83 S.E. 577 | N.C. | 1914
The plaintiff complained as follows:
1. Plaintiffs above named, under the firm name of Carpenter, Baggott Co., were at the times hereinafter mentioned engaged (in the ordinary course of their business) in buying and selling cotton for a commission.
2. Defendant W. M. Hanes is a citizen and resident of the State and county aforesaid, and was at the times hereinafter mentioned engaged (in the ordinary course of his business) in the manufacture of cotton.
3. On and between 12 June, 1912, and 27 September, 1912, plaintiffs purchased and sold for defendant, and at his special instance and request 5,000 bales of cotton.
4. Plaintiffs, at the special instance and request of defendant, paid out for defendant, in and about the purchase and sale of said 5,000 bales of cotton, the sum of $11,300.
5. Defendant agreed to pay plaintiffs the sum of $15 per 100 bales as plaintiff's commission for buying and selling said cotton, or the sum of $750 for plaintiff's services in buying and selling said 5,000 bales of cotton.
6. Defendant has paid plaintiffs, on said aggregate indebtedness of $12,050, the sum of $9,305, but has failed and refused to pay the balance due plaintiffs, towit, $2,745.
Wherefore plaintiffs demand judgment that they recover of (553) defendant W. M. Hanes the sum of $2,745, with legal interest from 27 September, 1912, and the costs of this action. *608
Defendant answered, denying generally the allegations of the complaint, and setting up three counterclaims. In the first he averred that he had requested plaintiffs, cotton merchants of New York city, to sell for his account for future delivery, according to the rules of the New York Cotton Exchange, a lot of cotton, and that he deposited a large sum of money to cover margins. That they were not, and were not intended to be, real sales, but the transactions were to be settled upon a basis of the rise or fall of prices. It all amounts to this, that they were dealing in cotton futures — gambling transactions, pure and simple. He prayed judgment for $3,000, amount of money deposited with plaintiffs as margins. In a second counterclaim he alleges that plaintiffs unlawfully and in violation of the contract closed out certain purchases made by them for the defendant, for which he claims $3,000 as damages. As a third counterclaim he alleges that plaintiffs had unlawfully and wrongfully brought suit in New York for the same cause of action as they allege herein, and wrongfully and maliciously sued out a writ of attachment "for the purpose of injuring, harassing, and embarrassing defendant, and not for the purpose stated in the writ, but to force defendant to pay a debt to them which he did not owe, and which was not collectible in law or in equity." He alleges further in the counterclaim "that defendant had no property or effects in New York at the time the warrant of attachment was issued, and at the time of its alleged service, which was subject to levy or attachment for the said cause of action of the plaintiffs, and this was well known to them." He then alleges that the court of New York had no jurisdiction of plaintiff's action, and there was no service of the process in the same. He asked that plaintiffs be restrained and enjoined in this action from prosecuting the New York suit, in order to prevent circuity and multiplicity of actions and useless expense.
Plaintiffs demurred to the several counterclaims, and upon the ground that they were invalid and did not state any cause of action against them, or any which could be prosecuted in this action, and they asked to be allowed to take a nonsuit. The court sustained the demurrer as to the first and second of the counterclaims, from which defendant did not appeal, and overruled it as to the third counterclaim, and refused the plaintiffs' leave to take a nonsuit, and to each of these rulings the plaintiffs excepted, and appealed.
We need consider but the single question, whether the third counterclaim is a good one in *609
law, assuming the truth of the facts alleged, and not any conclusion of law from them which is therein stated, for if the facts as alleged do not constitute a valid counterclaim, the demurrer should have been sustained, and this would clear the way for plaintiff's voluntary retirement from the court by way of a nonsuit, which it was his right to do, there being nothing left in the answer requiring his further presence, except the prosecution of his own cause, which he had a right to abandon by entering anon sequitur, as no other affirmative relief was prayed against him. The action is really not one for an abuse of process, but for a malicious prosecution of the New York action and the wrongful suing out of the attachment. An abuse of process is some unlawful use of the process for the accomplishment of some end foreign to the purpose for which it may be issued. This subject has been fully and exhaustively considered by this Court in several cases. R. R. v. Hardware Co.,
In R. R. v. Hardware Co., 143 N.C. at p. 58, the Chief Justice said: "It may be well to note here the distinction between an action for malicious prosecution and an action for abuse of process. In an action for malicious prosecution there must be shown (1) malice and (2) want of probable cause, and (3) that the former proceeding has terminated. R. R. v.Hardware Co.,
We said in Wright v. Harris, supra, that an abuse of process consists in its employment for some unlawful purpose, which it was not intended by the law to effect, and amounts to a perversion of it, and that the illegality or maliciousness of the proceeding leading up to it does *610 (555) not determine its abuse in law as much as the unlawful or oppressive use of it, after it is issued, for the purpose of coercing or harassing the defendant in some way, citing numerous cases; and, referring to Ludwick v. Penny, supra, and to the principle as stated by Judge Cooley, we said: "Speaking of the malicious abuse of process, he (Judge Cooley) distinguishes it from a malicious civil suit, where there is an interference with property or business, as follows: `If process, either civil or criminal, is willfully made use of for a purpose not justified by the law, this is abuse for which an action will lie. The following are illustrations: Entering a judgment and suing out an attachment for an amount greatly in excess of the debt; causing an arrest for more than is due; levying an execution for an excessive amount; causing an arrest when the party cannot procure bail and keeping him imprisoned until, by stress thereof, he is compelled to surrender property to which the other is not entitled. In these cases, proof of actual malice is not important, except as it may tend to aggravate damages; it is enough that the process was willfully abused to accomplish some unlawful purpose. Two elements are necessary to an action for the malicious abuse of legal process: First, the existence of an ulterior purpose, and, second, an act in the use of the process not proper in the regular prosecution of the proceeding. Regular and legitimate use of process, though with a bad intention, is not a malicious abuse of process. In a suit for malicious abuse of process it is not necessary that there should have been a termination of the suit in which the process was issued, nor a want of probable cause for the suit.' Cooley on Torts, p. 354 et seq. The distinction is clear: one consists in commencing and prosecuting a suit maliciously and interfering with property or business, and the other consists in the willful, unlawful, and wrongful use of the process itself."
Defendant cannot recover on his last counterclaim for malicious prosecution, as he does not allege the termination of the former suit in New York (Brinkley v. Knight,
In this connection we find a very good statement of the law in 32 Cyc., 541, 542, 543, which we reproduce substantially: Courts will never permit the wrongful use of their process; and in case such use is attempted, the party will not be permitted to gain an advantage by reason of such wrongful act. But the law goes further, and gives the person aggrieved by the wrongful act a cause of action against the offending party. This action for the abuse of process lies for the improper use of process after it has been issued, not for maliciously causing it to issue. It has been *611 said that two elements are necessary, an unlawful and ulterior purpose and also an act done in the use of the process not proper (556) in the regular prosecution of the proceeding. But it seems doubtful whether both of these elements must always be present. It has been held that "a malicious abuse of legal process consists in the malicious misuse or misapplication of that process to accomplish some purpose not warranted or commanded by the writ." And it has also been said that "whoever makes use of the process of the court for some private purpose of his own, not warranted by the exigency of the writ or the order of the court, is answerable to an action for damages for an abuse of the process of the court." . . . "Similar expressions occur in many cases. None of these statements include the second element above set forth. On the other hand, the second element alone has been held sufficient to impose liability, as where a writ is executed against property in an unreasonable and oppressive manner; where, after arrest upon civil or criminal process, the party arrested is subjected to unwarrantable insult or indignities, is treated with cruelty, is deprived of proper food or shelter, or is otherwise treated with oppression and undue hardships; or where a summons is served in an unreasonable, cruel, and oppressive manner. Although some cases hold that malice is a fact necessary to be shown in an action for abuse of process, and while the action is often denominated one for the "malicious abuse of process," it is probable that malice is not an essential element of the cause of action, and becomes important only when exemplary damages are sought. The act constituting the abuse must, however, be shown to have been willful. Under no circumstances will malice alone give a right of action. Nor will the action lie against one who in good faith has sought to properly enforce a supposed right. The action is distinguished from one for malicious prosecution in that it is founded upon the use, not the issue, of the process; it need not appear that the action was instituted without probable cause, and it need not appear that the action has terminated, but these distinctions are not observed by all the courts."
We refer to this statement for the purpose of remarking that the doubt expressed as to the necessity for the coexistence of both elements named may be removed if we regard the unlawful and wrongful use of the process as implying the illegal and ulterior purpose to be subserved, if that be essential to create the actionable wrong. But we need not enter more at large into a discussion of this question, as we are satisfied that plaintiffs have not been guilty of abuse of the process issued in their New York action, upon defendant's own showing.
"An action for damages," says Jaggard (1 vol., pp. 632, 634), "lies for the malicious abuse of lawful process, civil or criminal, even if such *612
process has been issued for a just cause, and is valid in form, and the proceeding thereon was justified and proper in its inception, but (557) injury arises in consequence of abuse in subsequent proceedings." Jackson v. Tel. Co.,
Applying these principles, we find that the plaintiff was prosecuting his suit in the New York court in a regular way and according to the established procedure of the court. There was nothing done abnormally or out of the ordinary. It may be that by the law of that State the cause of action was a valid one. Nothing appears to show the contrary. Defendant sets up our statute, but it has no extraterritorial effect. It also may be that it is illegal there. The law of that State governs, as the contract was made there, was enforcible there, and the action to recover upon it was pending there. It would be an anomaly to hold that we could, in an action pending here, declare an action pending there to be illegal, because the cause of action, though perhaps good there, is illegal here. Our statute may declare it illegal, and if so, we would not enforce it in our courts. The validity of a contract, or the question whether the contract is a legal or an illegal one, is judged by the law on the subject in the State or country in which the contract is entered into, the general rule being that a contract good where made is good everywhere, and a contract invalid where made is invalid everywhere. The general doctrine that a contract valid where made is valid also in the courts of any other country or State where it is sought to be enforced, even though had it been made in the latter country or State it would be illegal and hence unenforcible, is subject to several exceptions: (1) Where the contract in question is contrary to good morals; (2) where the State of the forum or its citizens would be injured by the enforcement by its courts of a contract of the kind in question; (3) where the contract violates the positive legislation of the State of the forum, that is, is contrary to its Constitution or statutes; and (4) where the contract violates the public policy of the State of the forum. 9 Cyc., pp. 672, 674.
"It may be laid down as the settled doctrine of public law that personal contracts are to have the same validity, interpretation, and obligatory force in every other country which they have in the country where they were made. The admission of this principle is requisite to the safe intercourse of the commercial world, and to the due preservation of public and private confidence; and it is of very general reception among nations. Parties are presumed to contract in reference to the laws of *613 the country in which the contract is made, and where it is to be paid, unless otherwise expressed; the maxim is, that locus contractus regitactum, unless the intention of the parties to the contrary be clearly shown. The rule stated in Huber relative to contracts (558) made in one country and put in suit in the courts of another is the true rule, and one which the courts follow, viz., the interpretation of the contract is to be governed by the law of the country where the contract was made; but the mode of suing and the time of suing must be governed by the law of the country where the action is brought. It is, however, a necessary exception to the universality of the rule, that no people are bound or ought to enforce, or hold in their courts of justice, any contract which is injurious to their public rights, or offends their morals, or contravenes their policy, or violates a public law." 2 Kent's Commentaries (13 Ed.), p. 458.
"It is a familiar principle of the common law that the lex loci is the general rule adhered to by courts in construing contracts, questions of marriage, legitimacy, and rights of succession to property. It has been adopted by so many States that it now constitutes an essential portion of what is denominated international jurisprudence. It has lost none of its efficacy as a rule by this; but, on the contrary, it has made thereby a bond of amity between nations; yet it is subject to a great controlling idea, that upon comity it will not be enforced if it involves anything immoral, contrary to general policy, or violative of the conscience of the State called on to give it effect. With this subordination, comity requires that we should give effect to the laws of any other State; not otherwise."Eubanks v. Banks,
The pleadings in the case are not before us, nor is the law of New York, and we cannot, therefore, say whether the contract, as alleged therein, is violative of the law of that State or of the common law, which is presumed to exist there, in the absence of proof that it is not. It may be void at the common law (Williams v. Carr,
But we need not decide upon these questions, as the court of that State, upon the papers, issued its process regularly. The plaintiff was entitled to an attachment or garnishment in order to secure the payment of his alleged debt in case he recovered in the action, the proceeding being merely ancillary, and he may have obtained judgment in the action if the contract was valid there, or if not, and the defendant failed to plead *614
its invalidity. The decisive and concrete question is this, Did the plaintiff wrongfully abuse the process after it was duly issued, and of this we find no sufficient allegation, and it looks as if defendant cautiously avoided making one. There was no arrest of his person, or interference (559) therewith, nor was there any taking of his property or obstruction of his full enjoyment thereof. The intent to arrest or to attach, or even to garnish, will not do, unless it is executed, nor will an attempt answer the purpose, unless carried out, or unless, in the course of the attempt to do the wrong, there is at least some tangible or appreciable invasion of his personal or property rights. We see nothing of the kind here, but, on the contrary, this is nothing more than a suit for the malicious prosecution of an action where there has been no illegal interference with the person or the property. Such a suit will not lie. It is said in 26 Cyc., 14: "In harmony with the English view of the remedy, some American authorities hold that no action will lie for merely commencing a civil action, however unfounded the suit may be, in the absence of interference with person or property or of special grievance differentiated from the superadded to the ordinary expenses of the suit. The usual reasoning is that the remedy of a person sued is to tax his costs, whereby he will not be stimulated to interminable litigation based upon constructive harm." Our Court is assigned to the class holding to this doctrine and following the English rule. In Ely v.Davis,
There is not the slightest foundation, in law, for this counterclaim to rest on. Plaintiff commenced and prosecuted in the court of another State an ordinary action upon a promise to pay money in advance, it may be upon an unlawful transaction, but he may have anticipated, and not unreasonably, that defendant would not plead the illegality, but would act upon that kind of honor which is supposed, by a sort of tacit consent, to prevail in such case, and to operate as a deterrent and preventive of such a course. The law permits the defendant to set up such a defense, and being true to itself, even encourages it, in order to punish a violation of its own mandate and as an example to others who are disposed to commit such offenses; but this is not done for the defendant's sake, but for its own, as he is regarded as being equally in fault with the other offender —particeps criminis. Both parties are gamblers by the moral standard and in the view of the law, and neither is entitled to any of its consideration, and gets none, except in so far as one of the guilty parties may receive an incidental benefit, and the other suffer a loss, from the enforcement of its penalties or forfeitures.
We have not discussed the question whether the alleged counterclaim, sounding in tort, can be set up "as arising out of the contract, or transaction, set forth in the complaint, as the foundation of the plaintiff's claim or connected with the subject of the action." Revisal, sec. 481, *616
subsec. 1. Plaintiffs say it is not, and cite Kramer v. Light Co.,
The court should have sustained the demurrer throughout, and then permitted the plaintiff to take the nonsuit, and this judgment will (561) be entered in the court below, without permitting any amendment, as plaintiff had already asked for the nonsuit, and cannot now be deprived of it by any change in the answer. He cannot be called back after once he has asked to depart and is entitled, at the time, to do so.
Reversed.
Cited: Jerome v. Shaw,