United Daughters of the Confederacy, N.C. Div. v. City of Winston-Salem ( 2022 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
    2022-NCSC-143
    No. 21A21
    Filed 16 December 2022
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, NORTH CAROLINA
    DIVISION, INC., and JAMES B. GORDON CHAPTER #211 of THE UNITED
    DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, NORTH CAROLINA DIVISION, INC.
    v.
    CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM, by and through ALLEN JOINES, MAYOR OF
    WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA, FORSYTH COUNTY; COUNTY OF
    FORSYTH, NORTH CAROLINA, by and through DAVID R. PLAYER,
    CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS; and WINSTON
    COURTHOUSE, LLC
    Appeal pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) from the decision of a divided panel of
    the Court of Appeals, 
    275 N.C. App. 402
     (2020), affirming an order entered on 8 May
    2019 by Judge Eric C. Morgan in Superior Court, Forsyth County, granting
    defendants’ motions to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) and Rule 12(b)(6) of the
    North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. Heard in the Supreme Court on 29 August
    2022.
    James A. Davis for plaintiff-appellants.
    Anargiros N. Kontos, Deputy City Attorney, and Angela I. Carmon, City
    Attorney, for defendant-appellee City of Winston-Salem.
    B. Gordon Watkins III, County Attorney, for defendant-appellee Forsyth
    County.
    Allman Spry Davis Leggett & Crumpler, P.A., by Jodi D. Hildebran; and
    Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, by Lorin J. Lapidu,s for defendant-
    appellee Winston Courthouse, LLC.
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
    2022-NCSC-143
    Opinion of the Court
    Mark Dorosin and Elizabeth Haddix for Chatham for All, North Carolina
    Commission on Racial & Ethnic Disparities in the Criminal Justice System,
    Dr. Joyce Blackwell, Dr. Phillip A. Clay, Algin Holloway, Patrice High, Edith
    A. Hubbard, Walter Jackson, Bradley Johnson, Philip McAlpin, Angelia Euba
    McKoy, Henry Clay McKoy, Lisa V. Moore, Moses G. Parker, Melvin L. Watt,
    Melvin L. Williams, Camille Z. Roddy, and Jimmy Barnes, amici curiae.
    Matthew R. Joyner and H. Edward Phillips for Sons of Confederate Veterans,
    amicus curiae.
    ERVIN, Justice.
    ¶1          In this case, plaintiff United Daughters of the Confederacy, North Carolina
    Division, Inc., challenges a decision made by defendant City of Winston Salem to
    remove a Confederate monument from the grounds of the former Forsyth County
    Courthouse.1 Although the courthouse and surrounding real property was originally
    owned by defendant Forsyth County, the County had sold the property to defendant
    Winston Courthouse, LLC, a private entity that had converted the courthouse
    building into private residential apartments, prior to the monument’s removal. The
    trial court granted defendants’ motions to dismiss for lack of subject matter
    jurisdiction pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 12(b)(1), and failure to state a claim
    upon which relief could be granted pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 12(b)(6), and
    1 On 1 May 2019, following the trial court’s hearing concerning defendants’ dismissal
    motions, plaintiff James B. Gordon Chapter # 211 of the United Daughters of the Confederacy
    filed a notice of voluntary dismissal without prejudice. In light of that fact, the term
    “plaintiff” as used throughout the remainder of this opinion should be understood as referring
    to the United Daughters of the Confederacy, North Carolina Division, Inc.
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
    2022-NCSC-143
    Opinion of the Court
    the Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal order in a non-unanimous decision. The
    issue before this Court on appeal is whether the facts alleged in plaintiff’s amended
    complaint were sufficient to establish that plaintiff had standing to challenge the
    City’s action. After careful consideration of the record in light of the applicable law,
    we hold that, even though plaintiff lacks standing to proceed in this case, the trial
    court erred in dismissing the amended complaint with prejudice. As a result, we
    affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals, in part; reverse that decision, in part; and
    remand this case to Superior Court, Forsyth County, for further proceedings not
    inconsistent with this opinion.
    I.    Factual Background
    A. Substantive Facts
    ¶2         Plaintiff is a nonprofit corporation organized under the laws of the State of
    North Carolina, having first registered with the Secretary of State in 1992. According
    to the allegations contained in plaintiff’s amended complaint, in 1903 the James B.
    Gordon Chapter #211 of the United Daughters of the Confederacy “began a movement
    to place a Confederate monument in Court House Square in Winston, North
    Carolina.” In its complaint, plaintiff alleges that the local chapter had approved a
    proposed design for the monument, initiated plans “to obtain a monument at a cost
    of no more than $3,000.00,” and launched a fundraising campaign to raise money for
    the monument’s construction.
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
    2022-NCSC-143
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶3          Plaintiff further alleges that, “on or about March 1, 1905, the Forsyth County
    Board of County Commissioners issued an order granting to the Plaintiff, formerly
    known as the Daughters of the Confederacy, permission to erect a memorial to the
    fallen soldiers of the Confederacy . . . upon property of the County of Forsyth.”2 In
    addition, the complaint alleges that, “on or about October 4, 1905, a ceremony
    sanctioned by the Board of County Commissioners was conducted during which the
    Confederate Monument was dedicated.” Finally, the amended complaint alleges that,
    sometime around March 2012, while acting “on behalf of the County of Forsyth, North
    Carolina,” Ashley Neville and John Salmon of Ashley Neville, LLC, nominated the
    old Forsyth County Courthouse for placement on the National Register of Historic
    Places, with that nomination having been accepted “[o]n or about April 23, 2013[.]”
    Plaintiff never makes any claim to own the monument or to have any sort of
    contractual or property interest in it.
    ¶4          On 18 March 2014, the County executed a general warranty deed conveying
    the old Forsyth County Courthouse and the surrounding real property to Winston
    Courthouse, a private real estate developer, by means of a deed that expressly
    excluded from the sale “a plaque mounted inside the building, time capsule currently
    buried inside the building, and public monuments located outside of the building on
    2 The complaint does not clearly indicate whether the reference to “plaintiff” in this
    part of the amended complaint refers to the statewide organization or the local chapter.
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    Opinion of the Court
    the land” and provided that Winston Courthouse “agrees to execute necessary
    easements (in form and content that are reasonably acceptable to both parties) to
    allow [the County] continued access to maintain and/or remove these items from the
    land at the expense of [the County].” Subsequently, Winston Courthouse converted
    the old courthouse building into private residential apartments, with the building
    having been exclusively used for residential purposes since April 2015. Plaintiff has
    not alleged or shown that any of the easements contemplated by the deed were ever
    executed or recorded.
    ¶5         On 18 August 2017, shortly after an outbreak of violence in Charlottesville,
    Virginia, related to the proposed removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee, the monument
    was vandalized, with the word “Shame” having been spray painted upon it. According
    to Assistant City Manager Damon Dequenne, local law enforcement officers
    subsequently received complaints from a resident of the Winston Courthouse
    apartments who was “upset about armed guards patrolling the [monument]” after
    this incident. On 20 August 2017, local law enforcement officers identified “eight (8)
    concerned citizens standing guard near the [monument].”
    ¶6         In September 2017, Winston-Salem Mayor Allen Joines contacted Salem
    Cemetery and proposed that the monument be relocated to the cemetery, a
    proposition that the Salem Cemetery Board considered and approved on 24 October
    2017. On 25 December 2018, the monument was vandalized a second time, with the
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    Opinion of the Court
    words “Cowards & Traitors” having been spray-painted on it. According to Mr.
    Dequenne, this incident “raised concerns that someone might try to topple the
    [monument] in a manner similar to that in Chapel Hill and other cities” and that “any
    efforts to topple the [monument] might result in injury to persons on the sidewalk as
    well as private property.”
    ¶7         On 31 December 2018, City Attorney Angela Carmon sent a letter to plaintiff’s
    president and registered agent and to Winston Courthouse’s management regarding
    the recent acts of vandalism at the monument.3 According to Ms. Carmon, the events
    in question had “invoke[d] significant concern about the safety of the [monument] and
    the potential for confrontation, breaches of the peace[,] and other nuisance type
    conduct similar to that endured by other cities,” with the City not being “in a position
    to provide constant security checks necessary for the protection of the [monument]
    and to mitigate the recuring acts of vandalism.” In addition, Ms. Carmon stated that
    the monument “does not appear” to be “publicly owned” and that “[c]laims of
    ownership of the [monument] have come from the United Daughters of the
    Confederacy.” In light of existing “concerns for overall public safety and protection of
    the [monument],” Ms. Carmon “direct[ed] [plaintiff] to remove and relocate by
    January 31st the [monument] from its present location to a more secure location
    where the same can be protected from vandals and others looking to create a
    3   Ms. Carmon’s letter was also addressed to a representative of the local chapter.
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
    2022-NCSC-143
    Opinion of the Court
    Charlottesville type incident in Winston-Salem,” noting that a “[f]ailure to comply
    with this direction may result in the [C]ity seeking a court order for the removal and
    relocation of the [monument] to preserve the same and to address public safety
    concerns[.]” On 8 January 2019, counsel for Winston Courthouse sent a letter to
    plaintiff’s representatives stating that “the recent controversy, press reports, and
    references to potential violence have raised serious concerns for some of [Winston
    Courthouse’s] residents” and that, “in order to protect the residents and the
    [p]roperty,” Winston Courthouse “cannot allow the [monument] to remain on the
    [p]roperty.”
    ¶8         At the public comment portion of the 7 January 2019 Winston-Salem City
    Council meeting, several City residents spoke in favor of removing or relocating the
    monument. On 13 January 2019, protests occurred near the monument during which
    people expressed both support for and opposition to the monument’s continued
    presence in its current location. According to Assistant City Manager Dequenne, the
    Winston-Salem Police Department “planned and executed a riot and emergency type
    operation using ninety-three (93) officers who expended in excess of four-hundred and
    sixty-five (465) man hours . . . in an effort to protect the [monument] and the public.”
    In addition, Mr. Dequenne noted that the police department’s bike patrol had
    continued to actively monitor the monument following the initial act of vandalism
    that occurred in 2017.     Additional City residents voiced strong support for the
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    Opinion of the Court
    removal of the monument during the public comment portion of the 22 January 2019
    City Council meeting, with some speakers having suggested that the monument
    should be destroyed rather than relocated.
    ¶9          On 25 January 2019, counsel for plaintiff hand-delivered a letter to defendants
    in which it requested a 60-day extension of the deadline for the removal of
    monument.4 On 30 January 2019, Mr. Dequenne issued a notice declaring that the
    monument was a public nuisance in accordance with N.C.G.S. § 160A-93 and Winston
    Salem City Code § 62-3(b) on the grounds that “the continued presence of the
    [monument] at its current location is detrimental to the safety and longevity of the
    [monument] and prejudicial to public safety.” In support of this determination, Mr.
    Dequenne pointed to “all that has occurred with Confederate Statues over the past
    sixteen months,” including (1) “the toppling of the [Silent Sam] statue in August 2018
    in Chapel Hill”; (2) “the December 2018 vandalism [of the monument] in Winston-
    Salem”; (3) “the expressions of concern regarding citizen safety both in 2017 and
    2018”; (4) “the protest events here in Winston-Salem”; (5) “comments made at the
    Winston-Salem City Council’s public comment periods”; (6) “calls for destruction of
    the [monument]”; and (7) “the potential for toppling the same,” all of which caused
    4 Although the 25 January 2019 letter is not included in the record, other portions of
    the record suggest that the letter advanced many of the same legal arguments regarding the
    monument upon which plaintiff has relied before this Court.
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    him to conclude that “the potential for harm to the [monument] and citizens was
    legitimate and the potential for harm looming.”
    ¶ 10         On the same day, City Attorney Carmon denied plaintiff’s request for
    additional time to remove the monument on the grounds that “the totality of the
    circumstances suggests that [plaintiff’s] request is made in an effort to cause an
    unnecessary delay in action by the City,” with plaintiff having been “made aware of
    the City’s public-safety related concerns regarding the [monument] more than sixteen
    (16) months ago.”     As a result, despite the existence of uncertainly about the
    ownership of the monument, the City indicated that it would, in accordance with the
    earlier public nuisance declaration, summarily remove the monument from the old
    courthouse property without seeking a court order. Winston Courthouse agreed to
    cooperate with the City’s efforts to remove the monument.
    ¶ 11         On 12 March 2019, the City had the monument removed from the old
    courthouse property and placed in storage, where it would remain until it could be
    moved to the Salem Cemetery. At that time, the City informed plaintiff that it was
    “more than willing to make the [monument] available to [plaintiff if] it wish[ed] to
    retrieve the [monument] from storage” and that it would pay for the monument’s
    relocation, at no cost to plaintiff, “upon property [where] [plaintiff] has clear written
    permission to place the [monument], provided the location is not prejudicial to public
    safety.”
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    Opinion of the Court
    B. Procedural History
    ¶ 12          On 31 January 2019, plaintiff filed a complaint against the City and the
    County in which it sought the issuance of a temporary restraining order and
    preliminary injunction enjoining defendants “from taking affirmative action to
    remove or relocate the [monument] prior to a full adjudication of the respective rights
    and obligations of the Parties[.]” On 6 February 2019, plaintiff filed an amended
    complaint in which it added the local chapter as a party plaintiff and Winston
    Courthouse as a party defendant and sought the entry of a declaratory judgment to
    determine (1) “the Parties’ respective rights, duties, privileges, obligations, liabilities,
    [and] immunities with regard to the [monument]” and (2) “[w]hether the City of
    Winston-Salem [has] misapplied [N.C.G.S. §] 160A-193 and City Ordinance 62-3(b)
    in declaring [that] the [monument] constitutes [a] Public Nuisance,” as well as the
    issuance of a preliminary injunction precluding the relocation of the monument
    pending resolution of its request for a declaratory judgment. After a hearing held on
    31 January 2019, Judge Stanley L. Allen entered an order on 25 February 2019 in
    which he denied plaintiff’s request the for the entry of a temporary restraining order.5
    ¶ 13          On 8 March 2019, defendants filed separate motions to dismiss the amended
    complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 1A1, Rule
    5Although Winston Courthouse was not named as a party defendant in the original
    complaint, the order notes that its attorney appeared at the hearing and argued that the
    motion should be denied.
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    Opinion of the Court
    12(b)(1), and failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted pursuant to
    N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 12(b)(6), in which they argued, among other things, that
    plaintiff lacked standing to challenge the City’s decision to remove the monument.
    On 20 March 2019, plaintiff filed a second amended motion for the issuance of a
    preliminary injunction in which it alleged that the City had acted unlawfully and in
    violation of plaintiff’s due process rights by removing the monument prior to a
    determination concerning the merits of defendants’ dismissal motion and sought the
    entry of an order requiring the City to return the monument to the courthouse
    property. In an affidavit filed in response to plaintiff’s motion, Winston Courthouse’s
    manager asserted that Winston Courthouse would be “irreparably harmed” if the
    monument were to be returned to the old courthouse property on the grounds that
    the restoration of the monument would result in an unlawful entry upon Winston
    Courthouse’s private property, force Winston Courthouse to incur additional security
    and legal expenses, and endanger the safety of its residents.
    ¶ 14         After a hearing held on 29 April 2019, the trial court entered an order on 8
    May 2019 granting defendants’ dismissal motions. In support of this determination,
    the trial court noted that plaintiff “has never alleged that it owns the [monument] or
    that there was ever any contract, lease, or other agreement between [plaintiff] and
    another entity requiring that the [monument] stay in its location on the land of
    [Winston Courthouse].” The trial court rejected plaintiff’s contention that it had
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
    2022-NCSC-143
    Opinion of the Court
    standing to maintain the present action because “a specific requirement for
    membership in [p]laintiff organizations is establishing that one is a lineal descendant
    of [a Confederate soldier].” In light of the fact that plaintiff “has not alleged that it
    owns the [monument], has not alleged that it has any contractual or other legally
    enforceable right in the [monument], and has not demonstrated a legally protected
    interest that would be invaded by Defendants’ actions,” the trial court concluded that
    plaintiff had failed to establish standing. The trial court further concluded that
    plaintiff “has not established that there is any injury in fact that is either concrete or
    particularized to this specific plaintiff.” As a result, for all of these reasons, the trial
    court concluded that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over this case and that
    plaintiff had failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted and dismissed
    plaintiff’s amended complaint with prejudice. Plaintiff noted an appeal to the Court
    of Appeals from the trial court’s order.
    C. Court of Appeals Decision
    ¶ 15          In seeking relief from the trial court’s order before the Court of Appeals,
    plaintiff argued that the trial court had erred by dismissing its complaint for lack of
    standing given that it “has an abiding and cognizable legal interest in the
    [monument] because [plaintiff] is a legacy organization which raised the money
    necessary to design, build, and place the monument on [the old courthouse property]”
    and that it “was clearly and specifically threatened with adverse consequences if it
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    Opinion of the Court
    failed or refused to remove the [m]onument.” In addition, plaintiff argued that,
    because the trial court had dismissed the amended complaint for lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction, it had erred by dismissing the amended complaint with, rather
    than without, prejudice. In plaintiff’s view, “[a] court cannot dismiss a complaint
    with prejudice if it has held that it lacks jurisdiction over the proceeding,” citing Cline
    v. Teich for Cline, 
    92 N.C. App. 257
    , 264 (1988) (vacating an order dismissing the
    plaintiff’s complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted
    because “the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the present case”
    and, for that reason, “had no authority to consider whether the [c]omplaint failed to
    state a claim.”).
    ¶ 16          A divided panel of the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s order, with
    the majority agreeing with the trial court that plaintiff had failed to establish the
    standing needed to assert the claims alleged in the amended complaint and
    concluding that dismissal of the amended complaint with prejudice was proper.
    United Daughters of the Confederacy v. City of Winston-Salem, 
    275 N.C. App. 402
    (2020).   In upholding the trial court’s decision to dismiss plaintiff’s amended
    complaint with prejudice, the Court of Appeals concluded that, “even assuming
    arguendo that it was improper to dismiss the complaint with prejudice on the basis
    of Rule 12(b)(1), it was not improper to do so on the basis of Rule 12(b)(6), which
    operates as an adjudication on the merits.” 
    Id. at 406
    . In view of the fact that the
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    Opinion of the Court
    trial court dismissed plaintiff’s amended complaint based upon both Rule 12(b)(1) and
    Rule 12(b)(6), the Court of Appeals concluded that “the trial court did not err in
    dismissing the complaint with prejudice pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), and that any error
    in doing so pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) was rendered harmless as a result.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 17         The Court of Appeals began its discussion of the standing issue by explaining
    that, in order to show standing, “a plaintiff must demonstrate three things: injury in
    fact, a concrete and actual invasion of a legally protected interest; the traceability of
    the injury to a defendant’s actions; and the probability that the injury can be
    redressed by a favorable decision.” 
    Id.
     at 407 (citing Neuse River Found., Inc. v.
    Smithfield Foods, Inc., 
    155 N.C. App. 110
    , 114 (2002)). For that reason, the Court of
    Appeals held that “[t]he mere filing of a declaratory judgment” action “is not
    sufficient, on its own, to grant a plaintiff standing.” 
    Id.
     (citing Beachcomber Prop.,
    LLC v. Station One, Inc., 
    169 N.C. App. 820
    , 824 (2005)). Instead, the Court of
    Appeals held that, in order “to pursue a declaratory judgment as to its rights in the
    [monument], plaintiff had to show, at the very least, that it possessed some rights in
    the [monument]—a legally protected interest invaded by defendants’ conduct.” 
    Id.
    As a result of the fact that, “aside from acknowledging their role in funding the
    erection of the [monument] over a century ago,” plaintiffs had alleged no ownership
    rights or other legal interest in the monument, 
    id. at 408
    , the Court of Appeals
    concluded that, since plaintiff had failed to allege an “injury in fact,” the trial court
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    had not erred by dismissing plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice pursuant to Rule
    12(b)(6), 
    id.
    ¶ 18          In dissenting from his colleagues’ decision to affirm the trial court’s dismissal
    order, Judge Tyson stated that he would have concluded that plaintiff had standing
    to pursue the claims asserted in the amended complaint for the purposes of obtaining
    relief from what he viewed as the “pre-emptive and unlawful actions of the City of
    Winston Salem.” 
    Id. at 409
     (Tyson, J., dissenting). According to Judge Tyson, “[t]he
    pleadings assert and the record raises factual disputes over who currently owns the
    [monument],” with plaintiff not being required “to claim sole ownership to possess
    standing in this declaratory judgment action.” 
    Id. at 412
    . In Judge Tyson’s view,
    plaintiff had standing to seek the entry of the requested declaratory judgment
    because the amended complaint “clearly assert[ed] and ‘involve[d] an actual
    controversy between the parties,’ ” id at 413 (quoting Goldston v. State, 
    361 N.C. 26
    ,
    30 (2006)), and because plaintiff, “[a]s an association of [c]hapters and members,” had
    associational standing to pursue its claim against defendants, 
    id.
     at 414 (citing River
    Birch Assocs. v. City of Raleigh, 
    326 N.C. 100
    , 130 (1990) (holding that an association
    has standing to file an action on behalf of its individual members when “(a) its
    members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right; (b) the interests it
    seeks to protect are germane to the organization’s purpose; and (c) neither the claim
    asserted nor the relief requested requires the participation of individual members in
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    the lawsuit” (quoting Hunt v. Wash. State Apple Advertising Comm., 
    432 U.S. 333
    ,
    343 (1977)).6 Judge Tyson believed that plaintiff’s members had standing to seek
    relief from the City’s actions because “[i]t is undisputed that the [monument] was
    paid for and erected by [plaintiff’s] members and [c]hapter,” that plaintiff’s
    participation in this litigation was “directly related to the stated non-profit and
    charitable goals of the organization,” and that the “claim asserted and the relief
    requested does not require the participation of the individual members or
    [c]hapters[.]” 
    Id.
    ¶ 19          In addition, Judge Tyson asserted that, “[a]s a veteran’s memorial and a war
    grave for those who did not return home and [an object] listed on the National
    Register [of Historic Places], the [monument] is arguably protected from injury or
    destruction by the ‘Veterans Memorial Preservation and Recognition Act of 2003.’ ”
    
    Id.
     at 415 (citing 
    18 U.S.C. § 1369
     (2018) (imposing criminal penalties upon anyone
    who destroys or attempts to destroy a monument “commemorating the service of any
    person or persons in the armed forces of the United States” that is located on federally
    owned or controlled land.)). According to Judge Tyson, a “veteran” for purposes of the
    Veterans Memorial Preservation and Recognition Act includes individuals who
    6 Judge Tyson also appeared to suggest that plaintiff might have standing to maintain
    the present action pursuant to the decision of the Court of Appeals in Fuller v. Easley, 
    145 N.C. App. 391
    , 395 (2001) (holding that a plaintiff “may have standing to bring a taxpayer
    action, not as an individual taxpayer, but on behalf of a public agency or political subdivision,
    if the proper authorities neglected or refused to act”) (cleaned up)).
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    “served for ninety days or more in the active military or [naval] service during the
    Civil War,” 
    id.
     (quoting 
    38 U.S.C. § 1501
    ), with the Secretary of the Army being
    directed “to furnish, when requested, appropriate Government headstones or
    markers at the expense of the United States for the unmarked graves” of various
    persons, including “Soldiers of the Union and Confederate Armies of the Civil War,”
    
    id.
     (quoting 24 U.S. § 279(a) (repealed 1 September 1973)).
    ¶ 20         Judge Tyson further contended that the monument was also protected by
    N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1, which provides, subject to certain exceptions, that “a monument,
    memorial, or work of art owned by the State may not be removed, relocated, or altered
    in any way without the approval of the North Carolina Historical Commission,”
    N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1(a) (2021)), and restricts the removal or relocation of an “object of
    remembrance located on public property,” § 100-2.1(b). According to Judge Tyson,
    plaintiffs “are seeking a declaratory judgment, restraining order, and injunction to
    enforce the statute, consistent with their threshold ownership of and role in securing
    and erecting the [monument] and the specific goals expressed in their charter,” with
    it being necessary to satisfy these restrictions “prior to any efforts [that] are
    commenced to alter or remove the [monument]” if it “is determined to be owned by
    the State . . . or is located on State-owned property.” Id. at 416 (emphasis in original).
    ¶ 21         Judge Tyson further asserted that, even though N.C.G.S. § 160A-193 “grants
    statutory authority to a municipality to act when a building or structure constitutes
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    Opinion of the Court
    an imminent danger to public health or safety,” before taking action “the municipality
    must comply with federal and state laws and give required notice, a hearing, and
    ample opportunity to make the structure safe.” Id. (citing Monroe v. City of New Bern,
    
    158 N.C. App. 275
     (2003)). Judge Tyson claimed the City “would [have acted] ultra
    vires to purport to declare a [m]emorial and war grave dedicated to dead and wounded
    veterans of that county, whether owned by Forsyth County or [plaintiffs] or the State
    to be a public nuisance”; that the City had “no lawful basis to declare the [monument]
    to be a public nuisance or to pre-emptively demand then unilaterally remove it from
    a property listed on the National Register of Historic Places without prior permission
    or agreement”; and that the City could have only removed the monument “after
    compliance with the applicable federal and state statutes.” 
    Id.
     at 416–17 (citing 
    18 U.S.C. § 1369
    ; 
    36 C.F.R. § 60.15
    ; N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1). As a result, Judge Tyson
    concluded that plaintiff’s request for a declaratory judgment “invokes subject matter
    jurisdiction and states standing and claims for relief to survive [d]efendants’ motions
    to dismiss.” Id. at 417.
    ¶ 22         Finally, Judge Tyson contended that the City had “inexplicitly [sic] and
    unlawfully sought to declare the [monument] to dead and wounded veterans from
    Forsyth County to be a public nuisance, used taxpayer funds to dismantle and remove
    the [monument], and sought to relocate the [monument] to the Salem Cemetery
    without the agreement of the owners and in violation of federal and state law.” Id.
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    at 418. After noting that “[t]emporary removal is permitted by agreement with the
    owner when required to preserve the [monument], which must be re-erected within
    ninety (90) days thereafter,” id. (citing N.C.G.S. § 100-.21(b)), Judge Tyson asserted
    that this statutory provision had no application to the present case because
    defendants had made “no allegations of action to physically damage the [monument]”
    or “assert[ed] any agreement with [plaintiff], the State, or any other potential owner
    to dismantle, remove, or relocate the [monument],” id. In Judge Tyson’s view, the
    majority’s decision “[did] not address, explain, distinguish[,] nor refute any of the
    rules, precedents, laws, and statutes that are plead at the trial court, cited on appeal,
    and as controlling law, are clearly applicable to the facts and record,” and that the
    trial court’s decision to dismiss plaintiff’s amended complaint with prejudice had been
    erroneous. Id. at 419. Plaintiff noted an appeal to this Court from the Court of
    Appeals’ decision based upon Judge Tyson’s dissent.
    II.   Analysis
    A. Standard of Review
    ¶ 23         This Court reviews a trial court’s decision to grant or deny a motion to dismiss
    for lack of standing using a de novo standard of view, under which it “view[s] the
    allegations as true and the supporting record in the light most favorable to the non-
    moving party,” Mangum v. Raleigh Bd. of Adjustment, 
    362 N.C. 640
    , 644 (2008), with
    this being the applicable standard of review regardless of whether the complaint is
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    Opinion of the Court
    dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) or for
    failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6),
    see Harris v. Matthews, 
    361 N.C. 265
    , 271 (2007) (dismissal under Rule 12(b)(1)); New
    Hanover Cnty. Bd. of Ed. v. Stein, 
    380 N.C. 94
    , 2022-NCSC-9, ¶ 21 (dismissal under
    Rule 12(b)(6)). An appellate court considering a challenge to a trial court’s decision
    to grant or deny a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction may
    consider information outside the scope of the pleadings in addition to the allegations
    set out in the complaint. See Harris, 
    361 N.C. at 271
    . A complaint is properly
    dismissed pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) “(1) when the complaint on its face reveals that
    no law supports [the] plaintiff’s claim; (2) when the complaint reveals on its face the
    absence of fact[s] sufficient to make a [ ] claim; [or] (3) when some fact disclosed in
    the complaint necessarily defeats [the] plaintiff’s claim.” Intersal, Inc. v. Hamilton,
    
    373 N.C. 89
    , 98 (2019) (quoting Oates v. Jagg, Inc., 
    314 N.C. 276
    , 278 (1985)).
    ¶ 24         This Court reviews decisions of the Court of Appeals for errors of law. N.C. R.
    App. P. 16(a); see also State v. Melton, 
    371 N.C. 750
    , 756 (2018). In the event that the
    sole basis for a party’s appeal of right is a dissent in the Court of Appeals, the Court’s
    review is “limited to consideration of those issues that are (1) specifically set out in
    the dissenting opinion as the basis for that dissent, (2) stated in the notice of appeal,
    and (3) properly presented in the new briefs[.]” N.C. R. App. P 16(b); see also C.C.
    Walker Grading & Hauling, Inc. v. S.R.F. Mgmt. Corp., 
    311 N.C. 170
    , 175 (1984)).
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    Opinion of the Court
    B. Standing
    ¶ 25         A plaintiff must establish standing in order to assert a claim for relief.
    Willowmere Cmty. Ass’n, Inc. v. City of Charlotte, 
    370 N.C. 553
    , 561 (2018); Creek
    Pointe Homeowner’s Ass’n v. Happ, 
    146 N.C. App. 159
    , 164 (2001). “As a general
    matter, the North Carolina Constitution confers standing on those who suffer harm.”
    Mangum, 362 N.C. at 642 (citing N.C. Const. art. I, § 18 (providing that “[a]ll courts
    shall be open” and “every person for an injury done him in his lands, goods, person,
    or reputation shall have remedy by due course of law[.]”)). As we have previously
    explained,
    “[t]he ‘gist of the question of standing’ is whether the party
    seeking relief has ‘alleged such a personal stake in the
    outcome of the controversy as to assure that concrete
    adverseness which sharpens the presentation of issues
    upon which the court so largely depends for illumination of
    difficult constitutional questions.’ ”
    Stanley v. Dep’t of Conservation and Dev., 
    284 N.C. 15
    , 28 (1973) (quoting Flast v.
    Cohen 
    392 U.S. 83
    , 99 (1968) (quoting Baker v. Carr, 
    369 U.S. 186
    , 204 (1962))). Prior
    to our decision in Committee to Elect Dan Forest v. Employee Political Action
    Committee, 
    376 N.C. 558
    , 2021-NCSC-6, the Court of Appeals had consistently held
    that North Carolina’s standing requirements were identical to those enforced in the
    federal courts, so that a plaintiff was required to show that he or she had suffered
    “(1) [an] ‘injury in fact’—an invasion of a legally protected
    interest that is (a) concrete and particularized and (b)
    actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical; (2)
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    Opinion of the Court
    [that] the injury is fairly traceable to the challenged action
    of the defendant; and (3) [that] it is likely, as opposed to
    merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by a
    favorable decision.”
    Neuse River Found., 155 N.C. App. at 114, (quoting Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560–61 (1992)). In Committee to Elect Dan Forest, however, we held that,
    since the North Carolina Constitution does not contain the same “case-or-
    controversy” provision that appears in the United States Constitution, it does not
    require the existence of an “injury-in-fact” to establish standing. Comm. to Elect Dan
    Forest, ¶ 85. Instead, we held that, “[w]hen a person alleges the infringement of a
    legal right directly under a cause of action at common law, a statute, or the North
    Carolina Constitution . . . the legal injury itself gives rise to standing.” Id.7
    ¶ 26          Admittedly, neither the trial court nor the Court of Appeals had the benefit of
    our decision in Committee to Elect Dan Forest at the time that they addressed the
    standing issue that is before us in this case. In light of that decision, to the extent
    that the lower courts relied upon plaintiff’s failure to allege an “injury-in-fact” in
    determining that plaintiff lacked standing, any such determination constituted error.
    7  We did note that, “in directly attacking the validity of a statute under the
    constitution, a party must show they have suffered a ‘direct injury.’ ” Comm. to Elect Dan
    Forest, ¶ 82 (quoting State ex rel. Summerell v. Carolina-Virginia Racing Ass’n, 
    239 N.C. 591
    ,
    594 (1954)) (emphasis added). Although amicus Chatham for All, et al., argues that N.C.G.S.
    § 100-2.1 is unconstitutional as applied to Confederate monuments generally, no party in this
    case has attacked the validity of N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 or any other statute. As a result, we need
    not address whether plaintiff has sustained the sort of “direct injury” needed to support a
    challenge to the validity of a statutory provision enacted by the General Assembly.
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    Opinion of the Court
    On the other hand, this analytical flaw in the reasoning adopted by the trial court
    and the Court of Appeals does not change the fact that plaintiff has failed to establish
    standing in this case, so that the decisions of the trial court and the Court of Appeals
    with respect to the standing issue should be affirmed. See Eways v. Governor’s Island,
    
    326 N.C. 552
    , 554 (1990) (holding that, “[w]here a trial court has reached the correct
    result, the judgment will not be disturbed on appeal where a different reason is
    assigned to the decision”).
    ¶ 27         In its brief, plaintiff advances a number of arguments, some of which it has
    asserted for the first time before this Court, in support of its contention that it has
    standing to pursue the claims asserted in the amended complaint. Although plaintiff
    has, in some instances, conflated its standing-related arguments with its arguments
    regarding the legally and conceptually distinct issue of whether the City’s actions
    were authorized under the various state and federal laws cited by plaintiff, we will
    attempt to address each of its standing-related arguments in turn for the purpose of
    determining whether plaintiff has made the necessary showing of standing.
    ¶ 28         As an initial matter, plaintiff argues that, “to challenge a statute, municipal
    ordinance, policy, or action, a plaintiff need only demonstrate that it has been
    ‘injuriously affected’ by the enactment or policy or action,” quoting Goldston, 
    361 N.C. at 35
    . In apparent reliance upon the law of taxpayer standing, see 
    id.
     at 31–32,
    plaintiff contends that “[c]itizens and taxpayers have the right to seek equitable and
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    Opinion of the Court
    declaratory relief when governing authorities are preparing to put property dedicated
    to the public to an unauthorized use,” citing Wishart v. Lumberton, 254, N.C. 94, 96
    (1961). For that reason, plaintiff asserts that “[a] citizen, [acting] in his own behalf
    and that of all other taxpayers[,] may maintain a suit seeking to enjoin the governing
    body of a municipal corporation from transcending their lawful powers or violating
    their legal duties in any mode which will injuriously affect the taxpayers,” citing
    Merrimon v. S. Paving & Const. Co., 
    142 N.C. 539
    , 545 (1906). In plaintiff’s view,
    although a declaratory judgment action must involve an
    actual controversy between the parties, plaintiffs are not
    required to allege or prove that a traditional cause of action
    exists against defendants in order to establish an actual
    controversy. A declaratory judgment should issue (1) when
    it will serve a useful purpose in clarifying and settling the
    legal relations at issue, and (2) when it will terminate and
    afford relief from the uncertainty, insecurity and
    controversy giving rise to the proceeding.
    quoting Goldson, 361 N.C. at 33 (2006) (cleaned up). In view of the fact that the
    amended complaint “patently assert[s] and ‘involve[s] an actual controversy between
    the parties,’ ” specifically a dispute over who owns the monument, plaintiff argues
    that it “does not have to claim sole ownership of the [monument] to possess standing
    in this declaratory judgment action.”
    ¶ 29         Secondly, plaintiff claims to be entitled to claim associational standing because
    “(a) its members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right; (b) the
    interests it seeks to protect are germane to the organization’s purpose; and (c) neither
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    Opinion of the Court
    the claim asserted nor the relief requested requires the participation of individual
    members in the lawsuit,” quoting River Birch Assocs., 326 N.C. at 130. According to
    plaintiff, “individual members of [its] organization who live in Forsyth County would
    have standing to sue in their own right as taxpayers,” citing Charles Stores v. Tucker,
    
    263 N.C. 710
    , 717 (1965); Fuller, 145 N.C. App. at 395–96), with the fact that it is a
    nonprofit corporation in good standing in North Carolina and the fact that its
    “purposes include ‘historical, benevolent, memorial, educational and patriotic
    programs’ ” sufficing to “clearly and equivocally give[ ] it an articulated interest in
    the status and preservation of objects of remembrance such as the [m]onument.” As
    a result, plaintiff contends that the “fundamental premises” upon which it was
    founded “establish that its very existence is germane to the issues raised in this
    litigation” and that “a thorough presentation and inquiry into the relevant evidence
    and the applicable law does not require the active participation of [its] individual
    members[.]”
    ¶ 30         Thirdly, plaintiff contends that “the [amended] complaint alleges colorable
    claims that [its] members and its affiliated chapter were responsible for funding and
    erecting the [monument],” that “no governmental expenditures were involved in the
    enterprise,” and that “[the County] is the owner of the monument.” After conceding
    that any of its members who might have been involved in erecting the monument are
    no longer alive, plaintiff contends that, “as an incorporated entity which has affiliated
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    Opinion of the Court
    chapters made up of qualifying members, [it] has a perpetual existence for so long as
    it otherwise complies with the laws of the State of North Carolina,” so that it
    “necessarily follows” that it “has succeeded to the interests of those deceased
    members of an affiliated chapter who were responsible for designing, funding, and
    erecting the [monument] in the first place.” Plaintiff argues that “the [amended]
    complaint specifically alleges that the monument had its origins in the efforts of
    [p]laintiff and its subsidiary local chapter to design, fund, and erect the [monument],”
    that this allegation “is facially sufficient to state a particularized interest in the
    [monument],” and that the trial court erred by concluding that it lacked standing to
    maintain the present declaratory judgment action.
    ¶ 31         Finally, plaintiff claims that it “did not start this fight” and that it had, instead,
    been “clearly and specifically threatened with adverse consequences by the City of
    Winston-Salem if it failed or refused to remove the [monument].”             According to
    plaintiff, “[t]o deny that [it] does not have the right to defend itself in a court of law
    when it was the recipient of a clear and unequivocal attack would be to subvert
    accepted and well-established concepts of due process and equal protection under
    law.” Plaintiff asserts that, while it “does not have to claim sole ownership to possess
    standing in this declaratory judgment action,” the City has “repeatedly asserted that
    [p]laintiff owned the [monument] in its demands and in other communications sent
    to [p]laintiff, while the other [d]efendants assert that ownership of the [monument]
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    Opinion of the Court
    is unknown.” As a result, plaintiff contends that “[t]his action squarely raises the
    question of the ownership of the [monument],” and that “it is only logical to find that
    standing exists if an individual or entity is alleged to own an item of property as has
    been the case with allegations made concerning [p]laintiff and its alleged ownership
    of the [monument].”
    ¶ 32         Plaintiff’s arguments rest upon a fundamental misunderstanding of the law of
    standing. In essence, plaintiff appears to believe that by simply filing a declaratory
    action and asserting that there was an “actual controversy between the parties”
    relating to the identity of the monument’s owner, it has made a sufficient showing to
    establish standing. See Goldston, 
    361 N.C. at 33
    . However, as the majority of the
    Court of Appeals observed, “[t]he mere filing of a declaratory judgment is not
    sufficient, on its own, to grant a plaintiff standing,” United Daughters of the
    Confederacy, 275 N.C. App. at 407 (citing Beachcomber Prop., 169 N.C. App. at 824),
    with it being necessary for a party to establish standing as a prerequisite for the
    assertion of a declaratory judgment claim, Goldston, 
    361 N.C. at 33
     (holding that
    plaintiffs had established taxpayer standing before “consider[ing] the form of relief
    sought by plaintiffs, who [had] filed a declaratory judgment action”) (emphasis
    added); see also Taylor v. City of Raleigh, 
    290 N.C. 608
    , 620 (1976) (holding that the
    validity of a zoning ordinance could be challenged through a declaratory judgment
    action only after determining that the plaintiff had established standing). In other
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    Opinion of the Court
    words, plaintiff is still required to demonstrate that it has sustained a legal or factual
    injury arising from defendants’ actions as a prerequisite for maintaining the present
    declaratory judgment action. See Goldston, 
    361 N.C. at 35
     (noting that “[o]nly those
    persons may call into question the validity of a statute who have been injuriously
    affected thereby in their persons, property, or constitutional rights.”) (quoting
    Piedmont Canteen Serv., Inc. v. Johnson, 
    256 N.C. 155
    , 166 (1962) (emphasis added
    in Goldston)); Comm. to Elect Dan Forest, ¶ 85 (holding that “[t]he North Carolina
    Constitution confers standing to sue in our courts on those who suffer the
    infringement of a legal right”) (emphasis added).
    ¶ 33         A careful analysis of the amended complaint satisfies us that plaintiff has
    failed to identify any legal right conferred by the common law, state or federal statute,
    or the state or federal constitutions of which they have been deprived by defendants’
    conduct.   For example, plaintiff has not claimed any proprietary or contractual
    interest in the monument that would support its contention that the removal of the
    monument constituted an “unlawful seizure” in violation of the Fourth Amendment
    or an “unlawful[ depriv[ation] of property without due process of law” in violation of
    the Fifth Amendment. Without asserting ownership over a piece of property, plaintiff
    cannot claim that the property was the subject of an unlawful seizure or deprivation.
    See Maines v. City of Greensboro, 
    300 N.C. 126
    , 134 (1980) (noting that “[a]t the
    threshold of any procedural due process claim is the question of whether the
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    Opinion of the Court
    complainant has a liberty or property interest, determinable with reference to state
    law, that is protectible under the due process guaranty” (citing Bishop v. Wood, 
    426 U.S. 341
     (1976); Presnell v. Pell, 
    298 N.C. 715
     (1979)). A number of plaintiff’s other
    allegations, including its assertion that the City’s actions “infringe[d] upon the
    freedom of speech of the [plaintiff] and the citizens of the County,” that these actions
    “violate[d] the right of equal protection pursuant to the [Fourteenth] Amendment,”
    and that “[p]laintiff will be irreparably harmed if [d]efendants take affirmative action
    to remove or relocate the [monument] prior to a full adjudication of the respective
    rights and obligations of the [p]arties,” are nothing more than conclusory statements
    devoid of any factual or legal support. See Krawiec v. Manly, 
    370 N.C. 602
    , 610 (2018)
    (holding that “a complaint that makes general allegations in sweeping and conclusory
    statements,      without   specifically   identifying      the   trade   secrets   allegedly
    misappropriated, is insufficient to state a claim for misappropriation of trade secrets”
    (cleaned up)).
    ¶ 34         Although the amended complaint claims that the local chapter was involved in
    raising funds to erect the monument and that it received permission from the County
    to place the monument outside the old county courthouse building in 1905, plaintiff
    does not allege that the local chapter or any of its members retained an ownership
    interest in the monument or had executed a contract with the County providing that
    the monument would remain upon the old courthouse property in perpetuity. As a
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    Opinion of the Court
    result, even construing plaintiff’s allegations concerning the funding for and erection
    of the monument as true, the mere fact that the local chapter “funded and erected the
    [monument]” does not suffice to establish standing in the absence of an affirmative
    claim to have some sort of proprietary or contractual interest in the monument. This
    is particularly true given that the plaintiff’s allegations that the City’s actions
    violated various state and federal laws, which we address in further detail below,
    assume that the County, rather than plaintiff, owns the monument.
    ¶ 35         In addition, our taxpayer standing jurisprudence makes it clear that, “where a
    plaintiff undertakes to bring a taxpayer’s suit on behalf of a public agency or political
    subdivision, his complaint must disclose that he is a taxpayer of the agency [or]
    subdivision,” Branch v. Bd. of Ed. of Robeson Cnty., 
    233 N.C. 623
    , 626 (1951) (citing
    Hughes v. Teaster, 
    203 N.C. 651
     (1932)); see also Fuller, 145 N.C. App. at 395–96, and
    “allege facts sufficient to establish” either that “there has been a demand on and a
    refusal by the proper authorities to institute proceedings for the protection of the
    interests of the public agency or political subdivision” or that “a demand on such
    authorities would be useless.” Id. Although plaintiff has included such assertions in
    its brief before this Court, no such allegations appear in the amended complaint. See
    Davis v. Rigsby, 
    261 N.C. 684
    , 686 (1964) (noting that “[a] party is bound by his
    pleadings and, unless withdrawn, amended, or otherwise altered, the allegations
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    contained in all pleadings ordinarily are conclusive against the pleader”).8 Instead,
    the amended complaint alleges that plaintiff is a nonprofit (and, therefore, non-
    taxpaying) corporation, see DiCesare v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hosp. Auth., 
    376 N.C. 63
    , 70 (2020) (holding, in the context of a motion for judgment on the pleadings, that
    the movant must show that the complaint “fails to allege facts sufficient to state a
    cause of action or admits facts which constitute a complete legal bar thereto”
    (emphasis added) (citation omitted)), and it does not allege that any of its members
    pay taxes to either the City or the County. In addition, plaintiff has never alleged
    that it has brought this action “on behalf of” the City or the County, Branch, 
    233 N.C. at 626
    , or accused public officials of “misuse or misappropriation of public funds,”
    Goldston, 
    361 N.C. at 33
    . As a result, plaintiff’s amended complaint simply does not
    make a valid claim of taxpayer standing in the manner required by this Court’s
    precedent.
    ¶ 36          In the same vein, we hold that the amended complaint fails to allege sufficient
    facts necessary to establish associational standing. Although plaintiff argues that it
    is a “legacy organization whose purposes include ‘historical, benevolent, memorial,
    8 In addition, given that plaintiff did not advance this argument before the Court of
    Appeals, it is not permitted do so for the first time before this Court. See Westminster Homes,
    Inc. v. Town of Cary Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    354 N.C. 298
    , 309 (2001) (noting the
    longstanding rule that “issues and theories of a case not raised below will not be considered
    on appeal;” see also N.C. R. App. P. 10(a) (providing that issues not raised in a party’s brief
    are deemed abandoned).
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    Opinion of the Court
    educational and patriotic programs;’ ” that its charter “clearly and [un]equivocally
    gives it an articulated interest in the status and preservation of objects of
    remembrance such as the [m]onument;” that it “has succeeded to the interests of
    those deceased members of an affiliated chapter who were responsible for designing,
    funding, and erecting the [monument];” and that it has “a specific requirement for
    membership . . . that one is a lineal descendant of an individual who served in the
    government or the armed forces of the Confederacy,” none of these factual allegations
    are raised in the amended complaint. In addition, the amended complaint does not
    identify any of plaintiff’s individual members or describe how the legal rights of any
    of plaintiff’s individual members have been violated.        As a result, the amended
    complaint fails to allege facts sufficient to show that “the interests [plaintiff] seeks to
    protect are germane to the organization’s purpose” or that its members “would
    otherwise have standing to sue in their own right.” River Birch Assocs., 326 N.C. at
    130.
    ¶ 37          In addition, we are simply not persuaded that the purpose for which plaintiff
    was organized, standing alone, suffices to provide it with standing to maintain the
    present action. Aside from the fact that plaintiff has cited no authority to support its
    position, similar arguments have consistently been rejected by both the federal courts
    and our Court of Appeals. See, e.g., Gardner v. Mutz, 
    360 F. Supp. 3d 1269
    , 1276
    (M.D. Fla. 2019) (concluding that, even though the plaintiffs claimed “genealogical
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    Opinion of the Court
    relationships and membership in associations for particular historical and cultural
    foci,” they “cannot base their standing on their preferences for the preservation of
    Confederate memorials” because such preferences “are not sufficiently particularized,
    but are general, public-interest grievances, and vindicating the public interest is the
    function of the legislative and executive branches, not the judicial branch” (cleaned
    up)), vacated, in part, on other grounds, 
    962 F.3d 1329
     (11th Cir. 2020); McMahon v.
    Fenves, 
    323 F. Supp. 3d 874
    , 880 (W.D. Tex. 2018) (observing that the plaintiffs “may
    be more deeply attached to the values embodied by the Confederate monuments than
    the average student rushing to class or the mall, but their identities as descendants
    of Confederate veterans do not transform an abstract ideological interest in
    preserving the Confederate legacy into a particularized injury”); Soc’y for Hist. Pres.
    of Twentysixth N.C. Troops, Inc. v. City of Asheville, 
    282 N.C. App. 701
    , 2022-NCCOA-
    218, ¶¶ 26–27 (concluding that that neither a purported violation of N.C.G.S. § 100-
    2.1 nor the plaintiff’s status as “a legacy organization which was responsible for” the
    restoration of a monument that was subsequently removed by the City of Asheville
    sufficed to “establish a legal injury suffered by [the] plaintiff sufficient to establish
    standing”);9 Hist. Pres. Action Comm. v. Reidsville, No. COA12-1386, 
    2013 WL 6096749
    , at *5 (N.C. Ct. App. Nov. 19, 2013) (unpublished) (concluding that the
    9 The decision in Twentysixth North Carolina Troops is particularly noteworthy
    because the Court of Appeals’ analysis, unlike the earlier decision in this case, rested upon
    this Court’s decision in Committee to Elect Dan Forest.
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    plaintiffs’ claim that they “derived a particular aesthetic enjoyment from the
    [Confederate] monument and are injured by its removal” was insufficient to support
    a claim of standing).
    ¶ 38         Finally, plaintiff’s assertion that it has standing because it “[has] the right to
    defend itself in a court of law when it was the recipient of a clear and unequivocal
    attack” finds no support in the law or the facts of this case. Neither the allegations
    contained in the amended complaint nor the evidence contained in the record support
    plaintiff’s contention that it was “clearly and specifically threatened with adverse
    consequences by the City of Winston-Salem if it failed or refused to remove the
    [monument].” Instead, the amended complaint simply alleges that the City had
    “caused a letter to be sent to [plaintiff] stating that it had until January 31st, 2019 to
    remove [the monument].” The letter itself, a copy of which appears in the record on
    appeal and the authenticity of which has not been questioned by any party,
    acknowledges that “[c]laims of ownership of the [monument] have come from the
    United Daughters of the Confederacy,” directs plaintiff “to remove and relocate” the
    monument by 31 January 2019, and warns that “[f]ailure to comply with this directive
    may result in the [C]ity seeking a court order for the removal and relocation of the
    [monument] to preserve the same and to address public safety concerns[.]” Although
    the letter does suggest that the City intended to utilize some sort of judicial process
    to facilitate the monument’s removal in the event that plaintiff failed to remove it
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    Opinion of the Court
    voluntarily, neither the letter nor the amended complaint contains any threat that
    the City intended to institute legal action directly against plaintiff.
    ¶ 39          In addition, even if one takes the allegations contained in the amended
    complaint as true, the mere fact that the City sent plaintiff a letter in which it set a
    deadline for the removal of the monument does not automatically confer standing
    upon plaintiff, particularly given the absence of any allegation that plaintiff has any
    proprietary or contractual interest in the monument. As the trial court correctly
    observed, plaintiff, as the party that initiated the lawsuit, has “the burden of proving
    that standing exists.” Chávez v. Wadlington, 
    261 N.C. App. 541
    , 544 (2018) (quoting
    Myers v. Baldwin, 
    205 N.C. App. 696
    , 698 (2010)).10 Thus, for all these reasons, we
    hold that the amended complaint even “when liberally construed,” Wells Fargo Ins.
    Servs. USA, Inc. v. Link, 
    372 N.C. 260
    , 266 (2019), fails to allege “the infringement of
    a legal right directly under a cause of action at common law, a statute, or the North
    Carolina Constitution” sufficient to give plaintiff standing to challenge the City’s
    actions in removing the monument from the old courthouse property, Comm. to Elect
    Dan Forest, ¶ 85.
    10  In the event that the City had brought suit against plaintiff for the purpose of
    forcing it to remove the monument, plaintiff would, of course been entitled to defend itself,
    with the City, rather than plaintiff, having been required to show that it had standing to seek
    the requested relief from plaintiff.
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    Opinion of the Court
    C. State Law Claims
    ¶ 40         In addition, plaintiff argues that the City violated numerous provisions of state
    law by relocating the monument, with each of these claims appearing to rest upon
    the premise that the County owns the monument. A careful analysis of each of these
    claims in light of the allegations set out in the amended complaint satisfies us that
    plaintiff lacks standing to bring a claim under these statutes, that many of plaintiff’s
    contentions are not properly before the Court, and that, in any event, plaintiff’s
    arguments under these statutes lack sufficient legal support.
    1. N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 (Protection of Monuments)
    ¶ 41         As an initial matter, plaintiff argues that the City “denied plaintiff due process
    of law and violated [N.C.G.S.] § 100-2.1” by removing the monument from the old
    courthouse property. N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 (“Protection of monuments, memorials, and
    works of art”) provides as follows:
    (a) Approval Required.--Except as otherwise provided in
    subsection (b) of this section, a monument, memorial, or
    work of art owned by the State may not be removed,
    relocated, or altered in any way without the approval of the
    North Carolina Historical Commission.
    (b) Limitations on Removal.--An object of remembrance
    located on public property may not be permanently
    removed and may only be relocated, whether temporarily
    or permanently, under the circumstances listed in this
    subsection and subject to the limitations in this subsection.
    An object of remembrance that is temporarily relocated
    shall be returned to its original location within 90 days of
    completion of the project that required its temporary
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    Opinion of the Court
    removal. An object of remembrance that is permanently
    relocated shall be relocated to a site of similar prominence,
    honor, visibility, availability, and access that are within
    the boundaries of the jurisdiction from which it was
    relocated. An object of remembrance may not be relocated
    to a museum, cemetery, or mausoleum unless it was
    originally placed at such a location. As used in this section,
    the term “object of remembrance” means a monument,
    memorial, plaque, statue, marker, or display of a
    permanent character that commemorates an event, a
    person, or military service that is part of North Carolina’s
    history. The circumstances under which an object of
    remembrance may be relocated are either of the following:
    (1) When appropriate measures are required by the
    State or a political subdivision of the State to
    preserve the object.
    (2) When necessary for construction, renovation, or
    reconfiguration of buildings, open spaces, parking,
    or transportation projects.
    (c) Exceptions.--This section does not apply to the
    following:
    (1) Highway markers set up by the Board of
    Transportation in cooperation with the Department
    of Environmental Quality and the Department of
    Natural and Cultural Resources as provided by
    Chapter 197 of the Public Laws of 1935.
    (2) An object of remembrance owned by a private
    party that is located on public property and that is
    the subject of a legal agreement between the private
    party and the State or a political subdivision of the
    State governing the removal or relocation of the
    object.
    (3) An object of remembrance for which a building
    inspector or similar official has determined poses a
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    Opinion of the Court
    threat to public safety because of an unsafe or
    dangerous condition.
    N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1.     According to plaintiff, N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 “applies to the
    controversy between the [p]arties on the basis that the [monument] is patently an
    object of remembrance located on public property,” with plaintiff having made
    “facially sufficient allegations tending to establish a colorable right of ownership of
    the [monument] in Forsyth County.” In addition, plaintiff appears to argue that
    N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 gives plaintiff standing to challenge the monument’s removal.
    ¶ 42         As support for its argument that the County owns the monument, plaintiff
    directs our attention to language appearing in the contract of sale and the deed
    transferring ownership of the old courthouse property from the County to Winston
    Courthouse “tend[ing] to establish that [the] County owns the [monument] and that
    it specifically and intentionally reserved easements for the purpose of maintaining
    the [monument.]” Secondly, plaintiff notes that the amended complaint “alleges that
    members of its local chapter raised the funds necessary to design, build, and install
    the [monument] from private sources,” that the local chapter “dedicated the
    [monument] to Forsyth County and its citizens,” and that “the historical record
    establishes that the Forsyth County Commissioners expressly permitted the
    [monument] to be placed on land which the County owned[.]” According to plaintiff,
    “[s]uch allegations are patently sufficient to invoke the provisions of [N.C.G.S.] § 100-
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    Opinion of the Court
    2.1 as a basis for adjudicating the rights and responsibilities of the respective parties
    to this dispute.”
    ¶ 43         According to plaintiff, “[d]edication is a form of transfer, either formal or
    informal, in which one grants rights to the public in their property,” citing Spaugh v.
    Charlotte, 
    239 N.C. 149
     (1954). Plaintiff asserts that the amended complaint “alleges
    sufficient facts from which one could reasonably conclude that it was intended for the
    [monument] to be dedicated to public use and that the governing body of Forsyth
    County accepted such dedication on behalf of the citizens of the county.” Arguing in
    reliance upon the deed transferring the old courthouse property to Winston
    Courthouse, plaintiff argues that “[i]t is patently nonsensical for [the] County to
    reserve easement rights with regard to the [monument] . . . for purposes of
    maintenance and repair if it did not in fact own the [monument]” and “the plot[ ] of
    land upon which [the monument was] situated.”
    ¶ 44         Plaintiff then argues that, upon its placement on the courthouse property, the
    monument became a “fixture” attached to real property and that its status did not
    change when the County sold the property to Winston Courthouse, given that
    “[c]hattels of a heavy and permanent character, even though not imbedded or
    physically fastened to the land, but merely placed on the land and held in place by
    their own weight, such as a monument, are real fixtures,” citing Webster’s Real
    Estate Law in North Carolina § 2-1 (5th ed. 1999); Snedeker v. Waring, 
    12 N.Y. 170
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    Opinion of the Court
    (1854) (holding that a three-ton statue of George Washington that rested on a stone
    foundation without having been otherwise attached to the land constituted a “fixture”
    that was “part of the realty”)).11 In this case, plaintiff claims, the monument was
    “erected and placed upon [the courthouse property] with the express assent of the
    Forsyth County Commission” and “has become part of the realty[.]”
    ¶ 45          Plaintiff further argues that, in order for N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1(b) to apply, the
    object in question must be (1) an “object of remembrance” and (2) situated on public
    property. Plaintiff claims that the monument meets the first of these two criteria
    because “it is a monument of a permanent character that commemorates those who
    were killed in the Confederate armed forces during the Civil [War], a seminal event
    in the history of North Carolina.” According to plaintiff, “[t]here is a factual dispute
    concerning whether the [monument] is situated on public property.” In plaintiff’s
    view, the monument is located on public property because (1) the monument was
    dedicated to the public and accepted by the County; (2) it was situated on real
    property belonging to the County; and (3) that the County reserved easements in the
    deed conveying the courthouse to Winston Courthouse, which plaintiff believes “is
    11 Although plaintiff raised this argument before the Court of Appeals, neither the
    majority nor the dissenting opinions addressed it. Even so, in light of our belief that it
    involves a purely legal issue and the fact that the law in this area is clear, we elect to address
    this contention rather than remanding the case to the Court of Appeals for further
    proceedings.
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    Opinion of the Court
    evidence tending to show that the [monument] continued to be situated on public
    property.”
    ¶ 46         We are not persuaded by any of plaintiff’s arguments. As an initial matter,
    plaintiff has completely failed to explain how the City’s actions “denied plaintiff due
    process of law.” In order to establish a due process violation, a plaintiff must identify
    a cognizable legal right of which it was allegedly deprived by the City’s actions. See
    State v. 
    Thompson, 349
     N.C. 483, 491 (1998) (discussing the differences between
    substantive and procedural due process, both of which serve to protect a party’s legal
    rights). Even if N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 applies in the set of circumstances that is before
    us in this case, we are unable to conclude that it confers any legal rights upon plaintiff
    sufficient to give rise to any sort of due process claim or other valid legal claim.
    ¶ 47         “[A] statute may authorize a private right of action either explicitly or
    implicitly, though typically, a statute allows for a private cause of action only where
    the legislature has expressly provided a private cause of action within the statute.”
    Sykes v. Health Network Solutions, Inc., 
    372 N.C. 326
    , 338 (2019) (cleaned up); see
    also Comm. to Elect Dan Forest, ¶ 68–69 (acknowledging the General Assembly’s
    “power to create causes of action and permit a plaintiff to recover in the absence of a
    traditional injury”). As a result, in the event that “the legislature exercises its power
    to create a cause of action under a statute,” “the plaintiff has standing to vindicate
    the legal right so long as he is in the class of persons on whom the statute confers a
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    Opinion of the Court
    cause of action.” Comm. to Elect Dan Forest, ¶ 82 (emphasis added). Although this
    Court has not addressed the circumstances in which a statute implicitly authorizes a
    private cause of action, the Court of Appeals has concluded that “an implicit right of
    a cause of action exists when a statute requires action from a party, and that party
    has failed to comply with the statutory mandate.” Sugar Creek Charter Sch., Inc. v.
    Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd. of Educ., 
    195 N.C. App. 348
    , 355 (2009) (citing Lea v.
    Grier, 
    156 N.C. App. 503
    , 508–09 (2003)).
    ¶ 48          We are unable to identify anything in N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1, particularly when
    read in conjunction with the allegations of the amended complaint, that explicitly
    authorizes the assertion of a private cause of action for the purpose of enforcing that
    statutory provision.12 The absence of explicit language authorizing the assertion of a
    private right of action based on N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 stands in stark contrast to the
    statute at issue in Committee to Elect Dan Forest, which specifically authorized a
    candidate for elected office who had complied with the relevant campaign finance
    laws to sue an opposing candidate or candidate committee for an alleged violation of
    those same laws. See Comm. to Elect Dan Forest, ¶ 6 (citing N.C.G.S. § 163-278.39A(f)
    (now repealed)). In addition, even assuming, without deciding, that the Court of
    12 After recognizing that the statute “is not self-executing in that no enforcement
    mechanism is provided under its terms,” plaintiff simply asserts that “the statute is a clear
    and unequivocal expression of public policy by the General Assembly.” A mere expression of
    legislative policy, without more, is not sufficient to support the recognition of a right on the
    part of any particular party to assert a private right of action.
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    Appeals has correctly identified the circumstances under which a statute implicitly
    authorizes a private right of action in Sugar Creek Charter School, nothing in
    N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 “requires action from a party” with which “that party has failed to
    comply[.]” 195 N.C. App. at 356. Instead, N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 prohibits the removal
    or relocation of certain specified objects that are owned by the State or located on
    public property. Finally, even if N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 could be interpreted to implicitly
    authorize the assertion of a private right of action, nothing in the relevant statutory
    language or the allegations contained in the amended complaint suggests that
    plaintiff would be “in the class of persons on which the statute confers the right[.]”
    Comm. to Elect Dan Forest, ¶ 67; see also Charles Stores, 
    263 N.C. at 717
     (holding
    that “[o]nly one who is in immediate danger of sustaining a direct injury from
    legislative action may assail the validity of such action,” and that it “is not sufficient
    that he has merely a general interest common to all members of the public”).
    ¶ 49         In addition, we further conclude that, even if plaintiff is entitled to assert a
    private right of action to enforce N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1, that statutory provision has no
    application to the facts that are before us in this case in light of the allegations
    contained in the amended complaint. As an initial matter, it is undisputed that, prior
    to its removal, the monument stood on property that had been privately owned by
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    Opinion of the Court
    Winston Courthouse since 2014.13 Although plaintiff has advanced a number of
    arguments in an attempt to avoid the consequences of this undisputed fact, none of
    them have any merit. For example, the fact that the deed transferring the old
    courthouse property to Winston Courthouse contained an exclusion relating to the
    monument and contemplated the reservation of an easement for the monument’s
    maintenance does not, as plaintiff asserts, establish that the County owns the
    monument,14 given that a party cannot transfer title to property in which it lacks any
    sort of ownership interest. 63C Am. Jur. 2d Property § 43. In the event that the
    County did not own the monument, its exclusion from the conveyance could simply
    13  N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 had an effective date of 23 July 2015, which was more than a
    year after the County conveyed the old courthouse property to Winston Courthouse. Nothing
    in the relevant statutory language suggests that N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 was intended to have any
    sort of retroactive application to transactions that had occurred prior to the statute’s effective
    date. See Cultural History Artifact Management and Patriotism Act of 2015, S.L. 2015-170,
    § 3(c), 
    2015 N.C. Sess. Laws 435
    , 437. “It is a well-established rule of construction in North
    Carolina that a statute is presumed to have prospective effect only and should not be
    construed to have a retroactive application unless such an intent is clearly expressed or arises
    by necessary implication from the terms of the legislation.” State v. Green, 
    350 N.C. 400
    , 404
    (1999).
    14 As we have already noted, even though the deed transferring the old courthouse
    property from the County to Winston Courthouse contemplates that Winston Courthouse
    would execute certain easements in favor of the County, the record contains no indication
    that any such easements were ever executed or recorded. “An express easement must be in
    writing pursuant to the Statute of Frauds and be sufficiently certain to permit the
    identification and location of the easement with reasonable certainty.” Singleton v. Haywood
    Elec. Membership Corp., 
    151 N.C. App. 197
    , 202 (2002). As a result, a mere agreement to
    create an easement in the future does not suffice to actually create such an easement, see id.
    at 203 (holding that the plaintiff’s contractual obligation to furnish “all necessary easements
    and rights-of-way” to the defendant did not, by itself, create an easement), and there is no
    contention in the amended complaint that any sort of implied easement exists or even could
    exist in this situation.
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    Opinion of the Court
    have reflected the County’s recognition that it could not warrant title to that piece of
    property, see Culbreth v. Britt Corp., 
    231 N.C. 76
    , 80 (1949) (defining a warranty of
    title as “an agreement of the warrantor to make good by compensation in money any
    loss directly caused by the failure of the title which his deed purports to convey”), and
    nothing in the amended complaint refutes this assumption. As a result, the mere
    exclusion of an item of personal property from a conveyance of real property is not
    tantamount to an affirmative claim of ownership over the excluded property.
    ¶ 50         Although its “fixture-related” argument is not entirely clear to us, plaintiff
    appears to be contending that, because the monument was “dedicated to public use”
    at the time that it was placed on the old courthouse property, it became part of the
    “real property belonging in fee simple to Forsyth County.” Although the general rule
    in this jurisdiction is that “whatever is attached to the land is understood to be part
    of the realty,” “[w]hether a thing attached to the land be a fixture or chattel personal,
    depends upon the agreement of the parties, express or implied.” Lee-Moore Oil Co. v.
    Cleary, 
    295 N.C. 417
    , 419 (1978) (quoting Feimster v. Johnson, 
    64 N.C. 259
    , 260–61
    (1870)). In this case, however, there is no allegation in the amended complaint nor
    any evidence in the record regarding the intent of either plaintiff, its local chapter, or
    the County with respect to the issue of whether the monument became “part of the
    realty” at the time of its installation. Instead, the amended complaint alleges that
    the County granted plaintiff “permission to erect a memorial.” As we stated in Lee-
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    Opinion of the Court
    Moore Oil, “[a] building, or other fixture which is ordinarily part of the realty, is held
    to be personal property when placed on the land of another by contract or consent of
    the owner.” Id. at 420 (quoting Feimster, 
    64 N.C. at 261
    ).15
    ¶ 51          Alternatively, plaintiff may be contending that, in the event that the real
    property upon which a fixture is located is conveyed to another party and the fixture
    is excluded from the conveyance, the real property beneath the fixture is excluded
    from the transfer as well.      For example, plaintiff argues in its brief that “the
    reservation of easements by the County in its deed conveying the old courthouse for
    the purpose of maintaining monuments and plaques on [the courthouse property] is
    evidence tending to show that the [monument] continued to be situated on public
    property.” However, plaintiff cites no authority in support of this novel proposition,
    which cannot be found in any of this Court’s precedent, and nothing in the amended
    complaint serves to justify adoption of plaintiff’s apparent position. Cf. Bond v. Coke,
    
    71 N.C. 97
    , 100 (1874) (holding that “personal chattels which have been fixtures are
    15  Although the amended complaint alleges that the monument “was dedicated”
    during a ceremony in 1905, it does not explain what plaintiff means by “dedicated.” In its
    brief, plaintiff claims, in reliance upon Spaugh, that what occurred in 1905 constituted a
    “dedication” for “public use.” However, Spaugh defined “dedication” as “the intentional
    appropriation of land by the owner to some public use.” 239 N.C. at 159 (emphasis added).
    Even if Spaugh applies to both personal and real property, we have held that, “[w]here
    property is dedicated or set apart without restriction merely for public uses, the municipal
    authorities may determine for what use it is appropriate and shall be used, and, if not
    irrevocably dedicated or appropriated by them to any particular public use, its use may be
    changed as the public convenience and necessities require.” Wishart, 254 N.C. at 96 (quoting
    64 C.J.S. Mun. Corp. § 1818).
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    Opinion of the Court
    incorporated in, and are, a part of the land as much so as a house or tree, until an
    actual severance and therefore, a deed conveying the land without excepting therein
    the fixtures, has legal effect of passing the [chattels], which are part and parcel of the
    land”) (emphasis added). In the event that we were to accept plaintiff’s argument as
    valid, we would necessarily also have to hold that, when a landowner grants timber
    rights to another, the grantee gains title not only to the tree but also to the discrete
    pieces of land upon which the tree is located. Cf, e.g., Hornthal v. Howcott, 
    154 N.C. 228
     (1911).   Such a result would be completely inconsistent with long-standing
    principles of North Carolina property law.
    ¶ 52         The facts at issue in this case are similar to those that were before the Court
    of Appeals in National Advertising Co. v. North Carolina Department of
    Transportation, in which an advertising company, acting in accordance with a five-
    year lease, erected a billboard upon real property that it did not own. 
    124 N.C. App. 620
    , 622–23 (1996). After purchasing the property upon which the billboard was
    located, the North Carolina Department of Transportation sent a letter to the
    advertising company in which it requested that the billboard be removed at the
    Department’s expense. 
    Id.
     After the Department removed the sign following the
    advertising company’s refusal to do so, the advertising company sought damages on
    the basis of an inverse condemnation claim. Id. at 623. As a result of the fact that
    no lease agreement relating to the billboard had ever been recorded, the Court of
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    Opinion of the Court
    Appeals held that the advertising company did not have any interest in the
    underlying real property, that the advertising company had no right to insist that the
    billboard remain on the property, and that, since the billboard was “abandoned
    property,” the Department had every right to remove the billboard from its property
    without paying compensation to the advertising company. Id. at 624–25. In the same
    vein, we conclude that, in the event that plaintiff remained the owner of the
    monument and that the County had granted permission to place the monument upon
    the old courthouse property, the monument had become abandoned property
    following the transfer of the old courthouse property to Winston Courthouse, and that
    Winston Courthouse, as a subsequent owner, was entitled to have the monument
    removed. For all these reasons, we hold that, based on the facts alleged in the
    amended complaint and contained in the record that is before us, the monument was
    not “located on public property,” and N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1(b) has no application to this
    case.
    ¶ 53           Similarly, we are not persuaded that N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1(a) has any bearing
    upon the proper resolution of this case given the absence of any allegation in the
    amended complaint that the monument is “owned by the State.” Although “counties
    and their respective boards of county commissioners are ‘creatures of the General
    Assembly and serve as agents and instrumentalities of State government,’ ” Silver v.
    Halifax Cnty. Bd. of Comm’rs, 
    371 N.C. 855
    , 866 (2018) (quoting Stephenson v.
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    Opinion of the Court
    Bartlett, 
    355 N.C. 354
    , 364 (2002)), the General Assembly has specifically authorized
    counties to independently acquire, maintain, and dispose of real or personal property,
    see N.C.G.S. §§ 153A-158, 169, 176; see also Davis v. Forsyth Cnty., 
    117 N.C. App. 725
    , 727 (1995) (concluding that the county was a “person” for purposes of the cartway
    statute because “counties are established as legal entities and are empowered by law
    to acquire land”) (citing N.C.G.S. § 153A-158).              Similarly, the North Carolina
    Constitution authorizes counties and municipalities to own property independently
    of the State. See N.C. Const. art. V, § 2 (providing that “[p]roperty belonging to the
    State, counties, and municipalities shall be exempt from taxation”). As a result, even
    if the County owns the monument, that fact would not convert the monument into
    State property subject to N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1(a). As a result, for all of these reasons,
    N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1 has no bearing upon the proper resolution of this case.
    2. N.C.G.S. Chapter 116B (Unclaimed Property)
    ¶ 54         Secondly, plaintiff argues that the City violated N.C.G.S. §§ 116B-2,16 B-56,
    and B-59 by removing the monument from the old courthouse property “without first
    giving notice and complying with procedures required by such statutes with regard
    to abandoned or unclaimed property whose owner cannot be ascertained.”                  In
    plaintiff’s view, “[t]he gist of [its] claim for a declaratory judgment is the initial
    determination of ownership of the [monument,]” with N.C.G.S. § 116B-51 et seq.,
    16   Recodified at N.C.G.S. § 116B-2.2 (2021).
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    having enunciated “comprehensive guidelines and procedures to be employed in order
    to ascertain ownership of the property alleged to be abandoned or unclaimed, and for
    the transfer of such property to the State.” According to plaintiff, “[i]f the [monument]
    were deemed to be abandoned or unclaimed, it would escheat to the State,” at which
    point “the State would then be subject itself for the manner in which it exercised
    possession of the [monument] under [N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1].” Plaintiff asserts that
    neither the City nor the County “has made any effort to invoke the provisions of
    Chapter 116B in order to ascertain whether the [monument] has been abandoned or
    unclaimed” and have, instead, “unilaterally undertaken to decide who owns the
    [monument], who is responsible for it, and what will be done with it.” In plaintiff’s
    view, “due process of law requires more than the blatant assertion of the right to
    decide a question on the part of a governmental unit without giving interested parties
    meaningful notice and opportunity to be heard.”
    ¶ 55         As an initial matter, we note that plaintiff did not present this “abandoned
    property” argument to the Court of Appeals or include any allegations supporting it
    in the amended complaint, but instead it was advanced for the first time in Judge
    Tyson’s dissent. Aside from the fact that “issues and theories of a case not raised
    below will not be considered on appeal,” Westminster Homes, Inc. v. Town of Cary
    Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    354 N.C. 298
    , 309 (2001); see also N.C. R. App. P. 10(a),
    arguments raised by a dissenting judge at the Court of Appeals on his or her own
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    motion cannot serve as a basis for an appeal to this Court either, see M.E. v. T.J., 
    380 N.C. 539
    , 2022-NCSC-23, ¶ 65; see also Viar v. N.C. Dep’t of Transp., 
    359 N.C. 400
    ,
    402 (2005) (per curium) (noting that “[i]t is not the role of the appellate courts . . . to
    create an appeal for an appellant”).       In addition, even if plaintiff’s “abandoned
    property” argument was otherwise properly before us, we note that plaintiff’s
    amended complaint does not assert a claim under the Unclaimed Property Act and,
    instead, demonstrates that no such claim could be sustained.
    ¶ 56          The Unclaimed Property Act defines “property” as
    (i) money or tangible personal property held by a holder
    that is physically located in a safe deposit box or other
    safekeeping depository held by a financial institution
    within this State or (ii) a fixed and certain interest in
    intangible property or money that is held, issued, or owed
    in the course of a holder’s business, or by a government,
    governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, and
    all income or increments therefrom.
    N.C.G.S. § 116B-52(11) (emphasis added). In light of this definition, the monument
    as described in the amended complaint simply cannot qualify as abandoned property
    that has escheated to the State. In addition, nothing in the amended complaint
    suggests that plaintiff is within the class of persons entitled to notice before the
    monument would escheat to the State. The statute provides that the “apparent
    owner” of abandoned property is entitled to at least 60 days’ notice before the holder
    of the property reports the property abandoned to the State Treasurer, N.C.G.S.
    §§ 116B-59–60, with “apparent owner” being defined as “a person whose name
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    Opinion of the Court
    appears on the records of a holder as the person entitled to property held, issued, or
    owing by the holder,” N.C.G.S. § 116B-52(1). As a result, since plaintiff has not
    claimed any proprietary or contractual interest in the monument or otherwise alleged
    facts that would qualify it as the “apparent owner” of the monument, it has failed to
    establish a claim for relief under the Unclaimed Property Act.
    3. N.C.G.S. § 160A-193 (Abatement of Nuisances)
    ¶ 57         Thirdly, plaintiff asserts that the City violated N.C.G.S. § 160A-193 by
    declaring the monument to be a public nuisance and removing it without providing
    plaintiff with the required statutory notice, an opportunity to be heard, and a
    reasonable opportunity to make the monument safe. In view of the fact that N.C.G.S.
    § 160A-193 provides, in pertinent part, that “[a] city shall have the authority to
    summarily remove, abate, or remedy everything in the city limits, or within one mile
    thereof, that is dangerous or prejudicial to the public health or public safety,”
    N.C.G.S. § 160A-193(a), plaintiff contends that “the authority of a city to act under
    this statutory grant of authority [without notice] is expressly limited to those
    situations in which a building or other structure constitutes an imminent danger to
    the public health or safety, creating an emergency necessitating the structure’s
    immediate demolition,” and that “cities may not summarily demolish structures
    merely because it is quicker and easier to do so than providing the owners notice and
    an opportunity to be heard,” citing Monroe, 158 N.C. App. at 278 (2003)). According
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    Opinion of the Court
    to plaintiff, even though the City “has alleged in public statements that the
    [monument] presented a danger to public safety, there is no evidence that such is the
    case.”
    ¶ 58            In addition, plaintiff contends that, “[i]f a city wishes to destroy a structure
    that does not pose an imminent threat to the public, then the city must follow the
    procedures required by [N.C.G.S.] §§ 160A-441 through 160A-450,” citing Newton v.
    City of Winston-Salem, 
    92 N.C. App. 446
    , 449 (1988), which require the City to
    “provid[e] the owner with notice, a hearing, and a reasonable opportunity to bring his
    or her dwelling into conformity with the housing code,” citing N.C.G.S. § 160A-443.
    In plaintiff’s view, the City “has unlawfully sought to use its statutory authority to
    abate nuisances which pose a threat to public health and safety by making claims
    which are patently bogus even under its own court filings in order to avoid the reach
    and limitation of [N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1].” Plaintiff contends that, if it were determined
    to be the owner of the monument, “it would necessarily follow that [p]laintiff has
    standing to defend the placement of the [monument] on [the courthouse property], as
    well as to invoke the arguments that the [monument] does not constitute a public
    nuisance under [N.C.G.S.] § 160A-193.”
    ¶ 59            A careful review of the record and the allegations contained in the amended
    complaint satisfies us that plaintiff lacks standing to challenge the City’s
    determination that the monument had become a public nuisance. N.C.G.S. § 160A-
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    193(a) authorizes a city to “summarily remove, abate, or remedy everything in the
    city limits . . . that is dangerous or prejudicial to the public health or public safety.”
    In Monroe, a case upon which plaintiff places substantial reliance, the Court of
    Appeals concluded that N.C.G.S. § 160A-193 authorizes a city “to summarily
    demolish a building only if the building constitutes an imminent danger to the public
    health or safety, creating an emergency necessitating the building’s immediate
    demolition,” 158 N.C. App. at 278.         Otherwise, the city must comply with the
    procedures set forth in Chapter 160A, Article 19 (now Chapter 160D, Article 12),17
    including the requirement that it provide notice and an opportunity to be heard to
    the owner. Id.; see also Newton, 92 N.C. App. at 451–52 (holding that the city had
    failed to give the owner actual notice of its intent to demolish his property, in violation
    of the statutory notice requirements) (emphasis added).
    ¶ 60          N.C.G.S. § 160D-1203, which governs the demolition of a “dwelling” that is
    deemed to be “unfit for human habitation,” provides that
    [w]henever a petition is filed with the public officer by a
    public authority or by at least five residents of the
    jurisdiction charging that any dwelling is unfit for human
    17 Although Chapter 160A, Article 19 (N.C.G.S. §§ 160A-441 et seq.) was repealed and
    substantively recodified in Chapter 160D, Article 12 (N.C.G.S. § 160D-1201 et seq.), the
    provisions upon which plaintiff relies are virtually unchanged. See An Act to Clarify,
    Consolidate, and Reorganize the Land-Use Regulatory Laws of the State, S.L. 2019-111, 2019
    N.C. Sess. Law 424. In light of this fact and the fact that the new statute is retroactively
    applicable, see An Act to Complete the Consolidation of Land-Use Provisions into One
    Chapter of the General Statutes, S.L. 2020-25, https://www.ncleg.gov/EnactedLegislation/
    SessionLaws/PDF/2019-2020/SL2020-25.pdf, we cite to the current statutory provisions in
    the text of this opinion.
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    Opinion of the Court
    habitation or when it appears to the public officer that any
    dwelling is unfit for human habitation, the public officer
    shall, if a preliminary investigation discloses a basis for
    such charges, issue and cause to be served upon the owner
    of and parties in interest in such dwellings a complaint
    stating the charges in that respect and containing a notice
    that an administrative hearing will be held before the
    public officer, or the officer’s designated agent, at a place
    within the county in which the property is located.
    N.C.G.S. § 160D-1203(2) (emphasis added). An “owner” for purposes of N.C.G.S.
    § 160D-1203(2) is “the holder of the title in fee simple and every mortgagee of record,”
    while “parties in interest” is defined as “[a]ll individuals, associations, and
    corporations that have an interest of record in a dwelling and any that are in
    possession of a dwelling.” N.C.G.S. § 160D-1202(1)–(2). In view of the fact that
    plaintiff did not allege in the amended complaint that it had any proprietary or
    contractual interest in the monument or that it has an “interest of record” or is “in
    possession of” the monument, plaintiff is simply not a member of the class of persons
    entitled to notice and an opportunity to be heard under N.C.G.S § 160D-1203(2). In
    addition, N.C.G.S. § 160D-1201 et seq. only applies to “dwellings,” which is defined as
    “[a]ny building, structure, manufactured home, or mobile home, or part thereof, used
    and occupied for human habitation or intended to be so used[.]” N.C.G.S. §§ 160D-
    102(15), 1201(a) (emphasis added). Given that plaintiff has failed to allege facts
    pursuant to which the monument would qualify as a “dwelling” as defined above, its
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    Opinion of the Court
    removal is not subject to N.C.G.S. § 160D-1201 et seq.         As a result, plaintiff’s
    challenges to the City’s nuisance declaration are without merit.
    D. Federal Law Claims
    ¶ 61         In addition, plaintiff has advanced a number of arguments in reliance upon
    federal law in an apparent attempt to demonstrate that the amended complaint
    sufficiently alleged that the County owns the monument and that the City acted
    unlawfully in removing it. First, plaintiff asserts that the old courthouse was listed
    on the National Register of Historic Places in 2013 at the recommendation of the
    County and the North Carolina Department of Cultural and Natural Resources, and
    that this is significant because 
    54 U.S.C. § 302105
    (a) provides that the property
    owner must be given the opportunity to concur in or object to the property’s inclusion
    on the National Register before that property can be listed there. Plaintiff further
    asserts that “the evidence would show that the [monument] was not excluded from
    the application or from the designation” and that the County had failed to explain
    how it “could initiate and fund the process for [the] designation of [the courthouse] as
    a National Historic Landmark without owning the property in the first place[.]”
    ¶ 62         Secondly, plaintiff argues that, “[a]s a veteran’s memorial and a war grave for
    those who did not return home and listed on the National Register, the [monument]
    is arguably protected from injury or destruction by the ‘Veterans’ Memorial
    Preservation and Recognition Act of 2003,’ ” citing 
    18 U.S.C. § 1369
     (2018), and
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    asserts that, “[u]nder Federal law, the term ‘veteran’ is defined to include persons
    who ‘served for ninety days or more in the active military or nav[a]l service during
    the Civil War,’ ” citing 
    38 U.S.C. § 1501
     (2018). In plaintiff’s view, the City “ha[d] no
    lawful basis to declare the [monument] to be a public nuisance or to pre-emptively
    demand and then unilaterally remove it from a property listed on the National
    Register of Historic Places without prior permission or agreement,” nor may it do so
    without complying with the applicable state and federal laws, citing 
    18 U.S.C. § 1369
    (2018); 
    36 C.F.R. § 60.15
    ; N.C.G.S. § 100-2.1(b). We are not persuaded by any of these
    arguments.
    ¶ 63         As an initial matter, we note that, like its arguments relating to the Unclaimed
    Property Act, plaintiff failed to assert any claim in reliance upon the Unclaimed
    Property Act in the amended complaint or present any argument in reliance upon
    that statute to the trial court or the Court of Appeals and, instead, simply adopted
    this argument from Judge Tyson’s dissent. For that reason, this argument is not
    properly before the Court. See Westminster Homes, 
    354 N.C. at 309
    ; M.E., ¶ 65; Viar,
    
    359 N.C. at 402
    ; N.C. R. App. P. 10(a). In addition, when considered in light of the
    record and the allegations contained in the amended complaint, plaintiffs’ arguments
    are completely devoid of merit. A careful reading of the relevant statutory provisions
    demonstrates that none of the federal statutes or regulations upon which plaintiff
    now relies creates a private cause of action authorizing plaintiff to enforce them. See
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    Opinion of the Court
    Warth v. Seldin, 
    422 U.S. 490
    , 500 (1975) (observing that “the standing question in
    such cases is whether the constitutional or statutory provision on which the claim
    rests properly can be understood as granting persons in the plaintiff’s position a right
    to judicial relief”); Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 
    578 U.S. 330
    , 341 (2016) (concluding that,
    even though Congress has the authority to create legal rights by statute, that “does
    not mean that a plaintiff automatically satisfies the injury-in-fact requirement
    whenever a statute grants a person a statutory right and purports to authorize that
    person to sue to vindicate that right”).18 As a result, plaintiff does not have the right
    to assert a claim against defendants on the basis of any of the statutory provisions
    mentioned in the dissent.
    ¶ 64          Aside from this fundamental procedural defect in its argument, plaintiff has
    failed to explain how the placement of the old courthouse property on the National
    Register of Historic Places had the effect of precluding the removal or relocation of
    the monument. In the event that plaintiff is seeking to invoke the National Historic
    Preservation Act, P.L. 89-665, now codified at 54 U.S.C. 300101 et seq., the only
    potentially relevant provision is 
    54 U.S.C. § 306108
    , which requires federal agencies,
    “prior to the approval of the expenditure of any Federal funds on [any Federal or
    federally assisted] undertaking or prior to the issuance of any license, [to] take into
    18Unlike claims brought under state law, which do not require a showing of “injury in
    fact,” Committee to Elect Dan Forest, ¶ 85, claims brought under federal law are subject to a
    traditional “injury-in-fact” requirement, Lujan, 
    504 U.S. at 560
    .
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    Opinion of the Court
    account the effect of the undertaking on any historic property.” According to well-
    established federal law, the statutorily required review process “applies by its terms
    only to federally funded or federally licensed undertakings.” Nat’l Min. Ass’n v.
    Fowler, 
    324 F.3d 752
    , 760 (D.C. Cir. 2003) (quoting Sheridan Hist. Ass’n v.
    Christopher, 
    49 F.3d 750
    , 755 (1995)) (emphasis in Sheridan). In Monumental Task
    Committee, Inc. v. Foxx, a federal district court concluded, on facts similar to those at
    issue here, that, unless efforts by the City of New Orleans to remove a controversial
    monument were “either federally funded or federally licensed, [§ 306108] does not
    apply.” 
    240 F. Supp. 3d 487
    , 496 (E.D. La. 2017). As a result of the fact that plaintiff
    “[has] not [alleged or] argued, let alone presented any evidence, that removal of the
    [monument] [was] federally funded, permitted, approved, or licensed,” “[§ 306108] is
    inapplicable to the removal of the [monument].” Id. Plaintiff also argues that the
    City was required to comply with 
    36 C.F.R. § 60.15
    , but that regulation governs only
    how properties are removed from the National Register and says nothing about what
    happens when the property itself is relocated or even demolished altogether.
    ¶ 65         Finally, plaintiff’s contention that the monument is a “memorial and war
    grave” that is “protected from injury” or destruction under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1369
     lacks
    merit given that the relevant statutory provision only applies to a “structure, plaque,
    statue, or other monument” that “is located on property owned by, or under the
    jurisdiction of, the Federal Government.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 1369
    (b)(2) (emphasis added).
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    Aside from the fact that plaintiff has not alleged, and the record does not otherwise
    reflect any basis for concluding, that the monument is located on federal land, 
    18 U.S.C. § 1369
     is a criminal statute, and “[p]rivate citizens have no standing to
    institute a federal criminal prosecution and no power to enforce a criminal statute.”
    Monumental Task Comm., Inc. v. Foxx, 
    157 F. Supp. 3d 573
    , 592 (E.D. La. 2016)
    (cleaned up); see also Linda R.S. v. Richard D., 
    410 U.S. 614
    , 619 (1973) (holding that
    “a private citizen lacks a judicially cognizable interest in the prosecution or
    nonprosecution of another”).19 As a result, none of plaintiff’s arguments in reliance
    upon various provisions of federal law provide any basis for a determination that
    plaintiff has the right to maintain the present action against defendants.
    E. Dismissal with Prejudice
    ¶ 66          Finally, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by dismissing its amended
    complaint with prejudice after ruling that plaintiff lacked standing to maintain a
    declaratory judgment action regarding ownership of the monument. In plaintiff’s
    view, “[a] dismissal for want of jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1) does not constitute an
    adjudication on the merits of the case” and “is without prejudice to a plaintiff’s ability
    to bring a second action which is factually and legally sufficient to establish
    19  Although plaintiff directs our attention to 
    24 U.S.C. § 279
    , which authorized the
    Secretary of the Army to furnish headstones for unmarked graves, including those of soldiers
    who served in the Union and Confederate armies, that statute was repealed in 1973. See
    
    Pub. L. 93-43, § 7
    (a)(1), (5), (7). In addition, the effect of this provision upon the viability of
    plaintiff’s claims is, at best, unclear.
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    Opinion of the Court
    jurisdiction in the court before which the second action is brought,” citing
    Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 19 (1982). In addition, plaintiff argues that
    “[a] personal judgment for the defendant for lack of jurisdiction, although valid and
    final, does not bar another action by the plaintiff on the same claim,” citing
    Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 20 (1982)); Cline, 92 N.C. App. at 257. As a
    result, plaintiff concludes that “[a] court cannot make its order an adjudication on the
    merits” and dismiss the claim with prejudice “if it lacks the power to decide the merits
    of the case in the first place.”
    ¶ 67          A review of the relevant precedent discloses that both this Court and the Court
    of Appeals have held that the absence of standing can be raised in a motion to dismiss
    for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).
    See, e.g., Energy Investors Fund, L.P. v. Metric Constructors, Inc., 
    351 N.C. 331
    , 337
    (2000); Teague v. Bayer AG, 
    195 N.C. App. 18
    , 22 (2009). On the other hand, we have
    also consistently recognized that standing is a “necessary prerequisite to a court’s
    proper exercise of subject matter jurisdiction.” Willomere Cmty. Ass’n, 370 N.C. at
    561 (citations and quotation marks omitted); see also Thomas v. Oxendine, 
    280 N.C. App. 526
    , 2021-NCCOA-661, ¶ 18 (observing that “[s]tanding is required to confer
    subject matter jurisdiction”) (citing Wellons v. White, 
    229 N.C. App. 164
    , 176 (2013));
    Apple v. Commercial Courier Exp., Inc., 
    168 N.C. App. 175
    , 177 (2005) (noting that,
    “[i]f a party does not have standing to bring a claim, a court has no subject matter
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    Opinion of the Court
    jurisdiction to hear the claim”). In addition, our earlier decisions indicating that the
    absence of standing can be asserted by means of a motion to dismiss for failure to
    state a claim for which relief can be granted pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) appear to rest
    upon the notion, which we have recently rejected, that standing for purposes of North
    Carolina law requires the allegation of an “injury in fact.” See Comm. to Elect Dan
    Forest, ¶ 66 (observing that, “in a common law action where actual injury is a
    necessary element of the claim, such as negligence, the proper disposition for failure
    to allege actual injury or damages is not dismissal for lack of standing, but dismissal
    for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted”).
    ¶ 68         “Although the practical consequence of dismissal of a complaint under Rule
    12(b)(6) or 12(b)(1) is the same—the case is dismissed—the legal effect is quite
    different.” Cline, 92 N.C. App. at 263. In the event that a complaint is dismissed for
    failure to state a claim, that decision constitutes a final judgment on the merits for
    res judicata purposes and bars the plaintiff from maintaining another action on the
    basis of this same claim. Rest. (Second) of Judgments § 19 cmt. d. (1982); Clancy v.
    Onslow Cnty., 
    151 N.C. App. 269
    , 272 (2002) (noting that “it is well settled in this
    State that a dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) operates as an adjudication on the merits
    unless the court specifies that the dismissal is without prejudice” (cleaned up)). On
    the other hand, when a complaint is dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction,
    that decision does not result in a final judgment on the merits and does not bar
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    Opinion of the Court
    further action by the plaintiff on the same claim. Rest. (Second) of Judgments § 20
    cmt. e.; Street v. Smart Corp., 
    157 N.C. App. 303
    , 305 (2003) (observing that “a
    dismissal under [Rule 12]b(1) is not on the merits and thus not given res judicata
    effect” (cleaned up)).
    ¶ 69          In this case, the trial court dismissed the amended complaint on the basis of a
    determination that, since plaintiff lacked standing, it lacked jurisdiction over the
    subject matter of plaintiff’s claims. For the reasons set forth above, the trial court
    correctly concluded that plaintiff had failed to allege the infringement of a “legally
    enforceable right” sufficient to establish standing for purposes of North Carolina law.
    See Comm. to Elect Dan Forest, ¶ 85. Thus, since the trial court lacked subject matter
    jurisdiction over plaintiff’s claims, the amended complaint was properly dismissed
    pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1). N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 12(b)(1); Catawba Cnty. ex re.
    Rackley v. Loggins, 
    370 N.C. 83
    , 87 (2017). In view of the fact that the trial lacked
    jurisdiction over the subject matter of plaintiff’s claims, the trial court erred by also
    dismissing the amended complaint for failure to state a claim for which relief could
    be granted pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), see Flowers v. Blackbeard Sailing Club, Ltd.,
    
    115 N.C. App. 349
    , 353 (1994) (vacating that portion of the trial court’s order
    dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice after affirming the trial court’s
    dismissal decision based on lack of subject matter jurisdiction), disc. rev.
    improvidently allowed, 
    340 N.C. 357
     (1995), with the Court of Appeals having erred
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    Opinion of the Court
    as well by affirming the trial court’s decision with respect to that issue. As a result,
    we vacate the portion of the trial court’s order dismissing the amended complaint
    with prejudice and remand this case to Superior Court, Forsyth County, with
    instructions to dismiss the amended complaint without, rather than with, prejudice.
    III.    Conclusion
    ¶ 70         Thus, we reaffirm our longstanding rule that a plaintiff must establish
    standing to bring an action pursuant to the Declaratory Judgment Act. See Goldston,
    at 361 N.C. at 33. As this Court held long ago, the Declaratory Judgment Act “does
    not license litigants to fish in judicial ponds for legal advice.” Lide v. Mears, 
    231 N.C. 111
    , 117 (1949). For the reasons set forth above, we hold that the trial court did not
    err by dismissing the amended complaint for lack of standing. On the other hand, we
    further hold that the trial court erred by dismissing the amended complaint with,
    rather than without, prejudice. As a result, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ decision,
    in part; reverse the Court of Appeals’ decision, in part; and remand this case to
    Superior Court, Forsyth County, for further proceedings not inconsistent with this
    opinion.
    AFFIRMED, IN PART; REVERSED, IN PART; AND REMANDED.
    Chief Justice NEWBY concurring in the result only.
    ¶ 71          Plaintiff United Daughters of the Confederacy, North Carolina Division, Inc.,
    filed an amended complaint on 6 February 2019 against the City of Winston-Salem
    (the City), the County of Forsyth (the County), and Winston Courthouse, LLC
    challenging the City’s decision to remove a monument from Courthouse Square in
    Winston-Salem, North Carolina. In its amended complaint, plaintiff alleges that it is
    a nonprofit corporation organized under the laws of North Carolina, it is authorized
    to do business in the state, and it maintains its principal place of business in Wake
    County, North Carolina. Plaintiff describes its organization in the amended
    complaint solely with this language and does not identify who is involved in its
    organization or indicate where its members reside.1
    ¶ 72          In its amended complaint, plaintiff alleges that the City declared the
    monument a public nuisance and planned to move the monument from Courthouse
    Square. Plaintiff alleges that the removal process proposed by the City violates
    various rights of plaintiff, including freedom of speech, due process, and equal
    protection and constitutes an unlawful seizure. Plaintiff also claims the City’s actions
    “violate . . . [N.C.G.S.] Chapter 100, Section 100, et seq, the Protection of Monuments,
    Memorial[s,] and Works of Art Act” and infringe upon the rights, duties, privileges,
    1 Plaintiff does identify its local chapter, the James B. Gordon Chapter #211, which is
    based out of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, in its amended complaint. The local chapter,
    however, filed a notice of voluntary dismissal from the present case on 1 May 2019, prior to
    entry of the trial court’s order, and is not a party to this appeal.
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
    2022-NCSC-143
    Newby, C.J., concurring in the result only
    obligations, liabilities, and immunities of the County and the United States
    Department of the Interior.
    ¶ 73         In its amended complaint, plaintiff asks for a declaratory judgment to
    determine the parties’ rights, duties, privileges, obligations, liabilities, and
    immunities with respect to the monument. Plaintiff also requests a declaratory
    judgment to determine whether the City misapplied N.C.G.S. § 160A-193 and City
    Ordinance 62-3(b) in declaring the monument a public nuisance. Additionally,
    plaintiff seeks a preliminary injunction enjoining defendants from altering,
    removing, or causing damage to the monument prior to a decision in the case. Because
    the City has since removed the monument from Courthouse Square, however, only
    plaintiff’s request for a declaratory judgment remains.
    ¶ 74         The task here is to determine whether the allegations in plaintiff’s amended
    complaint are sufficient to establish standing to seek a declaratory judgment.
    Standing is a necessary prerequisite to a court’s proper exercise of subject matter
    jurisdiction, Taylor v. City of Raleigh, 
    290 N.C. 608
    , 620–21, 
    227 S.E.2d 576
    , 583–84
    (1976), and standing is required to seek a declaratory judgment, see Goldston v. State,
    
    361 N.C. 26
    , 33, 
    637 S.E.2d 876
    , 881 (2006) (holding that the plaintiffs established
    standing before “consider[ing] the form of relief sought by [the] plaintiffs, who [had]
    filed a declaratory judgment action”). “The ‘gist of the question of standing’ is whether
    the party seeking relief has ‘alleged such a personal stake in the outcome of the
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
    2022-NCSC-143
    Newby, C.J., concurring in the result only
    controversy as to assure that concrete adverseness which sharpens the
    presentation[s] of issues upon which the court so largely depends for illumination of
    difficult constitutional questions.’ ” Willowmere Cmty. Ass’n v. City of Charlotte, 
    370 N.C. 553
    , 556–57, 
    809 S.E.2d 558
    , 561 (2018) (alteration in original) (quoting Stanley
    v. Dep’t of Conservation & Dev., 
    284 N.C. 15
    , 28, 
    199 S.E.2d 641
    , 650 (1973)). “Until
    a party has a real and vested interest in the subject matter of a lawsuit, an action
    will not lie.” Pierson v. Buyher, 
    330 N.C. 182
    , 186, 
    409 S.E.2d 903
    , 906 (1991).
    ¶ 75         Here the allegations of plaintiff’s amended complaint fail to establish standing.
    Although plaintiff identifies itself as a nonprofit corporation doing business in North
    Carolina, plaintiff fails to allege who comprises its organization and where its
    members live. Plaintiff does not identify any individual members of its organization
    in its amended complaint or allege the requirements for membership. Further, there
    is no indication in the amended complaint that any members of plaintiff’s
    organization reside in Winston-Salem or Forsyth County. Without more information
    regarding the membership of the organization and where its members reside, plaintiff
    has failed to demonstrate that its organization or its members have any interest in
    the monument that is the subject of this case. Moreover, because plaintiff failed to
    include sufficient allegations in its amended complaint regarding its membership and
    organizational   structure,   plaintiff   cannot     establish        taxpayer   standing   or
    associational standing. See Branch v. Bd. of Educ., 
    233 N.C. 623
    , 626, 
    65 S.E.2d 124
    ,
    UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY, N.C. DIV. V. CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM
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    Newby, C.J., concurring in the result only
    126 (1951) (“[W]here a plaintiff undertakes to bring a taxpayer’s suit . . . , his
    complaint must disclose that he is a taxpayer of the [political] subdivision.”); see also
    River Birch Assocs. v. City of Raleigh, 
    326 N.C. 100
    , 130, 
    388 S.E.2d 538
    , 555 (1990)
    (holding that a litigant may bring suit on an associational standing theory if “its
    members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right” (quoting Hunt v.
    Wash. State Apple Advert. Comm., 
    432 U.S. 333
    , 343 (1977))). Further, plaintiff does
    not allege ownership or a legal interest in the monument.
    ¶ 76         Thus, the bare allegations set forth in plaintiff’s amended complaint are
    insufficient to establish standing. See Comm. to Elect Dan Forest v. Emps. Pol. Action
    Comm., 
    376 N.C. 558
    , 2021-NCSC-6, ¶ 82 (requiring “a person [to] allege[ ] the
    infringement of a legal right . . . [for] the legal injury itself [to] give[ ] rise to
    standing”). As such, the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over plaintiff’s claims.
    Because there is no subject matter jurisdiction over plaintiff’s claims, dismissal of
    plaintiff’s amended complaint without prejudice is proper. Therefore, I agree with the
    majority that the proper disposition is dismissal without prejudice. Accordingly, I
    concur in the result only.
    Justices BERGER and BARRINGER join in this concurring opinion.