subject matter,
issues involved, and relief demanded?”
Id.
DOT argues there “was no identity of subject matter, issues involved or relief
demanded” because Defendant’s Action involved “the alleged taking of non-
possessory restrictions imposed on the subject property on 26 November 2008 as the
result of [DOT’s] recording a corridor protection map[,]” whereas DOT’s present
action involves “the taking of possessory interests (right of way in fee simple, control
of access and temporary construction easements) on 13 December 2016” – the date
DOT initiated this action pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 136-103.
Defendant’s complaint in his 9 May 2016 action alleged that DOT had taken
compensable interests in the Property through inverse condemnation; DOT’s action
- 12 -
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
sought to take the Property by direct condemnation. There is no dispute concerning
the real property involved, only about the nature of the property rights acquired by
DOT’s 26 November 2008 taking.5 Defendant’s complaint requested “damages
. . . arising out of [DOT’s] taking by inverse condemnation of [Defendant’s]
property[.]” DOT’s complaint contended that DOT and Defendant could not agree on
the value of the Property. Defendant’s complaint requested that DOT “be compelled
to purchase [the] Property for the inverse condemnation” for “just compensation” as
determined pursuant to Article 9. DOT’s action sought to acquire the Property for
$188,500.00, or for whatever amount was determined to be just in the condemnation
proceeding.
DOT contends that these facts in this case do not demonstrate a substantial
identity of subject matter, issues involved, and relief demanded. DOT bases its
argument on the fact that through its direct condemnation action it took the Property
in fee simple; that this taking did not occur until 13 December 2016; Defendant’s
Action involves DOT’s taking of Defendant’s property rights that result in a “negative
easement” affecting the Property; and that the taking involved in Defendant’s Action
occurred when the Corridor Map was recorded on 26 November 2008. DOT seems to
want this Court to ignore Defendant’s complaint, and the full extent of the Beroth
5 Though DOT, in its brief, speaks of “the alleged taking” in Defendant’s Action, that there was
a taking on 26 November 2008 has been established by the Beroth Order.
- 13 -
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
Order, and restrict our analysis to DOT’s limited reading of the holdings in Kirby I
and Kirby II.
Defendant seeks to compel DOT to purchase the Property in fee simple through
his inverse condemnation action. Although in the Beroth Order the trial court did
not grant Defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings in this respect, that issue
is still before the trial court in Defendant’s prior action:
To the extent [Defendant] requested the [trial c]ourt to find
a taking at fee simple valuation, the [trial c]ourt is not
prepared at this stage of the proceedings to rule that the
takings are in the nature of fee simple valuation; therefore,
. . .the [trial] court will deny [Defendant’s] motion[] at this
time in this regard. The issue may, and will likely be,
revisited at the Section 136-108 hearing phase.
Beroth Order, 2016 WL 9234026 at *2. The trial court further ruled:
[]DOT may issue instructions to its appraisers to make
appraisals based on something other than a fee simple
taking, such as the concept of a negative easement. While
this [c]ourt has not yet judicially imposed a fee simple
valuation upon []DOT at this juncture, []DOT may
ultimately conclude, based on the actual location of the
[P]roperty and the fact that [the P]roperty will be graded
and covered with asphalt, that it only makes sense to treat
the appraisal as a fee simple valuation[.]
Id. at *3 (emphasis added). In preparation for the N.C.G.S. § 136-108 hearing, the
Beroth Order ruled “that it is now incumbent upon []DOT to comply with N.C.G.S. §
136-111 by filing its plats and making good faith deposits with interest at the
- 14 -
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
statutory rate from the date of taking with the Forsyth County Clerk of Court[.]” Id.
at *2.
Pursuant to the broad discretion granted it by the General Assembly through
N.C.G.S. § 136-114, the trial court has provided DOT with the opportunity to proceed
with a fee simple direct condemnation action alongside Defendant’s inverse
condemnation action. As evidenced by the relief sought in Defendant’s complaint,
proceeding to fee simple determination of the condemned land is apparently
Defendant’s desire as well. See N.C.G.S. § 136-108 (“After the filing of the plat, the
judge . . . shall, either in or out of term, hear and determine any and all issues raised
by the pleadings other than the issue of damages, including, but not limited to, if
controverted, questions of necessary and proper parties, title to the land, interest
taken, and area taken.”). DOT argues that, pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 136-103, it has
the right to file a complaint and declaration of taking for a property at any time, no
matter that there exists at that time a prior, ongoing condemnation action concerning
the same property. DOT contends that, because it “determined that it [was] in the
public interest to condemn whatever interests [Defendant] still has in the subject
property[,]” it was authorized to do so. However, the interests, if any, that Defendant
maintains in the Property is one of the issues to be determined in Defendant’s Action.
If the trial court determines that DOT has acquired, or must acquire, a fee
simple interest in the Property pursuant to Defendant’s inverse condemnation action,
- 15 -
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
Defendant will retain no remaining property interest in the Property for DOT to
directly condemn pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 136-103. DOT fails to convey to this Court
any utility in initiating a condemnation action concerning a property already subject
to a condemnation action, nor how DOT’s action could result in anything other than
confusion and delay – as is currently the situation for the Property, as well as the
properties involved in the companion appeals. We hold that the prior pending action
doctrine applies in this case, and on these facts Defendant’s Action served to prevent
DOT from proceeding with a direct condemnation action pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 136-
103.
2. Alternate Procedures
DOT contends that the General Assembly “did not empower [DOT] to institute
a condemnation proceeding by filing a counterclaim in a pending action. The General
Assembly did not authorize the courts, in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 136-114 or otherwise, to
re-write the unambiguous language of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 136-103.” DOT seeks an
application of N.C.G.S. § 136-103 in isolation, and not as one of multiple sections of
Article 9. DOT took compensable property rights from Defendant in 2008 without
filing a complaint or declaration of taking as required by N.C.G.S. § 136-103. For this
reason Defendant initiated an action pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 136-111: “Remedy where
no declaration of taking filed[,]” that states in relevant part: “Any person whose land
or compensable interest therein has been taken by an intentional or unintentional
- 16 -
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
act or omission of [DOT] and no complaint and declaration of taking has been filed by
[DOT] may . . . file a complaint in the superior court” alleging a taking by inverse
condemnation. N.C.G.S. § 136-111. This was the appropriate and sole remedy
established in Article 9 available to Defendant in response to DOT’s taking of
Defendant’s property rights absent initiating a direct condemnation action pursuant
to N.C.G.S. § 136-103. There is nothing in Article 9 suggesting that, once a plaintiff-
property owner acts pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 136-111, precisely because of DOT’s
failure to act pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 136-103, that DOT can derail the plaintiff’s
action by initiating an action pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 136-103 while the plaintiff-
property owner’s N.C.G.S. § 136-111 action is ongoing.
DOT is also incorrect in arguing that bringing a counterclaim in an N.C.G.S. §
136-103 action is not permitted by Article 9. As noted above, N.C.G.S. § 136-114
states:
In all cases of procedure under this Article where the mode
or manner of conducting the action is not expressly
provided for in this Article or by the statute governing civil
procedure or where said civil procedure statutes are
inapplicable the judge before whom such proceeding may
be pending shall have the power to make all the necessary
orders and rules of procedure necessary to carry into effect
the object and intent of this Chapter and the practice in such
cases shall conform as near as may be to the practice in
other civil actions in said courts.
N.C.G.S. § 136-114 (emphasis added). N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 13, which applies
to the relevant actions in this appeal by the express terms of N.C.G.S. § 136-114,
- 17 -
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
concerns counterclaims. It is unnecessary for this Court to determine whether DOT’s
counterclaim in Defendant’s Action would be best described as “permissive,” and
likely unhelpful in light of the particular and distinct nature of actions pursuant to
Article 9. To the extent that Rule 13 required “amendment” by the trial court to best
apply to the facts before it in the present case, N.C.G.S. § 136-114 provided the trial
court with that authority. We find the following citation from this Court generally
instructive:
[Our Supreme Court] held that if an action may be
denominated a compulsory counterclaim in a prior action,
it must be either (1) dismissed with leave to file it in the
former case or (2) stayed until the conclusion of the former
case. Because the purpose of Rule 13(a) is to combine
related claims in one action, “thereby avoiding a wasteful
multiplicity of litigation,” we believe the option to stay the
second action should be reserved for unusual
circumstances, not present in the case at bar.
Brooks v. Rogers, 82 N.C. App. 502, 507, 346 S.E.2d 677, 681 (1986) (citations
omitted). The purpose of Rule 13(a) is just as relevant in the present case, and we
hold that the trial court had the authority to enter its 23 February 2017 order
dismissing DOT’s direct condemnation action “without prejudice to [DOT’s] right to
file a . . . counterclaim in the Pending Action[.]” Because of the unique nature of
condemnation proceedings, DOT would retain its right to bring an action pursuant to
N.C.G.S. § 136-103 to condemn the Property, or any remaining rights in the Property
- 18 -
DEP’T OF TRANSP. V. STIMPSON
Opinion of the Court
retained by Defendant, if resolution of Defendant’s Action leaves DOT lacking in some
right in the Property necessary for completion of the Project.
However, DOT instead continues to seek to proceed by its own direct
condemnation actions – actions it only decided to file after years of litigation involving
hundreds of plaintiffs who have been seeking the same resolution through inverse
condemnation actions, some of which were filed over seven years ago. We do not
believe the General Assembly contemplated Article 9 to permit direct condemnation
actions and inverse condemnation actions concerning the same property to be
litigated simultaneously, and we find nothing in Article 9 or elsewhere granting DOT
that right. We therefore affirm the 23 February 2017 order dismissing DOT’s 13
December 2016 action.
DOT also argues that “the trial court abused its discretion in denying [DOT’s]
motion for relief from [the 23 February 2017] judgment” pursuant to Rule 60(b)(6).
DOT’s argument is wholly predicated on its argument that the trial court erred in
dismissing its 13 December 2016 action. In light of our decision affirming the 23
February 2017 order, we also affirm the trial court’s 25 April 2017 order denying
DOT’s 24 March 2017 motion to reconsider the 23 February 2017 order.
AFFIRMED.
Judges ELMORE and MURPHY concur.
- 19 -