
365 S.E.2d 686 (1988)
PAMLICO PROPERTIES IV
v.
SEG ANSTALT COMPANY, Lux Corporation, Agri World Farm Management, Uli Bennewitz and The Rich Company.
No. 872SC501.
Court of Appeals of North Carolina.
March 15, 1988.
Lee E. Knott, Jr., Washington, D.C., for plaintiff-appellant.
Trimpi, Thompson & Nash by John G. Trimpi, Elizabeth City, for defendants-appellees.
*687 PHILLIPS, Judge.
Plaintiff's action is for damages allegedly caused by the several defendants negligently permitting a fire to spread onto its land on 5 April 1981. The action was filed on 21 September 1983, but defendant The Rich Company was not joined as a party or notified of the claim until 9 January 1985 when an amended complaint was filed. Eventually the claim was dismissed by an order of summary judgment on the explicit ground that it was barred by the three-year statute of limitations. In appealing from that order plaintiff paid little heed either to our rules of appellate procedure, the terms of the laws relied upon, or the state of the record. The pertinent facts are that: Adjoining plaintiff's property was a tract of forest land owned by defendant Seg Anstalt Company that was being cleared of its trees; defendant Agri World, a North Carolina partnership, supervised the contractors doing the clearing, during the course of which trees pushed into windrows were set afire and it spread to plaintiff's property; Agri World's general partners were the defendants Uli Bennewitz and The Rich Company; while plaintiff's original complaint alleged that Agri World was a North Carolina partnership and Uli Bennewitz was a general partner, it did not refer to The Rich Company or any other partner; defendant Agri World was dissolved by agreement of the partners in the spring of 1982; on 14 November 1984 while being deposed by plaintiff Uli Bennewitz testified that he and The Rich Company were general partners in Agri World, and immediately thereafter plaintiff moved for and was granted permission to join The Rich Company as a party defendant.
Plaintiff assigned as error only "[t]he granting of the motion for summary judgment of the defendant, The Rich Company." This is a broadside assignment, since it does not state any specific basis for the alleged error as Rule 10, N.C. Rules of Appellate Procedure requires, and the only questions it raises are whether the facts found by the court support the judgment and whether any error of law appears on the face of the record. Columbus County v. Thompson, 249 N.C. 607, 611, 107 S.E.2d 302, 305-306 (1959). Though the court is not required to find facts in ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the facts found in this instancethat the cause of action against The Rich Company arose on 5 April 1981 when the fire spread to plaintiff's land and that it was not served with notice of the claim against it until 9 January 1985clearly support the decision that the claim is barred by the three-year statute of limitations and no error of law appears on the face of the record. Thus, the order appealed from is affirmed.
Citing only that same assignment of error based only on an exception to the signing of the order plaintiff argues in the brief with no foundation at all that the order was erroneous on several specific grounds, one being that the statute of limitations did not run against The Rich Company in the usual way because it was an "undisclosed" partner of Agri World until 14 November 1984 when plaintiff purportedly learned that it was a partner. But the record does not show that. All it shows is that on the 14th of November, 1984, in response to an appropriate question, Bennewitz told plaintiff that the Agri World general partners were him and The Rich Company. The record does not show that plaintiff had asked the question earlier of anybody; or that The Rich Company's status as a partner was concealed from anyone interested in learning who comprised the partnership. That plaintiff may not have known before then that The Rich Company was a partner does not prove that it was an "undisclosed" partner within contemplation of law. Nevertheless, moving on from that unestablished premise, plaintiff argues that under G.S. 1-28 the statute of limitations did not begin to run against the claim until it learned that The Rich Company was an undisclosed partner. But even if The Rich Company had been an "undisclosed" partner, G.S. 1-28 would not have had that effect, because it provides only that "[t]he statutes of limitations apply to a civil action brought against an undisclosed partner only from the time the partnership became known to the plaintiff," and the partnership status of Agri *688 World obviously became known to plaintiff before the original complaint so alleging was filed. Plaintiff also argues that its action against The Rich Company is not barred by the statute of limitations because the statute did not start running against the partnership until 1982 when Agri World was dissolved in fraud of its creditors by not retaining enough assets to pay its debts. Even if the legal theory advanced was sound its only support in the record is plaintiff's own allegation in the amended complaint based on information and belief, while The Rich Company presented affidavits and other documents showing that all the partnership's known creditors were paid upon dissolution. From both these arguments it is also evident that plaintiff is under the mistaken impression that The Rich Company was obliged to show the absence of all conditions that might have extended the statute of limitations, whereas, our law is that when the applicable statute is pleaded the claimant has the burden of showing that the action is not barred. Willetts v. Willetts, 254 N.C. 136, 118 S.E.2d 548 (1961).
And still citing just its one broadside assignment of error and exception, plaintiff finally argued that the court erred in hearing the summary judgment motion before ruling on its motions for a continuance and to compel discovery; yet the order itself recites that plaintiff's counsel was present at the hearing and prepared to go forward, and the record shows that the motion to compel discovery was not filed until the very day the summary judgment motion was heard.
Affirmed.
BECTON and GREENE, JJ., concur.
