132 Misc. 643 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1928
This is a motion made by the defendants to dismiss the amended complaint, on the ground that it appears on the face thereof that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
Plaintiff brings this action against the defendant Trade Bank of New York, Karl Schenk, its president, Henry Schenk, its vice-president, and the defendant Herbert Mandelbaum, demanding the sum of $1,500 as damages suffered; that being the reasonable amount of the counsel fees incurred by him in defense of an action brought against him in the Supreme Court, New York county, by the defendant Trade Bank of New York. The amended complaint, the pleading here attacked, alleges that the plaintiff and
Plaintiff urges that his complaint may be sustained as one alleging a cause of action for abuse of process. In Asseis Collecting Co. v. Myers (167 App. Div. 133, 138) Mr. Justice Clarke said:
Process in the Supreme Court action was not abused; it was issued regularly and employed to duly prosecute the action in which it was issued. We are not concerned with any malicious intention that may have caused such process to issue. Plaintiff fails to state a cause of action for abuse of process, as it fails to meet the requirement of the authorities cited.
Nor may the pleading be sustained as one for malicious prosecution, as it is well established that an action for the malicious prosecution of a civil suit will not lie, unless in that suit the person or property of the defendant was interfered with, as by injunction, attachment, arrest, or other provisional remedy. (Paul v. Fargo, 84 App. Div. 9; Sachs v. Weinstein, 208 id. 360.) There is no claim in this complaint of interference with person or property within the rule stated. Weber-Pleuthert Co. v. Leventhal (103 Misc. 80) was a case quite similar to the one under consideration and a like ruling was declared.
The only other theory under which plaintiff urges that his pleading may be upheld is that of conspiracy. In their briefs the defendants stressed the statement made in the opinion in Von Au v. Magenheimer (126 App. Div. 257, 262): “ Where damage results from an act which if done * * * alone would not afford ground of action, the like act would not be rendered actionable because done by several in pursuance of a conspiracy.”
But this statement should be read with the rule as declared by the Court of Appeals in Green v. Davies (182 N. Y. 499): “ There may be cases where acts committed in pursuance of a combination of a number of persons to injure a third person are actionable, while the same acts, if done by a single individual acting without such concert, would not be actionable. Such cases may be termed actions for conspiracy, but where the conspiracy results in the commission of that which would be an actionable tort, whether committed by one or by many, then the cause of action is the tort, not the conspiracy.”
The complaint does not allege that the defendants conspired to falsely institute and maintain the Supreme Court action, assuming that the institution and maintenance of said action was the overt act required by section 583 of the Penal Law. Nor is there any allegation that in the Supreme Court action there were any false allegations knowingly made; nor that the defendants federated to misstate the facts or to resort to perjury or to misrepresent anything to the court. Commencing a legal action is surely not an unlawful act. It must be done in such way, in order to be declared unlawful, as to justify the court in determining that the defendants conspired thereby to do an act prohibited by the criminal law and one within the inhibition of the statute. (Cohen v. Fisher & Co., 135 App. Div. 238.) In the light of compelling authority, the motions made by the several defendants are granted and the amended complaint dismissed.
However, that plaintiff may have another opportunity to fully state his cause, if he have one, I am constrained to allow him to serve a second amended complaint within six days after service of a copy of the order entered herein. Order signed.