Bullock v. Tucker ( 2018 )


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  •                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA17-1429
    Filed: 4 December 2018
    Johnston County, No. 12 CVS 1061
    PAULA K. BULLOCK and FYNNMASTER, LLC, Plaintiffs,
    v.
    TRENTON GLEN TUCKER, ALLISON C. TUCKER, HOLLIE TUCKER WINTERS,
    BRIAN KEITH WINTERS, SHARLETTE TUCKER, GLENWOOD TUCKER, TIM
    RICHARDSON, TUCKER LAKE RECREATIONS, INC., JOHN BEMIS, JEFF
    ROBERTS, and JAKUB PILECKY, Defendants.
    Appeal by defendants from order entered 3 August 2017 by Judge Thomas H.
    Lock in Johnston County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 5 September
    2018.
    Law Offices of F. Bryan Brice, Jr., by F. Bryan Brice, Jr., for plaintiff-appellees.
    Daughtry, Woodard, Lawrence & Starling, LLP, by Luther D. Starling, Jr. and
    W. Joel Starling, Jr., for defendant-appellants.
    ELMORE, Judge.
    This action arose from the commercial lease of lakefront property at Tucker
    Lake in Johnston County that began 1 January 2012 and ended 31 December 2016.
    Lessors Trenton Glen Tucker, Allison C. Tucker, Hollie Tucker Winters, Brian Keith
    Winters, and Tucker Lake Recreations, Inc., as well as Sharlette Tucker, Glenwood
    Tucker, and Tim Richardson (collectively, “defendants”), appeal a trial court order
    that adopted a compulsory referee’s report. In its report, the referee recommended
    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    that the lessees, Paula K. Bullock and Fynnmaster, LLC (collectively, “plaintiffs”), be
    awarded Rule 60(b) relief in the form of striking a provision in a 30 April 2014 order
    that amended the initial lease. That provision provided that “[u]pon termination of
    the lease, . . . [p]laintiffs shall remove . . . grain bin anchors” they had previously
    installed in Tucker Lake to support the cable system required to operate their
    commercial waterskiing enterprise. In its report, the referee found that defendants
    have thwarted plaintiffs’ earnest efforts to remove the anchors since at least October
    2016, and concluded that, at the time its report issued one day before the lease
    expired, it was now impossible for plaintiffs to comply with this provision of the 30
    April 2014 order. After a hearing on defendants’ exception to the referee’s report, the
    trial court adopted the report in its entirety. Defendants appeal.
    On appeal, defendants contend the trial court’s order adopting the referee’s
    report should be reversed because (1) the trial court perfunctorily adopted the report
    without adequately reviewing the evidentiary sufficiency of the referee’s findings; (2)
    certain findings were unsupported by the evidence and the findings did not support
    the conclusions; and (3) the Rule 60(b) relief recommended was improper because it
    (a) was premised on an erroneous conclusion that it was impossible for plaintiffs to
    perform the anchor-removal requirement of the 30 April 2014 order, and (b)
    inappropriately modified a material provision of a consent order. Defendants also
    contend that, even if the trial court did not reversibly err in these respects, (4) the
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    case must be remanded for entry of a proper judgment because the trial court’s order
    merely adopted the referee’s report.
    We hold that the trial court adequately reviewed defendants’ exceptions to the
    referee’s findings and did not err in adopting the report in its entirety. The challenged
    findings were supported by the evidence, the challenged conclusions were supported
    by the findings, the 30 April 2014 order amending the initial lease was not a valid
    consent order, and the Rule 60(b) relief recommended did not amount to an abuse of
    discretion. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order. However, we remand to the
    trial court with instructions to enter a judgment concordant with that adopted report.
    I. Background
    On 1 January 2012, plaintiffs entered into a five-year pro se commercial lease
    with defendants Trenton Glen Tucker, Allison C. Tucker, Hollie Tucker Winters,
    Brian Keith Winters, and Tucker Lake Recreations, Inc., to use a 48-acre parcel of
    lakefront property at Tucker Lake for plaintiffs’ “operations of a water recreation
    operation including . . . the construction and maintenance of underwater and above
    water cabling, docks buildings, and related facilities.” Soon after, disputes concerning
    the parties’ performances under the lease arose. Although the parties have been
    actively litigating since April 2012, we limit our discussion of the extensive
    procedural history to only that relevant to provide context and adjudicate the appeal.
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    On 3 April 2012, plaintiffs filed a verified complaint against defendants.
    Plaintiffs asserted claims of breach of contract, civil conspiracy, tortious interference
    with contract, and unfair and deceptive trade practices (“UDTP”); sought declaratory
    judgments as to interpreting certain lease provisions; and sought a temporary
    restraining order (“TRO”) and a preliminary injunction on the grounds that
    defendants have “frustrate[d their] efforts . . . to construct a cable water skiing
    facility[.]” On 12 April 2012, defendants cross-moved for a TRO and preliminary
    injunction, seeking to enjoin plaintiffs from continuing construction. On 26 April
    2012, the trial court entered a TRO that, inter alia, enjoined defendants from
    unreasonably interfering with plaintiffs’ business plans. Plaintiffs then proceeded
    with their plan of installing three large grain bin anchors in Tucker Lake to support
    the cable system required for their waterskiing enterprise.
    On 4 June 2012, defendants filed their answer to the complaint, moved under
    Rule 12(b)(6) to dismiss plaintiffs’ claims, and asserted eight affirmative defenses.
    Defendants also filed a third-party complaint against plaintiffs, and John Bemis, Jeff
    Roberts, and Jakub Pilecky (collectively, “third-party defendants”). Defendants, as
    third-party plaintiffs, asserted claims of breach of contract, fraud, trespass to real
    property, trespass to personal property, civil conspiracy, UDTP, summary ejectment,
    and assault. After further litigation, likely due to the number of claims and the
    parties’ contentiousness, the trial court on 21 May 2013 entered an order appointing
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    a compulsory referee to, inter alia, “resolve any disagreement among the parties
    relating to the performance of the lease agreement” and “serve until the trial of this
    action or until further order of the Court.” Disputes about the lease and litigation
    continued.
    In mid-January 2014, plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed six of their claims,
    moved for summary judgment on their three remaining claims seeking declaratory
    judgments on interpreting certain lease provisions, and moved for summary
    judgment on all of defendants’ claims in their third-party complaint. After a bench
    trial scheduled for 21 January, the trial court permitted the parties to negotiate
    outside its presence to reach a resolution of their claims.      After a full day of
    negotiation on 22 January, the parties announced in open court they had reached an
    agreement, which they requested the trial court adopt as a consent order. The trial
    court instructed the parties to draft a consent order and reconvene the next day for
    its entry. But after exchanging several drafts, the parties could not mutually agree
    to the language of the consent order.
    In mid-February 2014, the parties filed cross-motions to enforce the settlement
    agreement they previously announced to the trial court on 22 January. After a
    hearing, at which both parties presented their proposed settlement agreements, the
    trial court entered an order on 30 April 2014 resolving the parties’ claims and
    amending some provisions of the initial lease. In its order, the trial court noted the
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    parties’ “ultimate[ ] ineffective work toward” “attempt[ing] to finalize a Consent
    Order”; elected to “adopt[ ] Plaintiff’s Motion and Order, with the addition of [two]
    paragraphs”; and added the following relevant provision to the lease agreement:
    “Upon termination of the lease [on 31 December 2016], Plaintiffs shall remove the
    cable system and grain bin anchors.” The parties operated under the modified lease
    but further disputes arose and litigation continued.
    Around 7 October 2016, plaintiffs began removing the cable system attached
    to the anchors from the premises. On 12 October, defendants moved for a TRO,
    seeking to enjoin plaintiffs from removing the cable system “while leaving the
    concrete grain bin anchors for Defendants to deal with later[.]” That same day, the
    trial court granted the TRO. At a review hearing two days later, evidence was
    presented that plaintiffs had hired an engineer to develop a plan for removing the
    anchors; that the engineer had proposed two plans that required lowering the water
    level of the lake, which plaintiffs had presented to defendants; and that defendants
    had rejected both proposals on the grounds that they refused to lower the water level
    due to ecological concerns with the lake.1 After the hearing, the trial court entered
    an order on 20 October 2016 dissolving the prior TRO and denying defendants’
    preliminary injunction motion.
    1  Because defendants have only provided 122 of 219 pages of transcript from this hearing, our
    discussion is limited. Miller v. Miller, 
    92 N.C. App. 351
    , 353, 
    374 S.E.2d 467
    , 468 (1988) (“It is the
    appellant’s responsibility to make sure that the record on appeal is complete and in proper form.”
    (citation omitted)).
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    On 26 October 2016, plaintiffs filed a “Motion to Modify Permanent Injunction”
    in the trial court, requesting that “the requirement to remove the ‘grain bin anchors’
    be stricken from the permanent injunction” of the 30 April 2014 order. Plaintiffs
    argued that the lease required defendants to “assist [Plaintiffs] in lowering water
    level for general maintenance of water quality in October of each year” but that
    defendants “have refused to lower the water level of the lake,” which “needs to be
    lowered at least 15 feet to remove the ‘grain bin anchors.’ ” Therefore, plaintiffs
    requested, “[d]ue to [defendants’] refusal to lower the water level,” the trial court
    “modify the requirement to remove the ‘grain bin anchors.’ ”
    At a 3 November 2016 hearing on plaintiffs’ motion, the trial court refused to
    consider the matter and referred it to the referee. On 15 November, defendants filed
    their response to plaintiffs’ motion to modify the 30 April 2014 order and a request
    that the referee report on additional lease issues.
    On 30 December 2016, one day before the lease expired, the referee
    electronically submitted its report to the parties. In its report, the referee found that
    plaintiffs were ready, willing, and able to comply with the anchor-removal provision,
    having retained an engineer and having submitted two proposals to remove the
    anchors to defendants in October 2016. However, defendants rejected both proposals
    on the grounds that they refused to lower the water level but failed to provide an
    alternative plan or present evidence to support their rationale that lowering the
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    water level would cause ecological damage to the lake, refused to lower the water
    level as they had done annually in Octobers past, and moved for a TRO that halted
    plaintiffs’ progress, all of which served to effectively frustrate plaintiffs from
    complying with the anchor-removal provision of the amended lease. As the lease was
    set to expire one day after its report issued, the referee concluded it was now
    impossible for plaintiffs to remove the anchors “[u]pon termination of the lease.” The
    referee determined:
    The plaintiffs cannot be expected to comply with
    Paragraph 9 of the April 30, 2014 order at this time. The
    Plaintiffs made a good faith effort to develop and
    implement a plan to remove the anchors while attempting
    to balance the environment of the lake with the need to
    remove the anchors. These efforts have been thwarted by
    the Defendants who do not want the lake level lowered but
    who have not offered any alternative plans for
    consideration nor evidence of potential damages to the lake
    at the level they believe is likely to occur. With the end of
    the lease term now upon the parties and the resistance to
    the Plaintiffs’ plan of removal by the Defendants, it has
    become impossible for the Plaintiffs to fulfill this part of the
    April 30, 2014 order.
    Therefore, the referee recommended that the trial court award plaintiffs relief
    under Rule 60(b)(6) in the form of striking the provision of the 30 April 2014 order
    amending the lease that required them to remove the anchors.
    On 13 January 2017, defendants filed with the trial court an exception to the
    referee’s report “in its entirety” but did not specifically except to any finding or
    conclusion. On 28 June, after several continuances, the trial court heard defendants’
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    exception to the referee’s report. On 3 August 2017, the trial court entered an order
    adopting “all findings of fact and conclusions of law” contained in the referee’s report.
    Defendants appeal.
    II. Issues Presented
    On appeal, defendants assert the trial court erred by (1) “fail[ing] to make a
    sufficient review of the referee’s findings as required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule
    53(g)(2)”; and (2) adopting the referee’s report because “the referee’s findings of fact
    were not supported by the evidence, and the conclusions of law were not supported
    by the findings.” Additionally, defendants contend, even if the trial court adequately
    reviewed and properly adopted the report, (3) “the case should still be remanded for
    entry of a proper judgment.”
    III. Sufficiency of Review
    Defendants first assert the trial court erred by “fail[ing] to make a sufficient
    review of the referee’s findings as required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 53(g)(2)”
    on the grounds that the trial court “ ‘perfunctorily placed the stamp of . . . approval
    upon the labor of the referee’ because the referee’s findings were unsupported and
    contradictory.” We disagree.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 53(g)(2) (2017) governs judicial review of a
    referee’s report and provides in pertinent part: “All or any part of the report may be
    excepted to by any party . . . . The judge after hearing may adopt, modify or reject
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    the report in whole or in part, render judgment, or may remand the proceedings to
    the referee with instructions.” Ordinarily, where
    exceptions are taken to a referee’s findings of fact and law,
    it is the duty of the [trial] judge to consider the evidence
    and give his own opinion and conclusion, both upon the
    facts and the law. He is not permitted to do this in a
    perfunctory way, but he must deliberate and decide as in
    other cases—use his own faculties in ascertaining the truth
    and form his own judgment as to fact and law. This is
    required not only as a check upon the referee and a
    safeguard against any possible errors on his part, but
    because he cannot review the referee’s findings in any
    other way.
    Quate v. Caudle, 
    95 N.C. App. 80
    , 83, 
    381 S.E.2d 842
    , 844 (1989) (quoting Thompson
    v. Smith, 
    156 N.C. 345
    , 346, 
    72 S.E. 379
    , 379 (1911)). However, where a party
    perfunctorily excepts to a referee’s report “in its entirety” and fails to specifically
    except to any finding, a trial court need not review the evidentiary sufficiency of the
    referee’s findings. See, e.g., Anderson v. McRae, 
    211 N.C. 197
    , 198, 
    189 S.E. 639
    , 640
    (1937) (“[I]n the absence of exceptions to the factual findings of a referee, such
    findings are conclusive, and where no exceptions are filed, the case is to be
    determined upon the facts as found by the referee.” (citations omitted)); Chard v.
    Warren, 
    122 N.C. 75
    , 79, 
    29 S.E. 373
    , 374 (1898) (“There was no exception by any of
    the parties to that finding of the referee, at any time, and it ought to have been
    confirmed by the court, because there had been no exception filed to the finding of the
    referee on that point.” (citation omitted)).
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    Here, in their written exception to the referee’s report, defendants failed to
    except to any particular factual finding or legal conclusion made by the referee;
    rather, they excepted to the referee’s report “in its entirety.” A careful review of the
    seventy-two-page transcript of the hearing before the trial court reveals that the only
    relevant exception defendants took to the referee’s findings that they now challenge
    on appeal concerned its finding about the absence of evidence that the anchors could
    be removed without lowering the water level of the lake. As no other relevant
    exceptions were made to the referee’s findings, they were binding and the trial court
    was not required to review them.       Anderson, 
    211 N.C. at 198
    , 
    189 S.E. at 640
    (citations omitted).
    We are satisfied by the two-hour hearing on defendant’s exception to the
    referee’s report, and by the language in the trial court’s order—that it “reviewed in
    detail the Referee’s Report of December 30, 2016, Defendants’ exceptions to the same,
    the case file, briefs and affidavits submitted by counsel, the materials submitted to
    the referee, [and] prior Orders of this Court”—that the trial court thoughtfully
    considered defendants’ exceptions and did not perfunctorily place a stamp of approval
    on the referee’s labor. Accordingly, we overrule defendants’ argument that the trial
    court inadequately reviewed the referee’s findings under Rule 52(g)(2).
    IV. Adopting the Referee’s Report
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendants next contend the trial court erred by adopting the referee’s report
    on the grounds that “the referee’s findings of fact were not supported by the evidence,
    and the conclusions of law were not supported by the findings.” We disagree.
    A. Review Standard
    Appellate review of factual findings made by a referee and adopted by the trial
    court is limited to whether the challenged findings were supported by “any competent
    evidence.” See Lawson v. Lawson, 
    236 N.C. App. 576
    , 578, 
    763 S.E.2d 570
    , 572 (2014)
    (“In reviewing the trial court’s judgment entered on the referee’s report, the findings
    of fact by a referee, approved by the trial [court], are conclusive on appeal if supported
    by any competent evidence.” (quoting Cleveland Constr., Inc. v. Ellis-Don Constr.,
    Inc., 
    210 N.C. App. 522
    , 531–32, 
    709 S.E.2d 512
    , 520 (2011)). Challenged legal
    conclusions are reviewed de novo. 
    Id.
     (“Any conclusions of law made by the referee,
    however, are reviewed de novo by the trial court, and the trial court’s conclusions are
    reviewed de novo by the appellate court.” (quoting Cleveland Constr., 210 N.C. App.
    at 531–32, 
    709 S.E.2d at 520
    )).
    B. Findings and Conclusions
    Defendants challenge the evidentiary sufficiency of the following purported
    findings made by the referee and adopted by the trial court: (1) “[t]he testimony of
    an engineer was that in order to remove the anchors the water level of the lake would
    need to be lowered”; (2) “[t]here was no showing by the Defendants to the court of any
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    alternative plan for removing the anchors that would not necessitate the lowering of
    the lake level”; (3) “[p]laintiffs cannot be expected to comply with Paragraph 9 of the
    April 30, 2014 order at this time”; and (4) “[w]ith the end of the lease term now upon
    the parties and the resistance to the Plaintiffs’ plan of removal by the Defendants, it
    has become impossible for the Plaintiffs to fulfill this part of the April 30, 2014 order.”
    As to the first statement, because the recitation of testimony is not a valid
    finding, see, e.g., In re M.R.D.C., 
    166 N.C. App. 693
    , 699, 
    603 S.E.2d 890
    , 894 (2004)
    (“Recitations of the testimony of each witness do not constitute findings of fact[.]”
    (quoting Moore v. Moore, 
    160 N.C. App. 569
    , 571–72, 
    587 S.E.2d 74
    , 75 (2003)), its
    evidentiary sufficiency is irrelevant. Nonetheless, we note that despite plaintiffs’
    engineer during cross-examination at the October 2016 hearing conjuring up a
    proposal to remove the anchors without lowering the water level of the lake, the two
    plans he formally proposed required lowering the water level. As to the second,
    defendants have not lodged a legitimate evidentiary challenge by pointing to evidence
    that they, indeed, presented a plan for removing the anchors not requiring lowering
    the water level; rather, they rely solely on plaintiffs’ engineer’s testimonial proposal
    that it might be possible the anchors could be so removed. Accordingly, we uphold
    the finding that defendants failed to present evidence of an alternative plan.
    As the third and fourth statements are legal conclusions, see Lamm v. Lamm,
    
    210 N.C. App. 181
    , 189, 
    707 S.E.2d 685
    , 691 (2011) (“Generally, ‘any determination
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    requiring the exercise of judgment . . . or the application of legal principles . . . is more
    properly classified a conclusion of law.” (quoting In re Helms, 
    127 N.C. App. 505
    , 510,
    
    491 S.E.2d 672
    , 675 (1997)), our review on appeal is whether the referee’s findings
    adopted by the trial court supported these conclusions, 
    id.
     (“A finding of fact that is
    essentially a conclusion of law will be treated as a fully reviewable conclusion of law
    on appeal.” (citing M.R.D.C., 166 N.C. App. at 697, 
    603 S.E.2d at 893
    )). To support
    these conclusions, the trial court adopted the referee’s following relevant findings:
    [A]s early as October 2016 the Plaintiffs were
    working towards removing the anchors in an effort to
    comply with Paragraph 9 of the April 30, 2014 order that
    “[U]pon termination of the lease, the Plaintiffs shall
    remove the cable system and grain bin anchors.” . . .
    . . . . The Plaintiffs have employed an engineer to
    develop a plan for removing the anchors. The engineer has
    present[ed] two plans to the Plaintiffs . . . each involving
    the lowering of the lake levels . . . . Before the Plaintiffs
    [could] proceed with the plan to remove the anchors the
    Defendants have objected to the removal and the process
    has come to a halt with a filing of a [TRO] by the
    Defendants. The Defendants have offered no alternative
    plan for removing the anchors nor have they offered any
    independent testimony regarding the harm they believe
    will occur to the lake with the lowering of the lake level.
    The lease now terminates on December 31, 2016.
    This motion to modify the April 30, 2014 order was filed
    several days after the Defendants filed for a [TRO]. These
    filing[s] have delayed the process of removing the anchors
    prior to the termination of the lease . . . .
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    These findings, combined with the fact that the referee’s report was issued one
    day before the lease expired, support the challenged conclusions that “Plaintiffs
    cannot be expected to comply with Paragraph 9 of the April 30, 2014 order at this
    time” and “[w]ith the end of the lease term now upon the parties and the resistance to
    the Plaintiffs’ plan of removal by the Defendants, it has become impossible for the
    Plaintiffs to fulfill this part of the April 30, 2014 order.”         (Emphasis added.)
    Accordingly, we hold the trial court did not err in adopting the challenged findings
    and conclusions.
    C. Rule 60(b) Relief
    Defendants also challenge the recommendation that plaintiffs be awarded Rule
    60(b)(6) relief in the form of striking the requirement of the 30 April 2014 order that
    “[u]pon termination of the lease, the Plaintiffs shall remove the . . . grain bin anchors.”
    Defendants argue (1) the underlying conclusion that it was impossible for plaintiffs
    to comply with this requirement was erroneous because “[p]laintiffs’ own expert
    testified it was possible to remove the . . . anchors without draining the lake[,]” and
    (2) the recommended relief was improper because the 30 April 2014 order was a
    consent order, and neither the referee nor the trial court had authority to modify a
    material term of such a consent order. We disagree.
    1. Review Standard
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    We review a trial court’s ruling on whether to grant Rule 60(b) relief for abuse
    of discretion. See Davis v. Davis, 
    360 N.C. 518
    , 523, 
    631 S.E.2d 114
    , 118 (2006) (“[T]he
    standard of review of a trial court’s denial of a Rule 60(b) motion is abuse of
    discretion.” (citing Sink v. Easter, 
    288 N.C. 183
    , 198, 
    217 S.E.2d 532
    , 541 (1975))).
    2. Grounds for Rule 60(b) Relief
    Rule 60(b)(6) authorizes relief from a judgment or order for “[a]ny . . . reason
    justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule
    60(b)(6) (2017). “The test for whether a judgment [or] order . . . should be modified . . .
    under Rule 60(b)(6) is two pronged: (1) extraordinary circumstances must exist, and
    (2) there must be a showing that justice demands that relief be granted.” Curran v.
    Barefoot, 
    183 N.C. App. 331
    , 343, 
    645 S.E.2d 187
    , 195 (2007) (quoting Howell v.
    Howell, 
    321 N.C. 87
    , 91, 
    361 S.E.2d 585
    , 588 (1987)). “Exercise of this equitable
    power is within the full discretion of the trial judge.” N.C. Dep’t of Transp. v. Laxmi
    Hotels of Spring Lake, Inc., ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 
    817 S.E.2d 62
    , 71 (2018) (citing
    Thacker v. Thacker, 
    107 N.C. App. 479
    , 482, 
    420 S.E.2d 479
    , 480 (1992)).
    An “extraordinary circumstance . . . exist[s]” and “justice demands” Rule
    60(b)(6) relief in the form of modifying a judgment by striking an award of specific
    performance pursuant to a contract when the movant shows the performance ordered
    is impossible. See, e.g., Curran, 183 N.C. App. at 343, 
    645 S.E.2d at 195
     (holding the
    trial court erred by denying Rule 60(b)(6) relief in the form of amending a judgment
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    to strike an order of specific performance requiring one party to convey to an adverse
    party three watercraft the party proved it did not own).
    Here, the trial court adopted the following relevant findings and conclusions
    made by the referee to support awarding Rule 60(b)(6) relief:
    [A]s early as October 2016 the Plaintiffs were
    working towards removing the anchors in an effort to
    comply with Paragraph 9 of the April 30, 2014 order that
    “[U]pon termination of the lease, the Plaintiffs shall
    remove the cable system and grain bin anchors.” . . .
    . . . . The Plaintiffs have employed an engineer to
    develop a plan for removing the anchors . . . . Before the
    Plaintiffs [could] proceed with the plan to remove the
    anchors the Defendants have objected to the removal and
    the process has come to a halt with a filing of a [TRO] by
    the Defendants.        The Defendants have offered no
    alternative plan for removing the anchors nor have they
    offered any independent testimony regarding the harm
    they believe will occur to the lake with the lowering of the
    lake level.
    The Plaintiffs made a good faith effort to develop and
    implement a plan to remove the anchors while attempting
    to balance the environment of the lake with the need to
    remove the anchors. These efforts have been thwarted by
    the Defendants who do not want the lake level lowered but
    who have not offered any alternative plans for
    consideration nor evidence of potential damage to the lake
    at the level they believe is likely to occur. With the end of
    the lease term now upon the parties and the resistance to
    the Plaintiffs’ plan of removal by the Defendants, it has
    become impossible for the Plaintiffs to fulfill this part of the
    April 30, 2014 order.
    . . . . The Defendants object to lowering the lake
    levels and have sought to restrain the Plaintiffs from so
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    doing. Given that the lease will end in one day, the
    Plaintiffs have been stopped from proceeding with the plan
    to remove the anchors prior to the termination of the lease
    and the Defendants have made no offer or an alternative
    plan for removing the anchors. It is now impossible for the
    portion of Paragraph 9 of the April 30, 201[4] order to be
    enforced.
    Defendants challenge the conclusion that the plaintiffs’ performance of the
    anchor-removal requirement of the 30 April 2014 order was impossible on the
    grounds that “[p]laintiffs’ own expert testified it was possible to remove the . . .
    anchors without draining the lake.”        Contrary to defendants’ interpretation, we
    construe this impossibility-of-performance conclusion not as one grounded in an
    underlying determination that it was impossible for plaintiffs to “remove the . . . grain
    bin anchors” without lowering the water level. Rather, we construe the conclusion as
    one grounded in an underlying determination that it was now impossible for plaintiffs
    to remove the anchors “[u]pon termination of the lease” because the lease expired the
    next day.    As the referee and trial court correctly concluded, the doctrine of
    impossibility operated to excuse plaintiffs’ from further performing this provision of
    the modified lease. By the time the referee issued its 30 December 2016 report, it
    had become impossible for plaintiffs to remove the anchors “[u]pon [the 31 December
    2016] termination of the lease.”
    Further, the lease provided that “[defendants] agree[ ] to assist [plaintiffs] in
    lowering water level for general maintenance of water quality in October of each
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    year,” and the referee made the following relevant unchallenged findings:               (1)
    “Defendants . . . knew that anchors would need to be removed as this was made a
    part of the [30 April 2014] order”; (2) “the water levels of the lake are annually
    lowered during the months of September to December”; (3) “[a]t the time the [30 April
    2014] order was entered . . . [it] did not place any restrictions on or address the
    lowering of the lake level as it was regular practice to lower the lake”; (4) “[p]laintiffs
    now come to the point in time that the lake level is usually lowered” and “have
    employed an engineer to develop a plan for removing the anchors,” who “present[ed]
    two plans . . . involving . . . lowering . . . the lake levels”; (5) “[d]efendants have
    objected to the removal and the process has come to a halt with a filing of a [TRO] by
    the [d]efendants”; (6) this “filing [has] delayed the process of removing the anchors
    prior to the termination of the lease”; (7) “[p]laintiffs made a good faith effort to
    develop and implement a plan to remove the anchors” but their “efforts have been
    thwarted by the [d]efendants who do not want the lake level lowered but who have
    not offered any alternative plans”; (8) “[t]here is nothing in the record to indicate that
    at the time the [30 April 2014 order] was entered the [d]efendants would later raise
    an objection to the lowering of the water level to remove the anchors at the
    termination of the lease as the water level of the lake was known to be lowered
    annually by all parties”; and (9) “[d]efendants object to lowering the lake levels and
    have sought to restrain the [p]laintiffs from so doing.”
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    These unchallenged findings adopted by the trial court establish, alternatively,
    that plaintiffs made a sufficient showing that defendants effectively prevented them
    from removing the anchors “[u]pon termination of the lease.” See Harwood v. Shoe,
    
    141 N.C. 161
    , 163, 
    53 S.E. 616
    , 616 (1906) (“It is a salutary rule of law that one who
    prevents the performance of a condition, or makes it impossible by his own act, will
    not be permitted to take advantage of the nonperformance.”); see also Goldston Bros.
    v. Newkirk, 
    233 N.C. 428
    , 432, 
    64 S.E.2d 424
    , 427 (1951) (“As a general rule,
    prevention by one party excuses nonperformance of an antecedent obligation by the
    adversary party, and ordinarily the party whose performance is thus prevented is
    discharged from further performance[.]”).
    Accordingly, we conclude that the findings established “extraordinary
    circumstances . . . exist[ed]” based on defendants’ refusing to annually lower the
    water level and rejecting plaintiffs’ proposals to remove the anchors, and that
    plaintiffs showed “justice demands that relief be granted” from enforcing the modified
    lease requirement that they remove the anchors “[u]pon termination of the lease”
    based upon the doctrines of impossibility and/or prevention. Accordingly, we hold the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining plaintiffs are entitled to relief
    under Rule 60(b)(6) of striking this requirement from the 30 April 2014 order.
    3. Application of Rule 60(b) Relief to Settlement Agreement
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendants also assert the challenged Rule 60(b) relief recommended was
    improper because the 30 April 2014 order represented the parties’ settlement
    agreement, and Rule 60(b) provides no authority to modify material terms of such a
    consent order or judgment. Because we conclude the 30 April 2014 order was not
    entered by consent, we overrule this argument.
    In the 30 April 2014 order, the trial court made the following unchallenged
    findings:
    3. The parties, after a full day of settlement negotiations
    [on 22 January 2014] outside the presence of the Court,
    informed the Court in chambers of a settlement.
    4. All parties . . . with their attorneys appeared before the
    Court in open session and recited for the record the terms
    of a settlement agreeable to all parties hereto . . . .
    ....
    6. The parties . . . consented to and agreed upon the terms
    as being entered pursuant to this Order [.] . . .
    7. After further hearings or appearances before this Court,
    significant discussion and correspondence among the
    parties’ counsel, attempts to finalize a Consent Order, and
    ultimately ineffective work toward that end, Plaintiffs and
    Defendants filed separate motions to Enforce the Settlement
    Agreement.
    8. The Court adopts Plaintiffs Motion and Order, with the
    addition of the paragraph 8, and 17, herein.
    (Emphasis added.) As reflected, although the parties after negotiating on 22 January
    2014 announced in open court they had reached a settlement agreement, they were
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    unable to agree to the terms of a consent order. Rather, both parties later moved to
    enforce the settlement agreement and, at the hearing on the motions, both parties
    presented their proposed settlement agreements to the trial court. The trial court’s
    30 April 2014 order adopted plaintiffs’ proposed agreement but added two other
    paragraphs. This establishes that the order was contested at least by defendants and
    was therefore not entered by consent. Further, contrary to the styling of plaintiffs’
    proposed settlement agreement as “Consent Order,” the 30 April 2014 order was
    styled merely as “Order”; and only the trial judge, not the parties, signed the order.
    As the 30 April 2014 order was not a consent order, we overrule this argument.
    V. Entry of Proper Judgment
    Last, defendants contend that even if the trial court’s review and adoption of
    the referee’s report did not amount to reversible error, the case must be remanded for
    entry of a proper judgment. We agree.
    Under North Carolina Civil Procedure Rule 53(g)(2), “[n]o judgment may be
    rendered on any reference except by the judge.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 53(g)(2).
    Where, as here, a trial court adopts a referee’s report without entering a judgment,
    the appropriate disposition is to remand the case for entry of a judgment in
    accordance with the approved referee’s report. See Morpul, Inc. v. Mayo Knitting
    Mill, Inc., 
    265 N.C. 257
    , 268, 
    143 S.E.2d 707
    , 716 (1965) (“We note, however, that [the
    trial judge], with the exception of the one item of cost, merely affirmed, ipsis verbis,
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    the referee’s report, without entering any judgment upon it. But the parties have
    treated his order as a judgment, and, to dispose of the appeal, so do we. The case is
    remanded to the Superior Court for judgment in accordance with the report as
    amended by [the trial judge].”); see also Rouse v. Wheeler, 
    17 N.C. App. 422
    , 427, 
    194 S.E.2d 555
    , 558 (1973) (“We find no error in the order of approval and confirmation
    [of the referee’s report] by [the trial judge]. However, in view of the fact that [the
    trial judge] did not enter a [j]udgment based on the approved findings of fact and
    conclusions of law other than to make an allowance for the referee’s fee, this cause is
    remanded to the superior court with directions that a proper judgment be entered
    herein.”). Accordingly, we remand this matter to the trial court with instructions to
    enter a proper judgment in accordance with the adopted referee’s report.
    VI. Conclusion
    The trial court adequately reviewed defendants’ exceptions to the referee’s
    findings.   The challenged findings were supported by competent evidence, the
    challenged conclusions were supported by the findings, and the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion in ultimately determining that plaintiffs should be awarded relief
    under Rule 60(b)(6) in the form of striking the requirement of the 30 April 2014 order
    that “[u]pon termination of the lease, Plaintiffs shall . . . remove the grain bin
    anchors.” Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order adopting the referee’s report.
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    BULLOCK V. TUCKER
    Opinion of the Court
    However, we remand this matter to the trial court with instructions to enter a proper
    judgment concordant with that report.
    AFFIRMED AND REMANDED.
    Judges DILLON and DAVIS concur.
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