Opinion for the Court filed by District Judge HAROLD H. GREENE.
The question presented by this case is whether the District of Columbia statute of limitations for a malicious prosecution action runs from the date on which the underlying, allegedly malicious, suit was brought or from the date when that suit *174 was terminated in favor of the defendant in that action.
On October 27, 1977, appellee Dona L. Miskell, with appellee Philip F. Hudock acting as her counsel, filed an action in the District Court charging appellant Isidore Shulman, M.D. with medical malpractice. Jurisdiction was based on diversity. 28 U.S.C. § 1332. The complaint sought both compensatory and punitive damages. 1 On June 30, 1978, the court entered a partial summary judgment dismissing the punitive damages claim. The compensatory damages claims were tried before a jury which on February 15, 1979, likewise found in favor of Dr. Shulman. 2
On November 21, 1978, appellant brought an action for malicious prosecution in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia, contending that the claim for punitive damages had been brought maliciously and without probable cause. The action was removed to the District Court under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441, 1446, 3 but the court dismissed it 4 on the ground that the one-year statute of limitations for malicious prosecution actions 5 had run.
Appellant urges that the District Court erred in computing the limitations period from October 27, 1977, when the malpractice action was brought, rather' than from June 30,1978, when the punitive damage claim was resolved by its dismissal by the trial judge.
At common law
6
and in jurisdictions everywhere in the United States termination of the underlying criminal or civil proceeding in favor of the defendant is an essential element of a malicious prosecution action. See 52 Am.Jur.2d Malicious Prosecution § 29 at n. 6, and cases cited therein;
Crescent Live Stock Co.
v.
Butchers’ Union,
*175
The District of Columbia, through decisions both of this court and of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals and its predecessors, has consistently followed the common law rule. See
Dellums v. Powell,
Under that rule and under the cases, a cause of action for malicious prosecution did not lie until Dr. Shulman prevailed on the punitive damage claim on June 30,1978, and, had he filed that action prior to that date, it would have been subject to dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6);
Leggett v. Montgomery Ward & Co.,
D.C.Code § 12-301 provides that, with an exception not here relevant, the limitation period begins to run “from the time the right to maintain the action accrues.” The District of Columbia Court of Appeals has interpreted that provision in the context of a malicious prosecution action to mean that the period begins to run “from the time that
all
the elements of the cause of action exist.”
S. Freedman & Sons
v.
Hartford Fire Ins. Co.,
Courts in other jurisdictions, with almost complete unanimity, have even more explicitly held that the malicious prosecution period of limitations is properly computed from the date of the disposition of the underlying civil or criminal action. See,
Jastrzebski v. City of New York,
The textwriters exhibit a similar understanding. Limitations-Malicious Prosecution,
With precedent and policy thus compelling one result, we would ordinarily end our analysis at this point. However, appellees have cited a fairly recent opinion of this court which appears to hold to the contrary.
11
In
Brewster v. Woodward & Lothrup, Inc.,
We have concluded that, notwithstanding F.R.App.P. 35(a) and D.C. Cir.R. 14(a)(3), 12 Brewster is not controlling for several reasons. 13 In the first place, the language in Brewster relating to the limitations problem may appropriately be considered as mere dictum since the plaintiff there could not have prevailed in any event because his claim was defective on its merits. 14 Moreover, while malicious prosecution is referred to in the Brewster opinion, the gravamen of the complaint, and the focus of this court’s decision, were claims of false arrest and defamation. With respect to both of these tort claims, the limitations period was quite properly considered to run from the date of the original arrest. 15 Finally, it is significant that we are here construing not federal law but District of Columbia law with respect to which we are of course obligated to follow the local decisions in any event. 16 Our review of the District of Columbia cases, including those decided subsequent to Brewster, 17 convinces us that in the District the statute of limitations for malicious prosecution actions begins to run from the time the underlying criminal or civil actions is disposed of in favor of the malicious prosecution plaintiff. Upon that basis, the statute of limitations had not yet run when appellant brought the instant action.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed and the case is remanded with instructions to reinstate the complaint.
Reversed.
Notes
. The complaint alleged that Dr. Shulman had failed to follow the instructions of the patient’s allergist and that as a result appellee Miskell suffered a severe reaction to an improperly administered injection.
. Appellant’s malicious prosecution complaint was based solely upon the prosecution by appellees of the punitive damage claim. That claim was fully disposed of on June 30, 1978, and we therefore need not consider the statute of limitations question by reference to the date of the jury verdict. Compare
Anderson v. Coleman,
. Upon removal, the case was assigned to Judge Hart, before whom the underlying malpractice case was still pending.
. Dismissals with prejudice were entered with respect to the claim against appellee Hudock on January 18, 1979, and with respect to the claim against appellee Miskell on February 1, 1979.
. D.C.Code § 12-301 provides that “. actions for the following purposes may not be brought after the expiration of the period specified below . .. (4) for . . . malicious prosecution ... 1 year.” Since the alleged tort occurred in the District of Columbia, we must, of course, apply District of Columbia law.
Erie RR v. Tompkins,
. Malicious prosecution existed as early as during the reign of Edward I, in the form of the writ of conspiracy aimed at combinations to abuse legal procedure. See, generally, Win-field, History of Conspiracy and Abuse of Legal Procedure (1921).
. It is generally held that an essential difference between malicious prosecution and the tort of malicious use of process is that under the latter rubric it is not necessary to show that the underlying proceeding has been terminated. W. Prosser, Law of Torts § 121 (4th ed. 1971).
. Cf.
Capital Elec. Co. v. Cristaldi,
. Appellees suggest that this concern may be accommodated by a rule which would require the malicious prosecution action to be filed within one year of the commencement of the underlying criminal or civil matter while deferring its trial until after the underlying matter had been decided. But this would mean — as appellees recognize (brief, p. -) — that the action would have to be filed not only before all of its elements could be
proved
but before they could even be
alleged,
thus giving rise to the problem discussed in the text to note 8,
supra.
Moreover, such a rule would tend to promote baseless lawsuits, for litigants would be encouraged to file malicious prosecution actions solely to avoid possible future limitations problems. See
Sicola v. First Nat. Bank,
. On similar reasoning, the courts have held premature malicious prosecution counterclaims to various kinds of civil actions. See
Kalso Systemet, Inc. v. Jacobs,
. Inasmuch as that case was brought to the attention of the District Court, it may be assumed that it relied upon it for its decision.
. These Rules prescribe that a decision of a division of the court may not be overruled by another division, but only by the court sitting en banc.
. See,
City of LaFayette v. Louisiana Power and Light Co.,
. The plaintiff had been convicted in the criminal prosecution which formed the substantive basis for his civil cause of action.
. See,
Shehyn v. District of Columbia,
. See note 5
supra;
see also,
Nature Conservancy v. Machipongo Club, Inc.,
. See S. Freedman & Sons v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., supra, and Carter v. S.N. McBride Co., Inc., supra.
