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Matulionis v. Loidl - North Carolina Court of Appeals Opinion

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Filed March 18th, 2026
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Summary

The North Carolina Court of Appeals issued an opinion in Matulionis v. Loidl, addressing claims including intrusion upon seclusion, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and civil conspiracy. The court affirmed in part and reversed in part the trial court's order regarding dismissal of claims and sanctions.

What changed

The North Carolina Court of Appeals issued a non-precedential opinion in Matulionis v. Loidl (Docket Number 25-426), filed on March 18, 2026. The case involves an appeal by Plaintiff Angela Matulionis from an order that dismissed several of her claims, including intrusion upon seclusion, intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligent infliction of emotional distress, and civil conspiracy, and also addressed motions for sanctions. The appellate court affirmed in part and reversed in part the lower court's decision.

This opinion is non-precedential and citation is disfavored per Rule 30(e)(3). Legal professionals involved in similar appellate matters in North Carolina should note the specific rulings on the dismissal of tort claims and the application of Rule 11 sanctions. While this specific ruling does not create new binding legal authority, it provides insight into how North Carolina appellate courts review such dismissals and sanctions, particularly in cases with complex prior litigation histories. No specific compliance actions are required for regulated entities, but practitioners should be aware of the procedural and substantive arguments discussed.

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                  by Judge Tom Murry](https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/10810313/matulionis-v-loidl/#o1)

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March 18, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

Matulionis v. Loidl

Court of Appeals of North Carolina

Syllabus

Intrustion upon seclusion; intentional infliction of emotional distress; negligent infliction of emotional distress; civil conspiracy; Rule 11 sanctions.

Combined Opinion

                        by Judge Tom Murry

An unpublished opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals does not constitute
controlling legal authority. Citation is disfavored, but may be permitted in accordance with
the provisions of Rule 30(e)(3) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA25-426

Filed 18 March 2026

Durham County, No. 24 CV 003858-310

ANGELA MATULIONIS, Plaintiff,

v.

CHRISTIAN LOIDL and
PAMELA BELL, Defendants.

Appeal by Plaintiff from order entered 23 October 2024 by Judge Hoyt G.

Tessener in Durham County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 14

October 2025.

Angela Matulionis pro se as Plaintiff–Appellant.

No brief filed by Defendants–Appellants.

MURRY, Judge.

Angela Matulionis (Plaintiff) appeals the trial court’s order granting Christian

Loidl and Pamela Bell’s (collectively, “Defendants”) motion to strike certain

paragraphs of her complaint, motion for sanctions, and motions for dismissal of

several claims. More specifically, the order dismissed Plaintiff’s claims for intrusion

upon seclusion (IUS), intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED), negligent
MATULIONIS V. LOIDL

Opinion of the Court

infliction of emotional distress (NIED), and civil conspiracy. For the following

reasons, this Court affirms in part and reverses in part the trial court’s order.

I. Background

This case forms yet another strand in a complex weave of “numerous prior

proceedings” between Plaintiff, Defendants, and Matthew R. Long—ex-boyfriend to

Plaintiff and ex-husband to Defendant Bell, Plaintiff’s estranged twin sister. Some

portions of the litigation stem from a custody dispute over Plaintiff and Defendant

Loidl’s daughter, whom Plaintiff fathered with Long while married to Loidl. Others

stem from Defendant Bell’s prior mischaracterization of Plaintiff as a prostitute. We

now seek to disentangle the particular knots raised by Plaintiff’s disparate claims

here.

Plaintiff and Loidl married on 27 April 2015 and divorced on 28 October 2022.

Plaintiff gave birth to their daughter on 25 September 2015, whom Plaintiff conceived

with Long prior to marrying Loidl. Loidl and Long maintained a friendship from 2018

onwards, while Bell “entered into a romantic relationship” with Long “[i]n or around

February 2023.” They later annulled their marriage in late 2023. Plaintiff has since

remarried to a Dr. Ilvydas Matulionis.

From 2022 to the present, Plaintiff alleged in her 17 May 2024 complaint a

complicated series of civil conspiracies between Defendants and Long “to cause [her]

distress . . . , damage [her] reputation and standing, and bring about the end of [her]

marriage to Dr. Matulionis.” More specifically, she claimed that Loidl tortiously

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Opinion of the Court

intruded upon her seclusion by “unlawfully access[ing]” her Asus laptop she left at

his house, as well as “a number of opened and unopened pieces of mail,” with the

purpose of “caus[ing her] financial damages, and emotional distress.” Plaintiff then

asserted that “Loidl disseminated the contents of [her] private records, files, mail,

and Asus laptop to Defendant Bell, Matthew Long, and possibly other unnamed third

parties.” She also intimated that they sought to intimidate Matulionis via “a series of

cryptic messages” on LinkedIn.

Among other “well-pleaded allegations,” Johnson v. Bollinger, 86 N.C. App. 1,

4 (1987) (citing N.C. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6)), Plaintiff alleged a series of additional facts

that the trial court ultimately struck in whole or in part in response to Defendants’

motion:

  1. Plaintiff’s text messages, email correspondence, personal recollections and witness corroboration to be presented at trial evidence that, since Plaintiff and Defendant Loidl’s separation in 2017, Defendant Loidl has expressed a desire to harm Plaintiff and make certain that she experiences monetary losses and emotional distress.
  2. Defendant Bell has engaged in numerous schemes and designs intended to harm Plaintiff. Defendant Bell’s specific acts in this regard are too numerous to be fully detailed in this filing but shall be enumerated to the extent allowable at trial. ....
  3. As a consequence of Defendant Loidl’s willful blindness to the damage caused by his own conduct, Loidl faulted Plaintiff entirely for the failure of their marriage. ....
  4. Beginning in late May 2023 and continuing until the present time, Defendants have stalked and harassed Matulionis, a respected physicist and pharmaceutical industry expert.

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Opinion of the Court

....
20. In March 2017, Defendant Loidl initiated child-custody litigation
against Plaintiff and Matthew Long as Intervenor seeking to obtain
sole custody of Plaintiff and Mr. Long’s biological child.
21. Defendant Loidl initiated the child-custody litigation subsequent to
Plaintiff separating from Defendant Loidl and upon him being
informed that Plaintiff and Long would not consent to a joint
custody arrangement with him.

(Quotation modified; strikethroughs added.) At one point in the complaint, Plaintiff

characterized Long as a “perpetually unemployed alcoholic” (¶ 24) and Bell as a

prostitute, pornographer, and international drug smuggler (¶ 26). Plaintiff also

accused Loidl of “financial[ ] and emotional[ ] abus[e]” that “forced her to flee the

marital home without notice in late January 2017” (¶ 30). Finally, she characterized

Defendants’ alleged conspiracies as an attempt “to give . . . Long an advantage in [his]

. . . highly contentious child[-]custody litigation with Plaintiff” (¶ 36).

In response, Defendants moved to sanction Plaintiff, to strike a broad variety

of paragraphs from her complaint, and to dismiss all claims. See N.C. R. Civ. P. 11(a)

(sanctions) [hereinafter Rule]; id. 12 (f) (stricken material); id. 12 (b)(6) (involuntary

dismissal for “[f]ailure to state a claim”). At a 23 October 2024 hearing on these

various motions, Plaintiff admitted that she lacked any “firsthand knowledge of how

[any] third parties” might have obtained her purportedly embarrassing information

from the laptop she left at Loidl’s house. She also voluntarily dismissed the NIED

claim against Bell at that point in the proceedings.

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Opinion of the Court

In response, the trial court ultimately granted the motion for sanctions in part,

granted the motion to strike in part, and granted the motion to dismiss in whole with

prejudice. It also dismissed Plaintiff’s civil-conspiracy claim as moot. In so doing, it

“found a violation of Rule 11 but declined to impose sanctions or a gatekeeper order”

and instead “cautioned that her future pleadings must be well grounded in fact and

law to avoid” tangible sanction in the future. (Brackets omitted.) Plaintiff timely

appealed this order.

II. Jurisdiction

This Court has jurisdiction to hear Plaintiff’s appeal of the trial court’s order

because its dismissal of her claims is a “final judgment of a superior court.” N.C.G.S.

§ 7A-27(b)(1) (2025).

III. Analysis

On appeal, Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by dismissing her claims

of IUS, NIED, and IIED with prejudice; by dismissing her claim of civil conspiracy as

moot; by striking in part certain paragraphs of her complaint; and by sanctioning in

part her litigation conduct to date. Motions to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) implicate

a de novo review, Horne v. Cumberland Cty. Hosp. Sys., 228 N.C. App. 142, 144 (2013)

(citing Toomer v. Garrett, 155 N.C. App. 462 (2002)), whereas sanctions and strikes

are subject to the trial court’s sound discretion, see Fatta v. M&M Props. Mgmt., 224

N.C. App. 18, 26 (2012).

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Opinion of the Court

In an initial complaint, a plaintiff must “set forth a claim for relief” that

contains a “short and plain statement of . . . sufficient particularity” and a “demand

for judgment” to survive a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal. Rule 8(a)(1)–(2) (brackets omitted).

This “ ‘notice theory’ of pleading” requires only “sufficient notice of the events . . .

which produced the claim to enable the adverse party to understand” it in such a

manner as “to prepare for trial.” Sutton v. Duke, 277 N.C. 94, 104 (1970). Contra

Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009) (explaining federal “plausibility standard”

of Twiqbal); Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 561 (2007) (“plausibility

standard at the pleading stage”). When “constru[ing] as to do substantial justice” a

pleading in response to a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, Rule 8(f), we “treat[ ] as true” any

remaining “well-pleaded allegations.” Bollinger, 86 N.C. App. at 4.

Based on these considerations of the trial court’s order, this Court (1) reverses

the dismissal of Plaintiff’s IUS and IIED claims; (2) affirms the dismissal of the NIED

claim; (3) reverses in part the dismissal of her civil-conspiracy claim to the extent it

derives from either her IUS or IIED claims; (4) affirms in part the dismissal of her

civil-conspiracy claim to the extent it derives from her NIED claim; (5) affirms the

partial strikes of Plaintiffs’ complaint; and (6) affirms the partial sanction of her

litigation conduct to date.

A. Intrusion Upon Seclusion

First, Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by dismissing with prejudice

her claim that Defendant Loidl tortiously intruded upon her seclusion by accessing

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Opinion of the Court

her laptop. We agree. At North Carolina common law, the IUS tort is “the intentional

intrusion ‘physically or otherwise, upon the solitude or seclusion of another or his

private affairs or concerns . . . [where] the intrusion would be highly offensive to a

reasonable person.’ ” Toomer, 155 N.C. App. at 480 (alterations in original; emphasis

added) (quoting Miller v. Brooks, 123 N.C. App. 20, 26–27 (1996)). In this context, a

“highly offensive” intrusion includes the “unauthorized examination of . . . sensitive

information such as medical diagnoses and financial information.” Id.; cf. Miller, 123

N.C. App. at 26 (personal correspondence) (citing Restatement (Second) of Torts

§ 652B cmt. b (A.L.I. 1977)).

Plaintiff’s accusations here meet this minimum standard. Defendants

possessed her laptop during the contested period in question. She claims, “[u]pon

information and belief,” that Loidl “unlawfully accessed [her] Asus laptop” in an effort

“to identify information and material that Defendants could then use to shame[ ] and

humiliate” her. Given the sensitive interrelations between the parties, a “reasonable

person” would find “highly offensive,” Toomer, 155 N.C. App. at 480, an unauthorized

release of any “ ‘dossier’ of information pertaining to Plaintiff . . . to the public at

large.” Although Plaintiff admitted to the trial court that she “ha[d] no firsthand

knowledge of how the third parties obtained the [laptop’s] information from” Loidl,

we ignore “matters outside the pleadings” when assessing a Rule 12(b)(6) motion on

appeal, Stanback v. Stanback, 297 N.C. 181, 205 (1979), abrogated in part on other

grounds by Dickens v. Puryear, 302 N.C. 437 (1981). Because her “complaint’s

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Opinion of the Court

allegations give adequate notice of the nature and extent of” her IUS claim, Bollinger,

86 N.C. App. at 3, Plaintiff “state[s] a claim upon which relief can be granted,” Rule

12(b)(6). Thus, this Court reverses the trial court’s dismissal with prejudice of

Plaintiff’s claim of tortious IUS.

B. Infliction of Emotional Distress

Second, Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by dismissing with prejudice

her claim that Defendants both intentionally and negligently inflicted her emotional

distress through their repeated actions. We disagree on the first count but agree on

the second.

  1. Intentional

Our common-law “tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress” requires

a defendant to engage in “(1) extreme and outrageous conduct which is intended

to cause and does cause (3) severe emotional distress to another.” Hall v. Post, 323

N.C. 259, 268 (1988) (quoting Dickens, 302 N.C. at 452). The conduct in question must

implicate more than “mere temporary fright, disappointment[,] or regret.” Johnson v.

Ruark Obstetrics & Gynec’y Assocs., 327 N.C. 283, 304 (1990), and excludes “mere

insults, indignities, threats, annoyances, petty oppressions, or other trivialities,”

Bollinger, 86 N.C. App. at 6 (quotation omitted).

We analogize Plaintiff’s claim here to the prima facie IIED claim brought in

Miller v. Brooks. In Miller, the plaintiff ex-husband sued his ex-wife and the private

investigator she hired to gather information on him in preparation for a divorce.

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MATULIONIS V. LOIDL

Opinion of the Court

Miller, 123 N.C. App. at 23. He brought in relevant part a claim for a tortiously

“intentional and highly offensive intrusion upon his seclusion.” Id. at 24. In his initial

complaint, the plaintiff alleged that the two defendants “installed a hidden videotape

camera in [his] bedroom ceiling.” Id. He also alleged that the ex-wife “intercepted,

sorted through, and threw away some of his mail.” Id. at 26. By way of formally

recognizing the “intrusion tort” in North Carolina’s common law, the Miller Court

affirmed the trial court’s denial of the Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss the plaintiff’s

seclusion claim. Id. at 24. In doing so, it recognized “opening . . . personal mail” and

intruding upon a “reasonable expectation of privacy” as “wrongs protected by th[at]

tort” which “would be highly offensive to a reasonable person.” Id. at 26 (first citing

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652B (A.L.I. 1977); and then citing W. Page Keeton

et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 117 (5th ed. 1984)).

So too here. Plaintiff alleges discrete actions by Defendants that evidence

supposedly “clear malice”—namely, that they “engaged in countless attempts to harm

her social and professional interests,” that Loidl “initiated unsolicited and unwanted

contact with her then-fiancé,” and that he “utilized LinkedIn to convey a series of

cryptic messages to Dr. Matulionis.” (Brackets omitted.) “[T]aken as true” at this

stage in the proceedings, McAllister v. Ha, 347 N.C. 638, 638 (1998), these facts fall

outside those otherwise nonactionable “rough edges of our society still in need of filing

down,” Bollinger, 86 N.C. App. at 6 (ellipses and quotation omitted). Because

Plaintiff’s complaint prima facie states at least some “facts which could be presented

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MATULIONIS V. LOIDL

Opinion of the Court

in support of [its] claim[s]” for IIED as a result, this Court reverses the trial court’s

dismissal with prejudice of that specific claim against Defendant Loidl. Id. at 4.

  1. Negligent

To state a claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress under our common

law, though, the plaintiff “must allege that (1) the defendant negligently engaged in

conduct (2) reasonably foreseeable to cause the plaintiff severe emotional distress,

and (3) that did in fact cause the severe emotional distress.” Johnson, 327 N.C. at 304

(citation modified). NIED contextually differs from its intentional counterpart to the

extent that the defendant’s conduct in question need only be “reasonably foreseeable.”

Id. And when pleading negligent infliction more specifically, a plaintiff must facially

distinguish allegations of intentional acts from those of mere negligence. See Horne,

228 N.C. App. at 149 (“[A]llegations of only intentional conduct, even when construed

liberally on a motion to dismiss, cannot satisfy the negligence element of an NIED

claim.” (ellipses omitted)).

We analogize Plaintiff’s insufficient NIED claim to that brought in Horne v.

Cumberland County. In Horne, the plaintiff sued her former hospital employer in part

for NIED incurred by her firing. Id. at 143. The defendant employer hired the plaintiff

as a CT technologist starting in early 2011. Id. Over the next two months until her

firing on 18 April 2011, the defendant “wrote up” plaintiff on four separate occasions

for conduct violations ranging from “carelessness in duty” to “walking out of a

procedure.” Id. (brackets omitted). In her complaint, the plaintiff alleged in part that

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Opinion of the Court

the defendant’s “action[s] toward [her] constitute[ ] extreme and outrageous conduct

which was intended to . . . cause her severe emotional distress.” Id. at 149. The Horne

Court affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of her NIED claim because the “complaint

recount[ed] only intentional conduct on the part of” the defendant. Id. It further

reasoned that “[a]llegations of intentional conduct . . . , even when construed liberally

on a motion to dismiss, cannot satisfy the negligence element of an NIED claim.” Id.

(emphasis added).

Plaintiff’s NIED claim here fails for the same reason. In her third claim for

relief, she alleges—without any substantive change—those same facts in the context

of negligence as she does for the immediately preceding claim of intentionality. At no

point does Plaintiff attempt to distinguish the offending acts intentionally committed

by Defendants from those merely committed negligently. Instead, she simply

recharacterizes Defendants’ “interference” with her personal relationships and

“access” of her “private and personal property” as “negligence in failing to use

ordinary and reasonable care to preserve her rights.” (Brackets omitted.) At one point,

she even states that Defendants acted “solely out of malice” towards her. (Emphasis

added.) She also fails to “reference any duty owed to her by” Defendants that they

would need to breach as a result of these alleged actions. Id. Because this “failure to

allege such a duty owed by . . . [D]efendant[s] to . . . [P]laintiff is fatal to [her] NIED

claim on a motion to dismiss,” this Court affirms the trial court’s dismissal with

prejudice of that claim against Defendants. Id.

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Opinion of the Court

C. Civil Conspiracy

Third, Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by dismissing as moot her

claim that Defendants engaged in a civil conspiracy of tortious conduct against her.

We agree only to the extent that the civil-conspiracy claim derives from either her

IUS or IIED claim. Although occasionally referred to as a separate claim, e.g.,

Dickens, 302 N.C. at 456, North Carolina common law does not recognize civil

conspiracy as an “independent cause of action,” Toomer, 155 N.C. App. at 483.

“Accurately speaking, [t]he action is for damages caused by acts committed pursuant

to a formed conspiracy, rather than by the conspiracy itself.” Reid v. Holden, 242 N.C.

408, 414 (1955) (ellipses omitted) (quoting 11 Am. Jur. Conspiracy § 45 (1938)).

Therefore, a plaintiff must allege in her complaint (1) “an underlying claim for

underlying conduct,” (2) an “agreement of two or more parties to carry out the

conduct,” and (3) an “injury resulting from that conduct.” Toomer, 155 N.C. App. at

483. Only if her “evidence of the agreement . . . create[s] more than a suspicion or

conjecture” of conspiracy can the claim survive dismissal. Henderson v. LeBauer, 101

N.C. App. 255, 261 (1991) (citing Dickens, 302 N.C. at 456). And because the

prejudicial dismissal of a tort claim “is the same as a judgment on [its] merits, . . .

any appeal concerning a directed verdict on issues predicated upon that [claim] is

rendered moot.” Bailey v. Gitt, 135 N.C. App. 119, 121 (1999) (citation omitted);

accord In re Oghenekevebe, 123 N.C. App. 434, 437 (1996).

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Opinion of the Court

Here, the trial court rendered Plaintiff’s civil-conspiracy claim moot only to the

extent it derived from her NIED claim. The civil-conspiracy claim remains a live

proposition to the extent Plaintiff alleged that Defendants conspired to either intrude

upon her seclusion or intentionally inflict her emotional distress. The “voluminous

email and text messages” between her and Defendants indicate sustained

communications between the various parties, thus meeting at least the second

element of civil conspiracy. As to the first and third elements, Plaintiff prima facie

alleges the underlying IUS and IIED claims—as well as the “severe emotional stress

and embarrassment” that they caused—for the various reasons discussed above. But

Plaintiff’s procedurally deficient NIED claim necessarily collapses its derivative

conspiracy claim. She does not adequately plead the former and thus cannot show

that the latter “in fact existed.” Henderson, 101 N.C. App. at 261. Based on these

considerations and “tak[ing] as true” the allegations on their face, this Court affirms

in part and reverses in part the trial court’s dismissal of Plaintiffs’ civil-conspiracy

claims as moot. McAllister, 347 N.C. at 638.

D. Motion to Strike

Fourth, Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by granting in part

Defendants’ motion to strike certain paragraphs of purportedly relevant allegations

from her complaint. We disagree. Under Rule 12(f), a trial court may “stri[ke] from

any pleading any insufficient defense or any redundant, irrelevant, immaterial,

impertinent, or scandalous matter” “[u]pon motion made by a party.” Rule 12(f). In

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Opinion of the Court

doing so, the trial court can better “avoid expenditure of time and resources before

trial by removing spurious issues.” Estrada v. Jaques, 70 N.C. App. 627, 642 (1984).

Because “justice is better served by allowing the parties to fully litigate their claims,”

though, Carpenter v. Carpenter, 189 N.C. App. 755, 761 (2008) (quotation omitted), a

trial court should not grant a motion to strike “[i]f there is any question as to whether

an issue may arise,” Shellhorn v. Brad Ragan, Inc., 38 N.C. App. 310, 316 (1978)

(emphasis added) (citing 2A Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 12.21 (2d ed. 1976)).

Despite its subjection to the trial court’s discretion, this question still raises a

high standard for the movant to meet. See Carpenter, 189 N.C. at 757, 760–61. Among

those few occasions that a movant has appealed stricken material to our appellate

courts, at least one of three non-inclusive preconditions must buttress the order: (1)

that the material have no “possible bearing on the litigation,” id. at 761, (2) that the

“absence of those allegations” before the court not otherwise prejudice the non-

movant, Long v. City of Charlotte, 306 N.C. 187, 204 (1982), superseded by statute on

other grounds, Act of Jul. 10, 1981, ch. 919, 1981 N.C. Sess. Laws 1382, as recognized

in Kirby v. N.C. Dep’t of Transp., 368 N.C. 847 (2016), or (3) that the material would

be inadmissible at trial, e.g., Faulconer v. Wysong & Miles Co., 155 N.C. App. 598,

602 (2002) (parol evidence); Peace v. Peace Broad. Corp., 22 N.C. App. 631, 633 (1974)

(hearsay). Accord 1A N.C. Index 4th Appeal and Error § 481, Westlaw (database

updated July 2025) (describing these three traits).

  1. Redundant
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The trial court did not abuse its discretion in partially striking ¶ 10 from the

complaint because it may readily omit any “superfluous” allegation “already

contained” elsewhere within the pleading. Redundancy, Black’s Law Dictionary (12th

ed. 2024) [hereinafter Black’s Law]. In the filing itself, Plaintiff alleges in part that

Loidl sought to “harm [her] and make certain that [she] experiences monetary loss

and emotional distress” without further explanation. Defendants claim that this

sentence is too “speculative” to permit in the record. But this language merely repeats

previous allegations of Loidl’s purportedly “countless attempts to harm Plaintiff’s

social and professional interests.” Thus, this Court affirms the trial court’s partial

strike of ¶ 10 on grounds of redundancy to her broader claims.

  1. Irrelevant

Nor did the trial court abuse its discretion by striking multiple paragraphs in

whole or in part due to their irrelevancy. A pleaded allegation descends into legal

irrelevancy by forgoing any “substantial relation to the action” or capacity to “affect

the [trial] court’s decision.” Irrelevant, Black’s Law. Many of Plaintiff’s claims

throughout her complaint fall prey to these flaws. First, Plaintiff describes Bell’s

“specific acts” that are “too numerous to be fully detailed in this filing” but promises

to later “enumerate[ ]” them “to the extent allowable at trial.” But a motion to dismiss

expressly restricts itself to the complaint’s content (and any valid attachments). See

Bollinger, 86 N.C. App. at 5. Second, Plaintiff attacks “Loidl’s willful blindness to the

damage caused by his own conduct” in “end[ing] the marital relationship between

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Opinion of the Court

them” amidst an otherwise preservable assertion of his “various plots and schemes.”

She further characterizes this conduct as “financial and emotional abuse” that “forced

her to flee the marital home without notice.” (Brackets omitted.) While tragic, intra-

marital strife is logically irrelevant to claims of tortious conduct committed post-

dissolution. Third, Plaintiff’s current husband may be “a respected physicist and

pharmaceutical industry expert,” but we fail to see how his professional stature

affects Plaintiff’s accusations of attacks against her own. Fourth, although the

parties’ previous custody battles certainly inform the backdrop of the parties’ deep

rancor, it does not speak to the issues at hand: whether Defendants committed the

aforementioned torts against Plaintiff. The parentage of Plaintiff’s minor child and

“Long’s highly contentious child custody litigation with Plaintiff” form no logical

bases for her other claims. For the reasons discussed above, Plaintiff’s claims do not

rely on these particular facts. Thus, this Court affirms the trial court’s various full

and partial strikes of ¶¶ 11, 13, 17, 20–21, 30, 36 on grounds that they lack any

“substantial relation to the action” or capacity to “affect the [trial] court’s decision.”

Irrelevant, Black’s Law.

  1. Scandalous

In both ordinary and legal parlance, an allegation becomes a “scandalous

matter” when so “disgraceful . . . and irrelevant to an action” that its inclusion “in a

court paper” would be manifestly “improper.” Scandalous Matter, Black’s Law; see

Scandalous, The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (rev. 5th ed.

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Opinion of the Court

2016) (“Containing material damaging to reputation; defamatory”). Amidst her

complaints of Defendants’ purportedly tortious conduct, Plaintiff alleges “upon

verifiable information and belief” that her twin sister “engages in sexual intercourse

for financial compensation, acts in amateur pornography, and facilitates the illegal

transport of narcotics within the United States and internationally” in her spare

time. (Quotation modified.) Plaintiff also characterizes her ex- (and sister’s current)

partner as a “perpetually unemployed alcoholic who continues to drink excessively.”

If these factually unsupported allegations are not the sort of disgraceful improprieties

that Rule 12(f) seeks to exclude from the courtroom, we struggle to comprehend what

would be. Thus, this Court affirms the trial court’s full strikes of ¶¶ 24, 26 on grounds

of scandalousness.

E. Sanctions

Fifth, Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by granting in part Defendants’

motion for Rule 11 sanctions of her litigious conduct to date. Although we review de

novo the “imposition of sanctions” per se under Rule 11, the “choice of sanction” is

subject only to an abuse-of-discretion standard. Crutchfield v. Crutchfield, 132 N.C.

App. 193, 195 (1999) (citing Turner v. Duke Univ., 325 N.C. 152, 165 (1989)). We

dismiss this argument out of hand and affirm the order based on the order’s express

“declin[ation] to impose sanctions or a gatekeeper order” even though it “f[ou]nd[ ] a

violation of Rule 11.” Plaintiff engaged in numerous acts of misfeasance throughout

her pretrial documentation for the reasons discussed above, yet the trial court merely

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Opinion of the Court

“cautioned that [her] future pleadings must be well grounded in fact and law” going

forward. Had the trial court imposed in fact either financial sanctions or a gatekeeper

order, we might have occasion to review its discretionary action here. It did neither,

and thus this Court affirms its partial grant of Defendants’ motion for Rule 11

sanctions.

IV. Conclusion

For the reasons discussed above, this Court (1) reverses the trial court’s

dismissal with prejudice of Plaintiff’s IUS and IIED claims; (2) affirms its dismissal

with prejudice of her NIED claim; (3) reverses in part its dismissal of her civil-

conspiracy claim to the extent it derives from either her IUS or IIED claims; (4)

affirms in part its dismissal of her civil-conspiracy claim to the extent it derives from

her NIED claim; (5) affirms its partial grant of Defendants’ Rule 12(f) motion to strike

certain paragraph’s from her complaint; and (6) affirms its partial grant of their Rule

11 motion for sanctions against her.

AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART.

Judge WOOD concurs.

Judge STROUD concurs in the result only.

Report per Rule 30(e).

  • 18 -

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
NC Courts
Filed
March 18th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Legal professionals
Geographic scope
State (North Carolina)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Judicial Administration
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Civil Procedure Torts

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