DocketNumber: No. 6926SC315
Citation Numbers: 6 N.C. App. 58, 169 S.E.2d 273, 1969 N.C. App. LEXIS 1140
Judges: Britt, Mallaed, Parker
Filed Date: 8/27/1969
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
G.S. 1-121 provides that the complaint must be filed in the clerk’s office at or before the time of the issuance of summons, "provided, that the clerk may at the time of the issuance of summons on application of plaintiff by written order extend the time for filing complaint to a day certain not to exceed twenty (20) days, and a copy of such order shall be delivered to the defendant, or defendants, at the time of the service of summons in lieu of a copy of the complaint. . . .”
Defendant appellant contends that the critical word in the above-quoted portion of the statute is the word “copy,” that this word means an exact duplicate of the original, and that since the purported copy of the order extending time for filing the complaint as served upon him was not an exact duplicate of the original in that the day in May 1968 to which the time for filing complaint was extended was left blank, the service upon him was fatally defective. In Washington County v. Blount, 224 N.C. 438, 31 S.E. 2d 374, the North Carolina Supreme Court, speaking through Denny, J., (later C.J.) said:
“Where the statute requires service of summons by delivery of a copy of the original writ to the defendant, such copy should, as a matter of course, conform exactly to the original, but frequently errors and omissions occur in the preparation of copies and it becomes necessary for the courts to determine the effect of particular clerical errors and omissions. In such cases it seems to be the general rule to disregard a clerical error or omission where the party served has not been misled. Clerical errors or omissions in the copy of a summons delivered to a defendant will not affect the jurisdiction of the court, when they consist of mere irregularities, such as the ‘want of the signature of the officer who issued it, the omission of the date of summons, or the failure to endorse thereon the date and place of service (citing authorities).’ ”
In that case the copies of the summons delivered to the defendants were not dated or signed by the clerk. The Supreme Court held that the defendants, in contending that the service of summons upon them was defective, were “relying upon mere irregularities or technicalities, which in no wise misled them,” and accordingly held that the omissions in the copies of the summons delivered to defendants were harmless irregularities and did not affect the jurisdiction of the court.
In the case presently before us the defendant could not have been misled by the omission from the copy of the order extending
The present case is clearly distinguishable from the situation which was presented in the case of Brantley v. Sawyer, 5 N.C. App. 557, 169 S.E. 2d 55, and from the case of Harrell v. Welstead, 206 N.C. 817, 175 S.E. 283. In each of those cases the copy of the summons which was delivered to the defendant directed him to appear in a county other than that in which the suit was pending. The Supreme Court in Washington County v. Blount, supra, cited and distinguished the Harrell case, characterizing the defects in Harrell as “a fatal variance between the place where the defendant was commanded to appear and file its answer and the place where the suit was actually pending.”
We hold that the omission in the copy of the extension order which was delivered to appellant was a harmless irregularity and did not mislead or prejudice appellant nor affect the jurisdiction of the court.
The judgment appealed from is
Affirmed.