In this action of tort for abuse of process and excessive attachment, the plaintiffs, husband and wife, had a verdict. The case is here on the defendant’s exceptions to the denial of his motions for a directed verdict and a new trial.
1. The evidence most favorable to the plaintiffs was as follows: In August, 1955, Mrs. Quaranto (hereinafter called the plaintiff) purchased from Northeastern Furniture Company (Northeastern) a rug, pad, and parlor set. The merchandise was to be paid for on the instalment plan, and a conditional sale contract and a promissory note were executed in blank by the plaintiff in favor of the furniture company. Although the contract introduced in evidence called for monthly instalments of $19.37, it was agreed that the plaintiff was to pay only $3 a week and “if she had a dollar more she would give it.” In March, 1957, the defendant purchased some of Northeastern’s accounts receivable, among which was the Quaranto account. At the time the defendant purchased this account he received from Northeastern the conditional sale agreement and note which the plaintiff had signed. The plaintiff agreed with the defendant to continue paying $3 a week, and she thereafter
Following the attachment, the defendant “put . . . [the plaintiff’s] name in the credit bureau.” The defendant continued to call on the plaintiff and she made weekly payments until October, 1959, when the debt was paid in full. Thereupon, slightly more than two years after the attachment was made, it was removed. While the attachment remained it was the subject of discussion between the plaintiff and the defendant at various times. The defendant offered at one time to remove the attachment if the plaintiff would share the costs of it. The defendant told the plaintiff that the sole purpose of the attachment was to “make secure what to him was a lot of money.” The plaintiffs took no action to dissolve or reduce the attachment. The plaintiff’s husband testified that he “never bought any furniture from Northeastern . . that his wife did.”
To constitute a cause of action for abuse of process “it must appear that the process was used to accomplish some ulterior purpose for which it was not designed or intended, or which was not the legitimate purpose of the particular process employed. ’ ’
Gabriel
v.
Borowy,
We need not decide whether an attachment of property for a debt not yet due is an ulterior purpose for which the process of attachment was not designed. Generally, the assignment of a debt carries with it every remedy or security that is incidental to the subject matter of the assignment and could have been used or made available to the
It could have been found that the defendant should reasonably have known that the plaintiff’s husband was not a party to the conditional sale contract and note, and the jury could have found that the husband was not otherwise liable for the debt incurred by his wife. It has been held that the intentional “attachment . . . of . . . property ... to enforce a claim which [it could be found] the defendant knew was groundless . . . was an abuse of legal process.”
Reardon
v.
Sadd,
If the attachment of the husband’s interest would conceivably have injured him in some way apart from the attachment of his wife’s interest, he could have applied for a discharge of the attachment as it related to his interest. G-. L. c. 223, § 114. The husband’s case stands no stronger by reason of the length of time the attachment was in effect. The damage claimed by the husband extended over a two year period but with the remedy of discharge readily available, he could not disregard this remedy and allow damages to mount; a party claiming injury by a tort has a duty to use reasonable means to minimize his damages.
Loker
v.
Damon,
Exceptions sustained.
Judgment for the defendant.
Notes
Both the conditional sale agreement and note contained a provision that if the purchaser failed to pay any instalment the entire balance would be due at the option of the seller. Even though acceleration provisions are not self-operative
(Grozier
v.
Post Publishing Co.
