Hemmings v. Green
Hemmings v. Green
Opinion of the Court
The issue in this case is whether plaintiff’s service of a “Delayed Service of Complaint” form constitutes valid service on defendant, since said form does not notify defendant of an obligation to appear at a certain place to answer the complaint. We hold that the form is not a substitute for a summons and is not a valid method of service. The trial court dismissed plaintiffs case for lack of service, and we affirm.
On 18 March 1994, plaintiff Harold Dee Hemmings commenced this action, alleging alienation of affections and criminal conversation by defendant Ernest G. Green. Plaintiff initiated said action by filing an application and obtaining an order extending his time to file a
Next, on 7 April 1994, plaintiff filed his complaint, and the clerk issued a “Delayed Service of Complaint,” form AOC-CV-103. The defendant was served with the Delayed Service of Complaint (AOC-CV-103) on 12 April 1994. On 28 April 1994, the clerk of court granted defendant’s application for extension of time to answer or otherwise plead, extending defendant’s reply deadline to 11 June 1994. Defendant then moved to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint on 13 June 1994, said motion grounded upon the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, alleging: lack of jurisdiction over the person, insufficiency of process, and insufficiency of service of process. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rules 12(b)(2), (4), (5) (1990).
The trial court, after considering the documents of record and arguments of counsel, found that the plaintiff failed to “obtain an endorsement to the original summons or alias or pluries summons within the ninety (90) days allowed by Rule 4(d) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure.” Further, the trial court found that defendant had never been served with a summons by plaintiff. As a result, the trial court concluded as a matter of law that: (1) the three-year statute of limitations applicable to plaintiff’s action expired on 20 March 1994, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52(5) (1983); and (2) that dismissal based on defendant’s Rule 12(b) motion was warranted. Based on the foregoing, the trial court dismissed plaintiff’s action with prejudice on 19 August 1994. The appropriateness of the trial court’s dismissal for lack of proper service is the sole issue on appeal. We affirm.
We find our analysis in Latham v. Cherry, 111 N.C. App. 871, 433 S.E.2d 478, cert. denied, 335 N.C. 556, 441 S.E.2d 116 (1994), persuasive. In Latham, this Court held that a Delayed Service of Complaint form, served alongside the complaint itself, is not a legally adequate substitute for a summons. Id. at 874, 433 S.E.2d at 480-81. Although the information conveyed in a Delayed Service of Complaint is similar to that of a summons proper, it falls short because it only tells the defendant to answer, not to appear. Id. at 874, 433 S.E.2d at 481. By statute, a summons must “notify each defendant to appear and answer within 30 days.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 4(b) (1990) (emphasis added).
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.