73 Pa. Super. 99 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1919
Opinion by
This was an action in trespass brought in the County Court of Allegheny County for the malicious abuse of civil process.
The basis of the plaintiff’s demand was that although she had never had a charge account with the defendant company and owed it nothing, it had sued her before an alderman to recover for goods sold and delivered, and having caused judgment therein to be entered against her, had immediately issued an attachment execution thereon summoning certain of her tenants as garnishees, and had secured judgments against said garnishees for the rents in their hands due the plaintiff. She averred that neither the original summons nor the writ of attachment execution had been served on her, nor had she any notice of the proceedings, until she tried to collect her rents from her tenants; that she then appealed from the judgments entered in said suit and attachment, with the result that the suit was discontinued and the attachment non-prossed; and that said proceedings were started and prosecuted maliciously and without probable or reasonable cause and with the intent of vexing and annoying the plaintiff, after defendant had been informed that she was not the person to whom the goods for which said suit was brought had been sold.
Prom the testimony in the case and the offers of the plaintiff it appears that the plaintiff had no dealings with the defendant and that the account sued upon was actually against one Margaret B. White, alias Miss M. Bevington, who resided at No. 4617 Forbes street, Pittsburgh, at the time the goods were sold and delivered,— the plaintiff’s residence being 3223 Wainbell street, Dor
The legal principles applicable to an action of this character are well settled in this State. In order to recover the plaintiff must allege and prove not only malice but also want of probable cause for such process: Eberly v. Rupp, 90 Pa. 259. There must also be shown falsehood in the demand and an actual arrest of the person or a seizure of property: Norcross v. Otis Bros. & Co., 152 Pa. 481; or as stated in Muldoon v. Rickey, 103 Pa. 110, “an actual interference with either the person or property of the defendant.” See also, Emerson v. Cochran, 111 Pa. 619.
(1) For the purpose of showing the malice and wrongful intent of the defendant, the plaintiff offered to prove that neither the summons in assumpsit nor the writ of attachment execution had been served on her, although the constable made return that he had served both writs on the plaintiff, by handing a true and attested copy of each to an adult member of her family, at her dwelling place; that said writs had actually been served by the constable on Mrs. Engel, a tenant of the plaintiff’s and wife of one of the garnishees, at her home No. 3950 Mifflin street, Pittsburgh, where she had resided for the previous eight years. From the colloquy which took place between the counsel for the plaintiff and the trial judge when these offers were made it was apparently the intention of the plaintiff to prove further that the constable had been directed by the defendant or its attorney to serve the papers on the plaintiff at 3950 Mifflin street, — although the record showed that that was known to be the residence of the garnishee Engel — and that the defendant knew that the plaintiff did not live there; but the court did not allow the matter to go that far and refused the offers on the ground that the plaintiff
(2) On the subject of probable or reasonable cause it must be remembered that this was not the case of a disputed account; the defendant had no account at all against the plaintiff. It was endeavoring to collect from
The able counsel for the appellee has cited a number of authorities in support of his contention that the judgment obtained against the plaintiff before the alderman conclusively established reasonable and probable cause. While there is some conflict in the authorities in this State as to whether such a judgment, even though after-wards on appeal it was discontinued or reversed, conclusively established probable cause: Herman v. Brookerhoff, 8 Watts 240; Graver v. Fehr, 18 W. N. C. 311; or was merely evidence of it: Mayer v. Walter, 64 Pa.
Nor did the fact that the plaintiff, upon discovering that her tenants’ rents had been attached, took appeals from both judgments of the alderman, operate to relieve the defendant from liability, if any, for malicious abuse of legal process. The effect of such appearance and appeal was to cure the defective service in the particular case, not to free the defendant of the consequences of any malicious abuse of that process. In Foster v. Sweeny, 14 S. & R. 386, it was held that appearance to a foreign attachment, entry of special bail to dissolve the attachment, and confession of judgment for a smaller sum than the amount claimed, were not a waiver of the right of the defendant to maintain an action against the plaintiff in the attachment for maliciously and wrongfully suing out a writ of foreign attachment against him, when he was not within the purview of the attachment laws.
(3) The record in the case of the defendant against Margaret B. White, alias Miss M. Bevington, showing that the defendant had afterwards sued and recovered judgment against another person for the very articles for which it had sued the plaintiff, was relevant on the question of the falsity of the defendant’s demand against the plaintiff and should have been admitted in evidence. The fact that in the copy of the defendant’s book account attached to its statement in the suit against the plaintiff in
(4) The learned counsel for the appellee further contends that seizure of the plaintiff’s property by attachment execution was not a sufficient interference to justify the action; that to entitle the plaintiff to recover, the defendant’s action against her had to be begun by seizure of her person or property. We find no such rule laid down in the books.
In Kramer v. Stock, 10 Watts 115, the Supreme Court said: “If one abuses the process of the law, as by maliciously holding to bail, an action lies. So wantonly to levy a second execution after a former levy or for a larger sum than is due, or after the debt has been paid has been held actionable, for all these are illegal and damage is thereby sustained.” In Graver v. Fehr, 18 W. N. C. 311, which grew out of dispossession proceedings it was held that the plaintiffs had no case for maliciously obtaining the judgment and enforcing it “unless there be proof of an excessive use' of the process.” Mayer v. Walter, 64 Pa. 283, was founded on proceedings to obtain possession of leased premises; Sommer v. Wilt, 4 S. & R. 18, and Barnett v. Reed, 51 Pa. 190, on writs of fieri facias; Whelan v. Miller, 49 Pa. Superior Ct. 91, on attachment execution.
In the case of Norcross v. Otis Bros. & Co., supra, relied on by the appellee as controlling here, there was, as pointed out by Chief Justice Paxson in his opinion, neither the use nor abuse of legal process, but only the giving of a notice by the defendant to the county commissioners not to pay the plaintiff, who was a contractor for the building of the county court house and jail, the
The assignments of error are sustained; the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County is reversed and an appeal to said court from the county court is allowed.