McGEE, Judge.
The State of North Carolina, on relation of the City of Charlotte, ("Plaintiff") filed a complaint and motion for preliminary and permanent injunction against Hidden Valley Kings, also known as HVK or ICEE Money, Wendell McCain, Kevin Funderburk, and Cordell Blair (together, "Defendants") on 12 August 2013. In its complaint, Plaintiff cited N.C. Gen.Stat. §§ 14-50.41 et seq., the "North Carolina Street Gang Nuisance Abatement Act" (hereinafter "the Act") and N.C. Gen.Stat. § 19-2.1, which provides for an action for abatement of a nuisance. The Act provides: (1) that a gang that regularly engages in criminal street gang activities constitutes a public nuisance, (2) that a trial court may enter an order enjoining a defendant from engaging in criminal street gang activity, and (3) that a trial court may "impose other reasonable requirements to prevent the defendant or a gang from engaging in future criminal street gang activities." N.C. Gen.Stat. § 14-50.43(b),(c) (2013).
The trial court held a hearing on Plaintiff's motion for preliminary injunction on 22 August 2013. Counsel for both Plaintiff and for Defendant Kevin Funderburk (hereinafter "Defendant Funderburk") were present and gave arguments to the trial court. The trial court found that Plaintiff had "no adequate remedy at law to prohibit" Defendants from "associating together for the purpose of regularly engaging in criminal street gang activity." The trial court further found that, without a preliminary injunction, Plaintiff and citizens and residents of the Hidden Valley Neighborhood and greater Charlotte area would "suffer irreparable harm from the criminal street gang activity regularly engaged in by" Defendants. The trial court
The trial court ordered that Defendants were restrained and enjoined from the following:
Defendant Funderburk appeals from the entry of the above preliminary injunction.
We first address whether this appeal must be dismissed as premature. "A preliminary injunction is an interlocutory order." Looney v. Wilson, 97 N.C. App. 304, 307, 388 S.E.2d 142, 144 (1990). There is no immediate right of appeal from an interlocutory order unless the order affects a substantial right. N.C. Gen.Stat. §§ 1-277, 7A-27(b)(3) (2013).
Issuance "of a preliminary injunction cannot be appealed prior to final judgment absent a showing that the appellant has been deprived of a substantial right which will be lost should the order `escape appellate review before final judgment.'" Clark v. Craven Regional Medical Authority, 326 N.C. 15, 23, 387 S.E.2d 168, 173 (1990) (quoting State v. School, 299 N.C. 351, 358, 261 S.E.2d 908, 913 (1980)). "If no such right is endangered, the appeal cannot be maintained." School, 299 N.C. at 358, 261 S.E.2d at 913. In School, the defendants offered "no evidence of any substantial right which will be irrevocably lost if the state's entitlement to the
Our Supreme Court further stated that its "refusal to allow [the] defendants' appeal is not a surrender to technical requirements of finality." Id. "The statutes and rules governing appellate review are more than procedural niceties. They are designed to streamline the judicial process, to forestall delay rather than engender it." Id. "`There is no more effective way to procrastinate the administration of justice than that of bringing cases to an appellate court piecemeal through the medium of successive appeals from intermediate orders.'" Id. (quoting Veazey v. Durham, 231 N.C. 357, 363, 57 S.E.2d 377, 382 (1950)); see also Barnes v. St. Rose Church of Christ, 160 N.C. App. 590, 586 S.E.2d 548 (2003).
In the present case, Defendant Funderburk offered in his brief that there is "no evidence of any substantial right which will be irrevocably lost if the state's entitlement to the preliminary injunction is not now reviewed." School, 299 N.C. at 358, 261 S.E.2d at 913. As discussed above, the "rule forbidding interlocutory appeals is designed to promote judicial economy by eliminating the unnecessary delay and expense of repeated fragmentary appeals and by preserving the entire case for determination in a single appeal from a final judgment." Love v. Moore, 305 N.C. 575, 580, 291 S.E.2d 141, 146 (1982). "Additionally, appellate courts are almost always better able to decide the legal issues when they have before them a fully developed record." Id.
The record before this Court contains only a brief transcript of the short hearing before the trial court and an affidavit from a detective with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department Gang Unit. Defendant Funderburk offered no evidence during the hearing before the trial court. Defendant Funderburk has not argued any substantial right that will be irrevocably lost if the preliminary injunction is not now reviewed, and his appeal is dismissed.
Dismissed.
Judges ELMORE and McCULLOUGH concur.