IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA16-1271
Filed: 5 July 2017
Guilford County, No. 15 CVD 9917
BEVERLY SHOOK FARQUHAR, Plaintiff,
v.
PETER MICHAEL FARQUHAR, Defendant.
Appeal by plaintiff from order entered 20 July 2016 by Judge Susan R. Burch
in Guilford County District Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 17 May 2017.
Martha C. Massie for plaintiff-appellant.
Black Slaughter & Black, P.A., by Ashley D. Bennington, for defendant-
appellee.
ZACHARY, Judge.
Plaintiff Beverly Farquhar (Beverly) appeals from an order dismissing her
claims for alimony and equitable distribution pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) of the North
Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district
court’s order of dismissal.
I. Background
Beverly and defendant Peter Farquhar (Peter) have married each other on two
separate occasions. The parties were first married on 30 December 1993, and they
separated approximately ten years later, on 24 January 2003. In February 2003,
FARQUHAR V. FARQUHAR
Opinion of the Court
Beverly filed an action in Caldwell County District Court for divorce from bed and
board, equitable distribution, post-separation support, alimony, and attorneys’ fees
(the Caldwell County action). Three months later, Peter filed an answer in the
Caldwell County action along with his own counterclaim for equitable distribution.
Beverly and Peter were divorced pursuant to a judgment entered 23 April
2004. However, Beverly’s claims for alimony and equitable distribution as well as
Peter’s claim for equitable distribution were not resolved in any manner by the
divorce judgment. All of those claims were pending in May 2005, when the parties
decided to remarry. Shortly after entering their second marriage, Beverly and Peter
entered into a joint voluntary dismissal of their pending claims. The joint dismissal
was filed on 26 August 2005.
Beverly and Peter’s second marriage lasted approximately ten years.
However, on 16 February 2015, Peter filed a verified complaint in Guilford County
District Court seeking divorce from bed and board, injunctive relief, and return of
separate property accumulated during the second marriage. The parties then
separated for the second time on or about 1 April 2015. Two weeks later, Beverly
filed an answer to Peter’s complaint, which included counterclaims for divorce from
bed and board, post-separation support, alimony, equitable distribution, and
attorneys’ fees. On 3 December 2015, Beverly filed a verified complaint in Guilford
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Opinion of the Court
County Superior Court alleging claims for equitable distribution, alimony, and
attorneys’ fees related to the parties’ first marriage.
On 30 December 2015, Peter filed a motion to dismiss Beverly’s claims arising
out of the first marriage pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1) and (6) of the North Carolina
Rules of Civil Procedure. The gravamen of Peter’s motion was that the trial court
lacked jurisdiction over Beverly’s complaint because the claims arising out of the first
marriage were voluntarily dismissed after the parties’ second marriage and were not
refiled within one year of their dismissal, as required by Civil Procedure Rule 41(a).
For the same reasons, Peter contended that Beverly’s complaint failed to state claims
upon which relief could be granted.
After hearing the motion to dismiss on 18 February 2016, and then
reconvening on 21 April 2016, the Honorable Susan R. Burch concluded that Beverly’s
complaint was barred by the application of Rule 41(a), which required her claims for
alimony and equitable distribution arising of out the first marriage to be refiled
within one year of their dismissal. According to Judge Burch, this was so even though
the parties had remarried before filing the joint voluntary dismissal. On 20 July
2016, the district court entered an order that memorialized its oral ruling, concluded
that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the claims set forth in Beverly’s
complaint, and granted Peter’s motion to dismiss. Beverly now appeals from the
dismissal of her complaint.
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Opinion of the Court
II. Standard of Review
“Subject matter jurisdiction refers to the power of the court to deal with the
kind of action in question [and] is conferred upon the courts by either the North
Carolina Constitution or by statute.” Harris v. Pembaur, 84 N.C. App. 666, 667, 353
S.E.2d 673, 675 (1987) (citations omitted). An order granting a Rule 12(b)(1) motion
to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is subject to de novo review. Burgess
v. Burgess, 205 N.C. App. 325, 327, 698 S.E.2d 666, 668 (2010). “Under the de novo
standard of review, this Court ‘considers the matter anew and freely substitutes its
own judgment for that of the [trial court].’ ” Id. (quoting In re Appeal of the Greens of
Pine Glen Ltd. P’ship, 356 N.C. 642, 647, 576 S.E.2d 316, 319 (2003)).
III. Discussion
Rule 41(a) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure provides, in pertinent
part:
Subject to the provisions of Rule 23(c) and of any statute of
this State, an action or any claim therein may be dismissed
by the plaintiff without order of court . . . (ii) by filing a
stipulation of dismissal signed by all parties who have
appeared in the action. . . . If an action commenced within
the time prescribed therefor, or any claim therein, is
dismissed without prejudice under this subsection, a new
action based on the same claim may be commenced within
one year after such dismissal. . . .
“Rule 41(a)(1) extends the time within which a party may refile suit after taking a
voluntary dismissal when the refiled suit involves the same parties, rights and cause
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Opinion of the Court
of action as in the first action.” Holley v. Hercules, Inc., 86 N.C. App. 624, 628, 359
S.E.2d 47, 50 (1987).
On appeal, Beverly acknowledges the general rule contained in Rule 41(a), but
maintains that the unique factual circumstances of this case present a “loophole.”
Beverly contends that because the parties’ second marriage occurred before the joint
voluntary dismissal was filed in August 2005, she lacked the ability to refile her
alimony and equitable distribution claims based on the parties’ first marriage.
According to Beverly, Rule 41(a)’s one-year savings provision was therefore tolled
during the parties’ second marriage, as she had no ability to refile her claims arising
out the first marriage. We disagree.
As a general rule, a judgment for absolute divorce destroys a spouse’s right to
seek equitable distribution or alimony unless those claims are pending at the time
that the divorce judgment is entered. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-11(c), (e) (2015). In Stegall
v. Stegall, however, our Supreme Court held that “if alimony and equitable
distribution claims are properly asserted, whether by the filing of an action or raising
of counterclaims, and are not voluntarily dismissed pursuant to Rule 41(a)(1) until
after judgment of absolute divorce is entered, a new action based on those claims may
be filed within the one-year period provided by the rule.” 336 N.C. 473, 479, 444
S.E.2d 177, 181 (1994). Under Stegall, alimony and equitable distribution claims
that are pending at the time a divorce judgment is entered and are then later
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Opinion of the Court
voluntarily dismissed may nonetheless survive and may be refiled within the one year
period established by Rule 41(a). Id. Having carefully reviewed the factual and
procedural background in this case, we conclude that the rule announced in Stegall
controls this case.
Here, Beverly’s alimony and equitable distribution claims based on the first
marriage were pending when the parties’ divorce judgment was entered in the
Caldwell County action on 23 April 2004. The joint dismissal, filed 26 August 2005,
caused Beverly’s alimony and equitable distribution claims (arising out of the first
marriage) to be dismissed. Thus, under Stegall, Beverly had one year within which
to refile those claims; however, Beverly chose not to do so. Because it is clear that
the alimony and equitable distribution claims that Beverly filed against Peter in 2015
are the same claims that she filed in 2003 (that is, based on the first marriage), they
were subject to Rule 41(a)’s restrictions and were barred by the Rule.
We are cognizant that Beverly (presumably) did not refile those claims because
she had reconciled with Peter and entered into a second marriage with him. However,
the rule in Stegall is clear—because the joint dismissal followed the entry of the
divorce judgment, Beverly’s claims for alimony and equitable distribution survived,
but a new action asserting those claims had to be re-filed within one year of the joint
dismissal. Beyond that, we refuse to hold that when alimony and equitable
distribution claims based on a first marriage are voluntarily dismissed after a divorce
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Opinion of the Court
judgment, those claims are indefinitely tolled by a second marriage of the parties so
that they may be tucked away and used as a sword in a hypothetical, future action.
Beverly’s 2015 claims for alimony and equitable distribution arising out the first
marriage were barred by the application of Rule 41(a). Accordingly, the district court
lacked subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate those claims and they were properly
dismissed.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the district court’s order dismissing
Beverly’s claims for alimony and equitable distribution.
AFFIRMED.
Judges DILLON and BERGER, JR. concur.
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