Plaintiffs filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 on February 21, 1973, seeking relief for an alleged violation of federal due process rights resulting from an ex parte attachment of real estate pursuant to procedures then sanctioned by Massachusetts law. At about that time plaintiffs also joined as amici curiae in a suit pending before a three-judge district court challenging the constitutionality of the Massachusetts attachment law. On August 7, 1973, the three-judge court declared Massachusetts’ attachment statute to be invalid. While the judgment was prospective as to others, it provided for relief to the immediate parties including amici. Bay State Harness Horse Racing and Breeding Ass’n, Inc. v. PPG Industries, Inc.,
At the time of the challenged attachments plaintiffs owned some 500 acres on Cape Cod. They agreed to sell the tract only to learn that defendant Richard L. Kinchla Real Estate, Inc., had made an attachment, returnable on January 1, 1973, in the sum of $350,000. The corporation did not pursue the first attachment, but Kinch-la, in his individual capacity, filed an action for $225,000 in the Barnstable County Superior Court on January 2, 1973, pursuant to which he made a second attachment of the same property. Both attachments were made in conformity with Mass.Gen. Laws ch. 223, §§ 42, 62-66, by recording a copy of the writs with the Registry of Deeds of Barnstable County.
Because the attachments authorized under the Massachusetts statute took effect without notice or hearing being afforded to the owner of the real estate, the Bay State court held that §§42 and 62-66 violated the due process clause of the Constitution as interpreted by Fuentes v. Shevin,
Most of the evidence submitted at the damages trial in the instant case concerned
We affirm. A plaintiff must prove malice when the wrong alleged to have been committed by a private party involves the institution of legal proceedings against the plaintiff. Madison v. Manter,
Affirmed.
