4 Ga. App. 289 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
The South Georgia Building and Investment Comjiany brought suit against Thomas Mathews and Samuel Greer, to recover damages for the malicious prosecution of a civil suit without probable cause, or for the malicious use of civil process. The civil suit alleged to have been prosecuted maliciously and without probable cause was a suit in equity in the circuit court of the United States for the Southern District of Georgia, in which suit Thomas Mathews and Samuel Greer sought to set aside as fraudulent the sale of certain property to the South Georgia Building and Investment Company, and obtained an interlocutory injunction restraining the respondent from in any manner disposing of the property until the hearing. It is alleged, in the petition for damages, that this restraining order remained in force and effect from the time it was granted, in February, 1905, until June, 1906, and that during all this time the respondent’s property was tied up by the restraining order, and it was deprived of the right to dispose of the property or any part of it; that the filing of this
The allegations of the petition, in our opinion, constitute a good cause of action; and if the facts are proved as laid, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover the damages sued for. Three grounds are urged before us in support of the judgment of the court sustaining the demurrer. It is said, in the first place, that the shit
It is next insisted by counsel for the defendants in error that the grant of the temporary restraining order by Judge Speer of the United States court furnishes conclusive evidence of probable cause, although the order was subsequently reversed by the judge and an injunction refused and the complainants’ bill dismissed, and that therefore .the demurrer in the instant case was properly sustained. Whether a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in a suit alleged to have been instituted_ and prosecuted maliciously is conclusive evidence that the suit was based on probable cause can not be stated as an inflexible rule of law. It depends, in every case, upon the allegations and the facts, the principle being well settled that such judgment will not, in every possible state of the case, be deemed to be conclusive of the question of probable cause, but that, like judgments in other cases, its effect may be destroyed by showing that it was procured by fraud or other undue means. In the case of Georgia Loan and Trust Co. v. Johnston, 116 Ga. 628 (43 S. E. 27), the subject ,is fully discussed, and the court approves of the rule laid down by the Supreme Court of the United
In the case of Short v. Spragins, 104 Ga. 628 (30 S. E. 810), which is relied upon by the defendant in error, the petition for injunction admittedly set forth fairly and honestly the facts which were relied upon by the plaintiffs therein, and on which the injunction was granted and the appointment of the • receiver made, the court in that case saying: “Surely, it would be hard law which would render a plaintiff liable in damages for instituting an action, wherein he made a truthful and honest statement of the facts, in the event that notwithstanding a judge of the superior court was satisfied that upon those facts the plaintiff had a meritorious case, a ruling to that effect should afterwards be set aside. It can not matter that the same judge reversed the judgment rendered by him in sanctioning the petition.” In the present case the petition alleges, that the temporary restraining order obtained by the complainants in the suit in the United States circuit court against them was obtained by false and malicious statements made in their equitable petition, and that these false statements were made for the pur
It is insisted that the mere bringing of the suit in the Federal court was not sufficient to authorize this suit for damages, because there was no seizure or interference with the property of the defendant company. But the allegation of the petition for damages is that something more was done than the mere filing of the suit in the United States court. An interlocutory order was obtained, by which the respondent was restrained from selling or disposing of its property for more than a year; and in order to get rid of this restraining order and enable the respondent to get control of its property, it became necessary for it to employ counsel and to pay, for counsel fees, witnesses, and expenses of attending court, the sum of $1,100, to recover which the present suit is brought.
We think that the plaintiff jn the court below was clearly entitled to go to the jury on the allegations made in the petition, and that therefore the judgment sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the petition was erroneous. Judgment reversed.