Opinion
Plаintiff David Warren appeals from orders sustaining a demurrer as to one count and granting summary judgment as to the other two counts of his complaint for malicious prosecution and abuse of process. We affirm. 1
Facts
In January 1985 Warren filed an action for breach of contract and misrepresentation on behalf of his clients, Jane and Thomas Delaney, against Jay and Karin Evans and General Insurance Contractors (GIC). Defendants, who were represented by Wasserman, Comden & Casselman and its associate, Jeffrey A. Slott, cross-complained against Warren on theories of legal malpractice, breach of fiduciary duty, declaratory relief and indemnification. Warren hаd been the Evanses’ attorney and GIC’s corporate counsel until he was dismissed in April 1984, and it was alleged he negotiated the agreement (which was the subject of the complaint) on the Evanses’ behalf.
The complaint and cross-complaint went to trial in October 1988. After cross-complainants rested, Warren made an oral motion for nonsuit on the ground the cross-complaint was barred by the one-year statute of limitations contained in Code of Civil Prоcedure section 340.6. Warren argued, and the trial court found, that the Evans had consulted the Wasserman law firm in April 1984, more than a year before the cross-complaint was filed. *1300 No other ground was raised in support of the motion. Thе trial court granted the motion and dismissed the cross-complaint as to Warren.
Warren then filed the instant action for abuse of process, malicious prosecution and conspiracy against the law firm of Wasserman, Comdеn & Casselman, Steve Wasserman, Leonard Comden, David Casselman, Mark Roth, the law firm of Slott & Shandler and Jeffrey Slott (the Wasserman attorneys) as well as the Evanses and GIC. Warren alleged defendants cross-complained knowing the statutе of limitations had run on any malpractice action, that it was done without an honest or reasonable belief there were grounds for the action, and that the cross-complaint was filed for the purpose of coercing Warren’s clients into satisfying an obligation which was not due and owing.
The Wasserman attorneys successfully demurred to the abuse of process count on the ground the mere filing of an action is not a misuse of process. Summary judgment was also granted on the malicious prosecution and conspiracy counts on the ground the cross-complaint was not favorably terminated. Warren appeals.
Discussion
I
Warren contends the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the abuse of process count. He asserts that count states a cause of action because it alleges defendant attorneys filed and took to trial a cross-complaint they knew was groundless in order to gаin a collateral advantage in the underlying action. The contention is without merit.
To state a cause of action for abuse of process, the plaintiff must plead the defendant had an ulterior motive, and committed “ ‘ “a wilful act in the use of the process not proper in the regular conduct of the proceeding.” ’ ”
(Oren Royal Oaks Venture
v.
Greenberg, Bernhard, Weiss & Karma, Inc.
(1986)
The same argument was recently made and rejected in
Oren Royal Oaks Venture
v.
Greenberg, Bernhard, Weiss & Karma, Inc., supra,
Since Warren’s complaint is based on the premise that the continued prosecution of the underlying action was the misuse of process, the court correctly sustained the demurrer.
II
The trial court also granted summary judgment on the malicious prosecution count, finding the termination of the prior action by a successful statute of limitations defense was not a termination in Warren’s favor. Warren claims this was error. Relying on footnote 3 in
Lackner
v.
LaCroix
(1979)
To state a cause of action for malicious prosеcution, the plaintiff, in addition to alleging the prior action was initiated with malice and brought without probable cause, must plead the prior action was terminated in his favor.
(Babb
v.
Superior Court
(1971)
Termination of a prior action by a successful statute of limitations defense is not a favorable termination since it does not reflect on the merits of the рrior action. (25 Cal.3d. at p. 752.) Indeed, “Termination of an action by a statute of limitations defense must be deemed a technical or procedural as distinguished from a substantive termination. Like other procedural defenses—i.e., lack of personal jurisdiction or failure to comply with the statute of frauds—the limitations defense is waived unless timely raised.” (Id. at p. 751.) Moreover, there are strong public policy reasons which “run against maintenance of a cause of action for malicious prosecution based on an action dismissed for limitations reasons .... When the underlying action has been dismissed [under a limitations defense] and the prevailing party attempts to assert a сause for malicious prosecution, he necessarily puts in question the same stale issues. Certainly if policy considerations preclude litigation of such issues in the underlying action, the same considerations also preсlude it in the malicious prosecution action.” (Id. at p. 752.)
Warren attempts to sidestep the preclusive effect of
Lackner
by asserting footnote 3 of that opinion carves out an exception applicable here. Footnote 3 provides: “Lackner does not claim defendants prosecuted the underlying action for medical malpractice knowing the term of the applicable statute of limitations had run. Thus we do not confront the question of a defendant’s right to relief when a knowingly ill-founded suit brought only to harass or vex the defendant fails for procedural reasons. [Citations.]” (
No reported decision has determined whether footnote 3 creates the exception Warren says it doеs.
Drasin
v.
Jacoby & Meyers
(1984)
Warren does not offer any persuasive reason why the alleged conduct satisfies the
favorable termination
element of malicious prosecution. Instead,
*1303
Warren directs our attention to language in
Sheldon Appel Co.
v.
Albert & Oliker
(1989)
Warren confuses the elements of probable cause and favorable termination. Whether a prior action was legally tenable goes to the issue of probable cause, that is, did the defеndant have an honest and reasonable belief in the truth of the allegations.
(Sheldon Appel Co.
v.
Albert & Oliker, supra,
An allegation defendants prosecuted a prior action knowing that the applicable stаtute of limitations has run on the claim does not constitute a favorable termination because it does not reflect on the merits of the action. While filing a lawsuit knowing the limitations period has run is a petty act which wastes judiciаl resources, if a litigant wants to pursue a malicious prosecution action under those circumstances, he must eschew the procedural defense, forgo the easy termination, and obtain a favorable judgment on thе merits. Otherwise, the policy reasons behind requiring a favorable termination would be thwarted if a litigant could meet the favorable termination requirement simply by alleging defendants knew the action was barred by the statute of limitations.
As a unanimous court stated in
Sheldon Appel Co.
v.
Albert & Oliker, supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
Crosby, Acting P. J., and Moore, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 15, 1990.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
No judgment was entered on the demurrer interposed by defendants or the motion for summary judgment. Warren attempts to appeal from those orders, but they are nonappealable. (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1.) Although neither party raises the point, in the interests of justice and to prevent unnecessary delay we will deem the orders to incorporate a judgment of dismissal and will treat the notice of appeal as applying to the judgment so entered.
(Bellah
v.
Greenson
(1978)
