Opinion
No. 7715SC741 No. 7715SC799
Filed 15 August 1978
Appeal and Error 6.11 — order limiting lis pendens — no immediate appeal In an action to quiet title to property which defendants have incorporated into a residential subdivision, an order limiting the scope of lis pendens filed by plaintiffs only to the area of the subdivision which they claim was interlocutory and not immediately appealable.
APPEALS by plaintiffs from Hobgood, Judge. Orders entered 1 July 1977 in Superior Court, CHATHAM County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 1 June 1978. (Appeals consolidated for purpose of hearing and determination.)
Epting, Hackney Long, by Joe Hackney, and Barber, Holmes McLaurin, by Edward S. Holmes, for plaintiff appellants Clifton T. Whyburn and Nellie Bynum Strowd.
Gunn Messick, by Paul S. Messick, Jr., for defendant appellee H. Ross Norwood.
In March of 1977 each plaintiff filed a complaint to quiet title to certain real property which he or she allegedly owns but which defendants Norwood have incorporated into a residential development named "River Forest". Plaintiffs do not claim title to all of the property in the 318-acre River Forest subdivision but only to approximately 16.7 acres thereof for which the deeds of plaintiffs and the Norwoods overlap.
Plaintiffs also joined as defendants 25 other persons and corporations who had purchased or financed lots in the River Forest development on the ground that the restrictive covenants in their deeds and recorded in a declaration of "Restrictive and Protective Covenants" give said defendants an interest in the disputed property through a purported right to restrict the use thereof.
Contemporaneously with the filing of their complaints, plaintiffs filed notices of lis pendens describing as the property affected by the pending litigation the entire River Forest subdivision. Defendant Ross Norwood filed motions to limit the scope of the notices of lis pendens only to the area to which plaintiffs claim title.
Following a hearing, based primarily on the complaints, the court allowed the motions and ordered cancelled so much of the notices of lis pendens which purport to apply to property other than the 16.7 acres claimed by plaintiffs.
Plaintiffs appealed.
Defendant appellee contends that the orders from which plaintiffs purport to appeal are interlocutory ones, not affecting substantial rights, and that they are, therefore, not immediately appealable. We think this contention has merit.
In Funderburk v. Justice, 25 N.C. App. 655, 214 S.E.2d 310 (1975), Judge Clark, speaking for this court, said:
"G.S. 1-277 and G.S. 7A-27 in effect provide that no appeal lies to an appellate court from an interlocutory ruling or order of the trial court unless such ruling or order deprives the appellant of a substantial right which he would lose if the ruling or order is not reviewed before final judgment. Consumers Power v. Power Co., 285 N.C. 434, 206 S.E.2d 178 (1974); Raleigh v. Edwards, 234 N.C. 528, 67 S.E.2d 669 (1951)."
We do not think the orders of Judge Hobgood deprive plaintiffs of substantial rights which they would lose if the orders are not reviewed before final judgment. Consequently, the appeals from said orders are dismissed.
Appeals dismissed.
Judges ARNOLD and ERWIN concur.