90 S.E. 764 | N.C. | 1916
The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for malicious prosecution, or the wrongful abuse of process, as he states in his brief. Whatever may be the cause of action, whether the one or the other of those named, we think the court properly sustained the demurrer. The defendant brought suit on a note given by plaintiff, and merely caused a summons to be served on him as he was passing through the State of New Jersey on a train. There was no attachment levied, or other interference with the plaintiff's property, nor was there any process against his person. The issuing and service of the summons were all. The defendant had a legal right to sue in this State, New York, or New Jersey, and to serve a summons there on the plaintiff (in this action), wherever he could be found. The case is within the principle stated in Ely v. Davis,
"Regular and legitimate use of process, though with a bad intention, is not malicious abuse of process." Cooley on Torts, (3 Ed.), p. 356, star page 221. When a right is being prosecuted in a lawful and proper way the hidden motive behind it is not taken into account. If there is any loss to the defendant in the suit, it is damnum absque injuria. It is alleged in the complaint, and, as against a demurrer, it must be taken as admitted, that there was a suit on the note by the defendant, Leslie M. Shaw, in the Federal court at Greensboro, which resulted in a judgment against the defendant in that suit, plaintiff in this. This tends, of course, to repel any suggestion that the debt was not due or that defendant in this case intended to harass the plaintiff by suing for the recovery of a nonexistent debt; but whether so or not, there was nothing illegal in what this defendant did in New Jersey, and the demurrer, therefore, was properly overruled.
Affirmed.
Cited: Dickerson v. Refining Co.,