ON PETITION FOR TRANSFER
Pеnny Reichhart is an employee of Chemical Waste Management of Indiana (CWMI) and a resident taxpayer of the City of New Haven. She sued to challenge New Haven's attempt to annex CWMI's facility and New Haven counterclaimed for malicious prosecution. One element of New Haven's malicious prosecution claim is that Rеichhart's suit was brought without "probable cause." We hold that lack of probable cause is not satisfied simply because a citizen initiates a taxpayer challenge financed by her employer, and that Reichhart had probable cause to bring her suit.
Factual and Procedural Background
On November 26, 1991, New Haven passed a municipal ordinance to annex land on which CWMI operated a hazardous waste disposal facility. Two weeks later, Penny Reichhart, an employee of CWMI and a resident of New Haven, filed a "Citizen Taxpayer Challenge" pursuant *377 to the Indiana Declaratory Judgment Act. 1 Reichhart alleged that the annexation ordinance was enacted in violation of Indiana's Open Door law. The trial court immediately issued а temporary restraining order against the annexation.
Reichhart's lawsuit was financed by her employer, CWMI. In response to the restraining order, New Haven withdrew the annexation ordinance and filed a counterclaim against Reichhart and a third party complaint against CWMI, alleging that Reichhart's lawsuit, financed by CWMI, constituted an abuse of prоcess. The trial court denied Reichhart's and CWMI's joint motion for summary judgment on the counterclaim. That order was certified for interlocutory appeal and the Court of Appeals reversed, holding that Reichhart and CWMI were entitled to summary judgment on the abuse of process claim. Reichhart v. City of New Haven,
While the interlocutory apрeal was pending in the Court of Appeals, New Haven amended its counterclaim and third-party complaint to add a count of malicious prosecution. After the Court of Appeals ruled, Reichhart and CWMI moved to dismiss the malicious prosecution claim on three grounds. First, they argued that taxpayer petitions such as Reichhart's arе "absolutely privileged" and a governmental entity cannot maintain an action for malicious prosecution in response to them. Second, they contended that the Court of Appeals opinion in Reich hart I constituted the law of the case and barred New Haven's action for malicious prosecution. Third, they argued that a gоvernmental entity is precluded from seeking an award of punitive damages.
In February 1999, the trial court granted Reichhart's and CWMI's motion to dismiss but did not specify its reasons. New Haven appealed that decision. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court, holding that although the action was not barred by the law of the case doctrine, the First Amendmеnt protects a citizen's right to petition the government without regard to the citizen's motivation. Because Reich-hart, as a taxpayer, was a qualified petitioner with a legitimate claim against a governmental entity, New Haven was barred from pursuing a malicious prosecution claim against her and CWMI. City of New Haven v. Reichhart,
We grantеd transfer in order to clarify Indiana law regarding the nature and extent of a taxpayer's privilege to pursue a challenge against a governmental entity without risking a malicious prosecution claim.
Standard of Review
It is well settled that a complaint may not be dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted unless it is clear on the face of the complaint that the complaining party is not entitled to relief McQueen v. Fayette County Sch. Corp.,
I. Malicious Prosecution
The Court of Appeals explored two рossible justifications for the trial court's judgment in Reichhart II After concluding that the "law of the case" doctrine did not dispose of the issue, the Court of Appeals analyzed Reichhart's right of petition under the First Amendment as a bar to New Haven's claim. Reichhart II,
The essence of malicious prosecution rests on the notion that the plaintiff-in this case, New Haven-has been improperly subjected to legal process. Ziоbron v. Crawford,
In Reichhart I, the Court of Appeals addressed the "improper process" elеment of New Haven's abuse of process claim against Reichhart. The Court of Appeals concluded that Reichhart's taxpayer challenge was "procedurally and substantively proper" and was "authorized by statute and thus legitimate.
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Reick
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hart I,
We agree that the ruling in Reichhart I was not dispositive of New Haven's malicious prosecution claim. That does not mean, however, that the trial court could not find, as a matter of lаw, that Reichhart had probable cause to file a taxpayer challenge. Reichhart's taxpayer challenge alleged that New Haven's proposed annexation "has caused or threatens to cause a waste of public funds" and "will cause or contribute to serious financial and other burdens to the city." The Court of Appeals has noted on a number of occasions that declaratory judgment proceedings brought by city taxpayers are appropriate when the city common council's actions:
are clearly or patently illegal, or where the council acts without jurisdiction over the subject matter, or where there is an unmistakablе abuse of discretion in the council's decision to annex, or where wastage of public funds is present or imminent and is something more than the furnishing of the normal services and facilities attendant legal annexation.
Prock v. Town of Danville,
In Count I of her lawsuit, Reichhart alleged that New Haven's considerаtion of the annexation ordinance violated the Indiana Open Door statute. In response, the trial court granted a temporary restraining order and New Haven voluntarily withdrew the ordinance. In a memorandum of law to the trial court, New Haven seemed to concede that it had violated the statute, and pronounced that "[tlhе ordinance will be re-introduced in strict conformity with the terms of the Court's Order and in compliance with the substantive portions of the Open Door laws." The Court of Appeals properly concluded that New Haven's violation of the Open Door law in its initial consideration of the annexation ordinance meant that the city common сouncil "lacked jurisdiction to act on the ordinance, and wastage was certain to occur." Reichhart II,
II. Right of Petition
Because we have determined that Reich-hart had probable cause to file her lawsuit, and therefore New Haven's malicious prosecution claim was properly dismissed by the trial court, we need not address whether the First Amendment right to petition the government precludes a malicious prosecution action based on an attempt to exercise a statutory right to challenge the validity of a governmental action. Ind. Code § 34-14-1-2 (1998)
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; United Mine Workers v. Illinois Bar Ass'n,
We do, however, disagree with New Hаven that the Court of Appeals opinion was as expansive as New Haven claims. Not ing that this was a question of first impression in Indiana, the Court of Appeals turned to United States Supreme Court cases which considered immunity from malicious prosecution charges in the context of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act and the National Labor Relations Act. In those arenas, the Court of Appeals noted, "it is settled that the First Amendment protects a citizen's right of petition regardless of intent." Reichhart II,
On appeal, New Haven contends that: the ruling of the Court of Appeals means that any person may sue any state, county, or municipal entity, or any public school corporation or state university in Indiana, with an evil and malicious purpose and without probable cause, so long as there is "standing" and there appears to be no abuse of process.
In effect, New Haven argues that Reich-hart II nullifies the common law of mali-clous prosecution with respect to Indiana governmental entities, collapses the torts of malicious prosеcution and abuse of process and, under the First Amendment, nullifies various state statutes and court rules.
New Haven's view of the Court of Appeals opinion appears to stem from footnote 10 of the opinion:
We do not agree with Reichhart's broad assertion that she had an "absolute priv-lege" to maintain a taxpayer challеnge without risking a malicious prosecution claim. It is more accurate to say that her taxpayer challenge was privileged because she was a qualified petitioner who brought her claim against the City in the manner prescribed by law.
Id. at 607. As New Haven points out, this footnote does not specify that the claim must be "legitimate." Yet the оpinion takes care to establish that Reichhart's claim was "legitimate" 5 and makes it clear *381 that she was entitled to immunity from the malicious prosecution action because she had both "standing and grounds" to bring the taxpayer's challenge. Id. New Haven asserts that the words "in the manner prescribed by law" mean "a mere procedural hurdle" and will therefore oрen the door for a flood of frivolous, malevolent taxpayer challenges sheltered from malicious prosecution actions. We do not believe this accurately captures the holding of the Court of Appeals. Instead, we think it is clear that the court found a limited immunity from malicious prosecution actions for qualified citizеns who bring legitimate taxpayer challenges against a governmental entity in compliance with all relevant statutes and court rules. The Court of Appeals took the view that the motivation of the taxpayer bringing the challenge is irrelevant as long as the claim is legitimate. We do not address the constitutional issue other than to observe that the Court of Appeals opinion is not as expansive as New Haven claims.
Conclusion
The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court through an interpretation of federal constitutional law. We reach the same result under common law. It is well settled that malice alone is not enough to justify a charge of malicious progecution-thе claim must also lack "probable cause." As explained in Part I, Reichhart had the requisite "probable cause" to bring her . action against New Haven. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. In 1991, the Indiana Declaratory Judgment Act was codified at Indiana Code section 34-4-10. It has since been moved to Indiana Code section 34-14-1-2. The statute provides, in part, that a taxpayer may challenge the validity of any municipal ordinance and "obtain a declaration of rights, status, or other legal relations thereunder."
. Reichhart's lawsuit consisted of two claims: that New Haven violated the Open Door law and a taxpayer challenge to the ordinance itsеlf. After the temporary restraining order was granted in response to the first claim and New Haven voluntarily rescinded its ordinance, Reichhart moved to dismiss her taxpayer challenge without prejudice but the irial court dismissed it with prejudice.
. "It is undisputed that, by virtue of her status as a taxpaying property owner in New Haven, Reichhart was entitled to file а taxpayer's action and io initiate proceedings to force compliance with the Open Door Law and city
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regulations." Reichhart II,
. Section 2 of the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act provides:
Any person interested under a deed, will, written contract, or other writings constituting a contract, or whose rights, status, or other legal relations are affectеd by a siat-ute, municipal ordinance, contract, or franchise, may have determined any question of construction or validity arising under the instrument, statute, ordinance, contract, or franchise and obtain a declaration of rights, status, or other legal relations thereunder.
. Reichhart's original complaint alleged that he proposed anmexation "has caused or
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threatens to cause a waste of public funds" and that it "is clearly and patently illegal and represents a clear abuse of discretion." The action of the common council of a city to annex land must be considered a proper subject of a taxpayer suit if wastage of public funds is evident or certain to occur as a result of annexation. Reichhart II,
