This appeal was taken from an order sustaining preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer to appellant’s pro se complaint in assumpsit. The trial court held that a contract had not been made and that there could be no recovery on quantum meruit where appellant had volunteered information which enabled appellee, a publisher of books, to effect a recovery against a third person for copyright infringement. We agree and, accordingly, affirm.
*428 The averments of the complaint 1 disclose that on September 28, 1976, the appellant, James L. Martin, directed a letter to Bantam Books, Inc. in which he advised the addressee that portions of a paperback publication entitled “How to Buy Stocks” had been plagiarized by the authors of a later book entitled “Planning Your Financial Future.” Appellant’s letter offered to provide a copy of the book, in which appellant had highlighted the plagiarized passages, with marginal references to the pages and paragraphs of the book from which the passages had been copied. By letter dated October 21, 1976 and signed by Robin Paris, Editorial Assistant, the appellee, Little, Brown and Company, Inc., invited appellant to send his copy of “Planning Your Financial Future.” This was done, and appellee acknowledged receipt thereof in writing. Thereafter, appellant made inquiries about appellee’s investigation but received no response. Appellant was persistent, however, and upon learning that appellee had agreed with his assertions and was pursuing a claim of copyright infringement, he demanded compensation for his services. Appellee denied that it had contracted with appellant or was otherwise obligated to compensate appellant for his work or for his calling the infringement to the publisher’s attention. Nevertheless, appellee offered an honorarium in the form of a check for two hundred dollars, which appellant retained but did not cash. Instead, he filed suit to recover one-third of the recovery effected by appellee.
These facts and all reasonable inferences therefrom have been admitted by appellee’s demurrer.
Gekas v. Shapp,
The facts alleged in the complaint are insufficient to establish a contractual relationship between appellant and appellee. Appellant’s initial letter did not expressly or by implication suggest a desire to negotiate. Neither did appellee’s letter of October 21, 1976, which invited appellant to send his copy of the offending publication, constitute an offer to enter a unilateral contract. It was no more than a response to an initial letter by appellant in which he notified appellee of a copyright infringement and expressed a willingness to forward a copy of the infringing work in which he had highlighted copied portions and cited pages of appellee’s work which had been copied. Appellant’s letter did not suggest that he intended to be paid, and appellee’s response did not contain an offer to pay appellant if he forwarded his copy of the infringing work. In brief, payment to appellant was not discussed in any of the correspondance which preceded the forwarding of appellant’s work to appellee.
“A contract, implied in fact, is an actual contract which arises where the parties agree upon the obligations to be incurred, but their intention, instead of being expressed in words, is inferred from their acts in the light of the surrounding circumstances.
Cameron v. Eynon,
Similarly, there is no factual premise to support a finding that appellee is entitled to recover in quasi-contract for the information supplied by appellant. Where one person has been unjustly enriched at the expense of another he or she must make restitution to the other.
DeGasperi v. Valicenti,
As a general rule, volunteers have no right to restitution.
Reiver v. Safeguard Precision Products, Inc.,
*432 Finally, appellant’s complaint contains a count in trespass for intentional infliction of mental distress. The basis of this claim is an alleged statement by appellee’s counsel that if appellant instituted suit, a counterclaim would be filed for abuse of process.
The Restatement (Second) of Torts, in section 46, provides: “One who by extreme and outrageous conduct intentionally or recklessly causes severe emotional distress to another is subject to liability for such emotional distress, .. . . ” Under this rule, “[liability has been found only where the conduct has been
so outrageous in character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized community.
Generally, the case is one in which the recitation of the facts to an average member of the community would arouse his resentment against the actor, and lead him to exclaim, ‘Outrageous.’ ”
Jones v. Nissenbaum, Rudolph & Seidner,
The mere threat of a legal counterclaim, even if entirely lacking in merit, will not generally satisfy the strict standard required to make out a case of outrageous conduct. The adversary nature of litigation invariably involves a turbulent contest of wills. Appellant, a law student who threatened to avail himself of the judicial process to assert a claim, cannot properly complain when his adversary threatens to file a counterclaim. This did not give rise to an action for the emotional distress, if any, which appellant suffered when he learned that a new dimension would be added to the litigation. The claim was properly dismissed.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant failed to attach to his complaint copies of correspondence upon which he relied to establish a cause of action, as required by Pa.R.C.P. No. 1019(h). Although such copies were subsequently attached to the brief which appellant filed in the trial court, they were not a part of the complaint and not entitled to be considered in determining the sufficiency thereof. We have examined them solely for the purpose of determining whether appellant should be granted leave to file an amended complaint.
. The parties have not briefed and our decision makes it unnecessary that we consider the damages which appellant would otherwise be entitled to recover. It is clear, however, that such damages are measured by the reasonable value of services rendered and not by a percentage of the recovery achieved by appellee as a result of the copyright infringement first observed by appellant. See:
Pulli v.
*432
Warren National Bank,
