Plaintiff appeals from order granting new trial after judgment on jury verdict in favor of plaintiff. 1
*315 Questions Presented.
A. Propriety of granting new trial to defendant Terry against whom judgment for punitive damages, but none for compensatory damages, was rendered.
B. Propriety of granting new trial as to the other defendants. Was a cause of action for abuse of process proved ?
Record.
Plaintiff Joe Coy brought this action for abuse of process against defendants Advance Automatic Sales Co., Lou Woleher and Harrison Terry. 2 The jury rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiff and against defendant Terry in the sum of $1,000 “as and for punitive damages” (nothing for compensatory damages) and against the other defendants in the sum of $10,000 compensatory damages and $10,000 punitive damages. Judgment was entered thereon. Defendants moved for judgment notwithstanding' the verdict. 3 Defendants’ motion for new trial was granted on “the grounds of insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, and error in law, occuring at the trial. ...”
A. New Trial Properly Granted Dependant Terry.
No judgment could have been entered on the award to plaintiff of punitive damages against defendant Terry without any award of compensatory damages. Therefore, the action of the trial court in granting defendant Terry a new trial was proper. In
Mother Cobb’s Chicken Turnovers, Inc.
v.
Fox
(1937)
B. New Trial Properly Granted The Other Defendants.
The complaint alleges that plaintiff for more than two years had operated an amusement machine business in Contra Costa County placing certain juke boxes, pool machines, bowling machines and other amusement machines in certain places in the county under exclusive contracts with the owners thereof. These contracts are valuable rights and essential to plaintiff’s business which cannot be operated without them. Defendants Advance Automatic Sales Co., Inc., Lou Wolcher and Harrison Terry are competitors of plaintiff in the amusement machine business in the Bay Area. 4 On November 10, 1960, plaintiff was indebted to defendant under an account stated in the sum of $1,070.49, which was the only amount owed by plaintiff to defendant. On and prior to that day and again on November 15, 1960, defendant and defendant Terry conspired “together in an effort and conspiracy to deprive plaintiff of nine of his exclusive locations for said amusement machines, in an effort to obtain said locations’’ for defendant’s business. In furtherance of the conspiracy defendant filed an action in Contra Costa County Superior Court for a total sum of $3,834.81 at a time when defendant knew that $1,070.49 was the only sum owed by plaintiff. Defendant obtained a writ of attachment in the sum *317 of $3,834.81 and directed the Marshal of the Richmond Municipal Court to attach 18 of plaintiff’s amusement machines in nine of said places in Contra Costa County. The attachment was levied by said marshal on November 15, 1960. Defendant arranged to accompany said marshal with his own machines “and attempted to and did arrange to place their own amusement machines in the place and stead of the machines of plaintiff,” thereby taking said exclusive locations from plaintiff for the use and benefit of defendant. The 18 machines “picked up” by said marshal under said writ of attachment were of a value in excess of $10,000.
Plaintiff sought return of $2,764.32 excessive sum paid defendant, general and special damages in the sum of $22,400, and punitive damages of $15,000 from each defendant.
Plaintiff’s claimed abuse of process is based upon the allegations that with the motive of obtaining the locations of plaintiff’s machines and substituting his own, defendant filed an action and obtained a writ of attachment for an excessive sum, had the marshal levy upon and remove plaintiff’s machines valued far in excess of the amount due or even the amount for which the writ of attachment was issued.
Without detailing the evidence, it may be said that there was evidence from which the jury could find that defendant desired to have plaintiff's machines attached and removed so that defendant could solicit plaintiff’s business locations for his own machines. (Although defendant denied that this was the intention, the jury evidently so found.) As to the amount of the indebtedness due defendant from plaintiff the evidence shows at least that the correct amount was in dispute between the parties. Defendant’s books showed the larger indebtedness. Plaintiff denied owing that amount although he was not clear as to exactly how much he did owe. Defendant told plaintiff, in effect, that the attachment would not be released unless plaintiff paid the amount claimed by defendant. The issue whether the amount claimed by the defendant was greater than the amount due and owing was taken from the jury by the court, it being of the opinion that the issue was relevant only in an action for malicious prosecution.
While the complaint alleged that the levy was on machines of values greatly in excess of the amount sued for, no evidence was introduced to support this allegation. Moreover, plaintiff is not now urging this contention. At oral argument counsel for plaintiff stated that he was basing his contention *318 that there was an abuse of process solely upon the fact that defendant’s agent accompanied the marshal with the intent of soliciting the plaintiff’s business locations as the machines were removed.
The complaint did not state a cause of action for abuse of process nor did the evidence, viewing it most favorably towards plaintiff, prove such a cause of action. In
Kyne
v.
Eustice
(1963)
It is well settled that an action for abuse of process does not lie for maliciously causing process to issue. (See 72 C.J.S. § 120, p. 1190.) Also see
Clark
v.
Nordholt
(1898)
Therefore, the allegation that in the attachment action the amount sued for was greatly in excess of the amount due adds nothing to an attempt to set up a cause of action for abuse of process, and the court was justified in removing from consideration of the jury the determination of whether the amount sued for was or was not excessive. “It is clear that in order for an action to be for abuse of process there must be some act additional to the issuance of process, where the party is entitled to such process. An improper motive in obtaining the process is not enough to afford grounds for an action for abuse of process if the latter were regularly issued. This principle is well illustrated by the case of
Pimentel
v.
Houk
(1951)
To constitute abuse of process there must be an abuse in the use to which it is put after issuance. If as here, the process is legitimately used, the motive with which it is used becomes immaterial. As said in Tellefsen v. Key System Transit Lines, supra, at page 614, the effect of the attachment would be the same whether the writ was used with or without malice.
As to defendant’s employee soliciting business from the owners of the places from which the machines were removed, there is nothing illegal in such solicitation. Defendant had a right to so solicit, just as in
Kyne
v.
Eustice, supra,
Plaintiff contends that the situation in
Spellens
v.
Spellens
(1957)
“ ‘ “One who uses legal process, whether criminal or civil, against another to accomplish a purpose for which it is not designed is liable to the other for the pecuniary loss caused thereby.” ’ ” (P. 231.) The court pointed out that the defendant caused a claim and delivery writ to issue and had an automobile which was the “quasi-community property” of the parties seized by the sheriff “for the ulterior purpose of making things difficult for plaintiff so she would drop her main action [divorce]. It was like a threat, not really to obtain possession of the property which he claimed as his own, but to coerce her with regard to the main action.” As further stated by the court, “ ‘. . . There is, in other words, a form of extortion, and it is what is done in the course of negotiation, rather than the issuance or any formal use of the process itself, which constitutes the tort.’ ” (Pp. 232-233.)
Nor are the facts in
Tranchina
v.
Arcinas, supra,
In our ease, as we have seen, there was no abuse of process. Defendant used the writ of attachment for the purpose for which such writs are issued, namely, to attach property for a debt due. Nor was there anything improper nor actionable in defendant’s refusing to dismiss the attachment unless plaintiff paid the full amount sued for. If plaintiff felt that he did not owe this amount, instead of paying it to defendant to get the attachment released, he could have deposited the money in court, or filed a bond to await the outcome of the action.
Thus, neither the complaint alleged nor the proof showed any cause of action for abuse of process. The complaint does not attempt to set forth a cause of action in malicious prosecution. The basic elements in such an action are (1) favorable termination of the action claimed to be maliciously *322 brought, (2) lack of probable cause in bringing it, and (3) malice. (See 2 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law, § 97, p. 1268.) The first requirement is missing in this case. It is neither alleged nor proved that the action terminated favorably to the defendant in the attachment action—plaintiff here.
The trial court was right in granting a new trial under both the theories upon which it acted. The court had erred in not granting a judgment notwithstanding the verdict as no cause of action was alleged or proved.
The order granting the new trial is affirmed.
Sullivan, J., and Molinari, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied July 14, 1964, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 27, 1964.
Notes
Such order is appealable. (Code Civ. Proc., § 963.)
Two other defendants, Bebieh and Kern, were granted nonsuits. This ruling is not involved in this appeal.
The record fails to disclose the ruling, if any, on this motion.
It was stipulated at the trial that Advance Automatic Sales Co., Inc., and Lou Wolcher be deemed to be one and the same person and that Harrison Terry was employed by Lou Wolcher during the period described in the complaint. The word ‘ ‘ defendant ’ ’ used hereinafter will refer to both Advance Automatic Sales Co., Inc., and Lou Wolcher. Terry will be referred to as 1' defendant Terry. ’ ’
