142 Ga. 138 | Ga. | 1914
E. L. Waters brought suit against E. R. Winn and the National Woolen Mills. The petition contained two counts. The first count alleged, that Winn, as the agent and with the approval of his codefendant, sued out a warrant before a justice of the peace, charging him with the offense of a misdemeanor; that he was arrested by a lawful constable; that the arrest was without probable cause; that he was not guilty of the offense charged in the warrant, nor guilty of any other offense; that the arrest was malicious; and that he had sustained the damages set out. In the second count he alleged, in addition to the matters set out in the first count, that upon being arrested he was brought before the justice, when the warrant was withdrawn by the defendants in consideration of his agreeing to pay off and discharge a debt owing by him to the National Woolen .Mills, which was done, and the warrant was withdrawn. The petition was dismissed on general demurrer, and the plaintiff excepted.
The allegations in the first count 'are insufficient to set out a cause of action for false imprisonment. An arrest under a warrant, valid in form, issued by a competent authority upon a sufficient complaint, is not false imprisonment. Joiner v. Ocean Steamship Company, 86 Ga. 238 (12 S. E. 361); Page v. Citizens Banking Company, 111 Ga. 73, 86 (36 S. E. 418, 51 L. R. A. 463, 78 Am. St. R. 144); Gordon v. West, supra.
Nor does the first count set out a cause of action for a malicious abuse of process. An action for a malicious abuse of process lies where a party employs process, legally and properly issued, wrong- , fully and unlawfully for a purpose which it is not intended by law to effect; and for such malicious abuse of civil or criminal process an action will lie against the party responsible for the abuse. Porter v. Johnson, Mullins v. Matthews, supra. There is no allegation in the first count that the warrant was sued out, and the defendant arrested thereunder, to accomplish any ulterior purpose.
Judgment affirmed;