15 S.E.2d 901 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1941
The court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer to the petition and in dismissing the action.
The defendant demurred to the petition and on a hearing the court ordered the plaintiff on pain of dismissal, to amend his petition to meet the demurrer. The plaintiff filed an amendment alleging substantially that the process set forth in the original petition was legally and properly issued; wilfully, wrongfully, and unlawfully employed for a purpose which it was not instituted by law to effect; and defendant is the prosecutor and plaintiff in the cases, one civil, the other criminal; that the plaintiff in this suit is a defendant in both of the above actions; that the defendant is the person responsible for the abuse; that the diamond ring involved is exclusively the property of the plaintiff, free from any lien or lawful claim of the defendant; that the defendant's employment of the actions sets out is a malicious abuse of legal process, not instituted nor employed in good faith for punishment of crime nor *395 recovery of any of defendant's property; but for the ulterior motive or purpose of extorting by oppressive coercion the payment of a plain unconditional promissory note by which plaintiff bought the ring from defendant, by indictment and arrest; to rescind the contract without notice and to compel the plaintiff to give other and higher security or to enter into a new and different contract respecting the purchase of the ring; that plaintiff had not stolen the ring and defendant knew he had not; that his object was not to punish the plaintiff for the alleged crime nor to obtain the jewelry nor bail-trover bond, but to compel plaintiff to give up the ring which was not the property of the defendant and not the object of the process, but to pay the debt, which was the object of the process, by intimidation and fear of arrest, thus compelling the plaintiff to give bond in both cases to keep from being imprisoned and further embarrassed; that the actions set out were instituted by the defendant to prevent the plaintiff from running for and being elected to the State Senate, etc.
The demurrer was renewed to the petition as amended, and was sustained by the court. The plaintiff excepted to the order requiring him to amend the original petition and to the order sustaining the demurrer to the petition as amended.
1. In order to reach a decision we must first decide what is the basis of this action, whether it is for a malicious use of process, or a malicious abuse of process. The allegations of the petition would be pertinent in either class of cases, but the case at bar can not proceed as a case for malicious use of process, for in a case of that kind three things must be alleged: (1) that the suit was malicious; (2) that it was without probable cause; and (3) that it had terminated in plaintiff's favor before the suit for damages was filed. Clement v. Orr,
2. We now look at the petition to see whether a case of malicious abuse of process is laid. In such a case it is not necessary to allege that the suits which were instituted against the plaintiff *396
have terminated in his favor, but it must be alleged that the plaintiff in a civil proceeding wilfully misapplied the process of the court in order to obtain an object which such a process was not intended by law to effect, as contradistinguished from malicious use of process, where the plaintiff in a civil proceeding employs the court's process in order to execute an object which the law intends such a process to subserve, but proceeds maliciously and without probable cause. McElreath v.Gross,
3. No cause of action for malicious prosecution is set forth in the petition originally or as amended because "The prosecution must be ended before the right of action accrues." Code, § 105-806. It is alleged that the indictment against the plaintiff is still pending. There is no cause of action for malicious abuse of criminal process. Grist v. White,
It was not error for the court to require the amendment to the petition, or to sustain the demurrer to the petition as amended, or to dismiss the action.
Judgment affirmed. Stephens, P. J., and Sutton, J., concur.