Pennsylvania has long followed the “English rule” which requires a plaintiff to prove either an arrest of the person or seizure of property 1 in order to state a cause of action for malicious use of civil procеss. 2 In this appeal, appellants ask us to reconsider our adherence to this rule. We decline to do so 3 and, therefore, affirm the lower court’s order sustaining appellee’s demurrer.
In the instant complaint, filed on June 25, 1976, appellant-Dr. Garcia averred that he is an opthalmologist in King of Prussia, Montgomery County; that in October, 1974, appel-lee, a corporation engaged in the dispensing and sale of eyeglasses, commenced an action in trespass in the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas charging appellant with trade libel, defamation, and interference with business relations; that during discovery, appellees voluntarily discontinued the aсtion; and that the action was commenced maliciously and without probable cause. The complaint averred that as a result of the original trespass action, *77 appellant-Dr. Garcia suffered damage tо his reputation, severe mental anguish and anxiety, loss of consortium and companionship with his wife, and was compelled to engage legal counsel to defend against appellee’s claims. In his prayer for reliеf, he averred that he was entitled to $3574.50 in counsel fees and costs expended for his defense to appel-lee’s trespass action, $10,000 to compensate for counsel fees and costs incurred in bringing the instant aсtion, $10,000 in compensatory damages for the loss of companionship and consortium with his wife, and $10,000 in punitive damages. In count III of the complaint, appellant-Mrs. Garcia incorporated by reference the foregoing factual averments and prayed for $10,000 in compensatory damages for loss of companionship and consortium with her husband, and $10,-000 in punitive damages.
In its preliminary objections, appellee answered that appellants failed to state a cause of action for malicious use of process because they did not aver any seizure of person or property. Appellee asserted that an adverse effеct on one’s reputation, expenditures for legal fees incurred, and loss of consortium are not the kind of damages properly recoverable in an action for malicious use of process. In sustaining appellee’s preliminary objections, the lower court stated that it was unwilling to alter the seizure requirement to allow appellants’ complaint to state a cause of action for malicious use of process. This appeal followed.
It has been the law in Pennsylvania since our Supreme Court decided
Kramer v. Stock,
In
Publix Drug Co. v. Breyer Ice Cream Co.,
“It was essential in this case that plaintiff should show that the judgments were entered with malice, without probable cause to believe that the defendant could succeed, and that the original actions finally ended in failure. .
*79 “There is here, however, a controlling bar to recovery. We have consistently held in this state that in an action for malicious use of legal process the action will not lie if there be no interferеnce with the plaintiff’s person or his property. Here the defendant stopped with the entry of the judgments and did not take any action against the plaintiff or its property. It will be noted that there is no evidence that the plаintiff had any real estate on which the judgments were a lien.” See also Beadle v. Friel,320 Pa. 560 ,183 A. 761 (1936); Eberly v. Rupp,90 Pa. 259 (1879); King v. Bernstein,199 Pa.Super. 180 ,184 A.2d 510 (1962).
The most recent statement by a Pennsylvania appellate court on the seizure requirement is found in
Roberts v. Gibson,
*80
We believe that this long-standing rule of law, reiterated unequivocally and repeatedly by the appellate courts of Pennsylvania, should be retained. In reaching this conclusion, we recall the words of our Supreme Court in the seminal case of
Kramer v. Stock,
supra at 118: “There is probably great difficulty in devising a system on the subject which would be free from inconvenience to one party or the other.” The competing interests were aptly articulated by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals in reaffirming its adherence to the seizure requirement: “Some sort of balance has to be struck between the social interests in preventing unconscionable suits and in permitting honest assertion of supposed rights. These interests conflict because a suit which its author thinks honest may look unconscionable to a jury.
Soffos v. Eaton,
*81 Accordingly, we affirm the order of the lower court granting appellee’s demurrer.
Order affirmed.
agrees that the order of the lower court should be affirmed, but only because in his opinion this court is bound by the Supreme Court’s adoption of, and adherence to, the English rule; were the question open for this cоurt’s examination, he might be persuaded that this rule should be abandoned in favor of the Restatement Rule.
Notes
. According to the Oregon Supreme Court, Pennsylvania is one of seventeen states which retains the English rule. Twenty-three states do not require a seizure of person or property. The remaining ten jurisdictions have not decided the issue.
See O’Toole v. Franklin,
. This cause of action must be distinguished from two other torts, malicious abuse of process and malicious prosecution. Malicious abuse of process concerns an improper use of civil proсess after an action has been instituted. Malicious use of process, in contrast, focuses on the wrongful initiation of an action. Malicious prosecution focuses on the same time period as instant action; however, it involves the wrongful use of criminal process. In an attempt to avoid the confusing terminology, the instant action has been referred to as “wrongful civil proceedings.” See Prosser, Torts § 120-121 (4th ed., 1971); Restatement (Second) of Torts § 674 (1965).
. Because of our discussion of this element, it is unnecessary for us to consider the other elements of the cause of action as formulated by Pennsylvania case law: that the former proceedings terminated favorably to the plaintiff, that the defendant instituted the previous action without probable cause, and that the defendant acted with malice.
See Publix Drug Co. v. Breyer Ice Cream Co.,
. The rule adopted in Pennsylvania has its origins in the English Statute of Marlbridge, 52 Hen III (1259) which awarded a рrevailing defendant costs and damages against a plaintiff who wrongfully brought the initial action. Subsequent English cases adopted the requirement of an arrest of the person or a seizure of property.
. Federal courts applying Pennsylvania law have repeated the state court formulation.
Baird v. Aluminum Seal Co.,
. Appellants argue alternatively thаt they have suffered the kind of interference compensable under Pennsylvania law. This contention lacks merit. The prayer for reimbursement of legal fees must be rejected. Such expenditures are an often unavoidable burden on litigants and cannot be construed as the kind of immediate seizure or interference with the person and property contemplated by Pennsylvania case law.
Publix Drug Co. v. Breyer Ice Cream Co.,
supra. Likewise, injury to reputation and loss of сonsortium are the kind of
*81
secondary consequences which the seizure requirement was designed to make non-compensable.
Muldoon v. Rickey,
supra;
Roberts v. Gibson,
supra. Finally, appellants’ argument that the seizure requirement deprives them of their due process rights is patently frivolous.
See O’Toole v. Franklin,
supra, 279 Or. at-,
