Davison-Paxon Co. v. Walker

163 S.E. 212, 174 Ga. 532, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 27, 1932
DocketNo. 8314
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 163 S.E. 212 (Davison-Paxon Co. v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davison-Paxon Co. v. Walker, 163 S.E. 212, 174 Ga. 532, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 81 (Ga. 1932).

Opinion

Beck, P. J.

We are of the opinion that the first question should be answered in the negative. In a suit for malicious use of process “it is well settled that the plaintiff must allege three things: (1) that the suit against him was malicious; (2) that it was without probable cause; and (3) that it had terminated in his (plaintiff’s) favor before the suit for damages was filed.” Clement v. Orr, 4 Ga. App. 117, 118 (60 S. E. 1017); Marable v. Mayer, 78 Ga. 710 (3 S. E. 429). Allegations of a petition, in a suit for malicious use of process, that the former suit was an action of bail-trover, and that after the plaintiff had been arrested by an officer who was required by law to execute the process she regained her liberty by paying an amount equal to the value of the property sued for and the costs of the suit, “being without means at the time to give the bond required by law in such cases,” and thereupon the suit against plaintiff was marked “settled and satisfied and terminated,” do not sufficiently show, as against a general demurrer, that such former action terminated in favor of the defendant therein. The suit being marked “settled and satisfied and terminated” indicates rather the contrary result, that is, that the former action terminated in favor of the plaintiff.

We are of the opinion that a negative answer should also be given to the second question. In Robinson v. Commercial Credit Co., 37 Ga. App. 291 (supra), which was a suit for malicious abuse of process, it was said: “It is alleged by the petition in the present suit that the present defendant sued out bail-trover process against [535]*535the plaintiff, to recover a certain automobile to which it claimed title, and that such process was sued out, not for the purpose of recovering the property, but for the purpose of ‘collecting the balance due on said automobile;’ and that the present plaintiff, by reason of his having been unable to give security as provided by law, was arrested under the bail-trover proceeding and held in jail until he paid the balance due. The allegations of the petition did not set forth an abuse of legal process. Malicious abuse of legal process is where the plaintiff in a civil proceeding wilfully misapplies the process of the court in order to obtain an object which such a process is not intended by law to effect, as contradistinguished from malicious use of process, where the plaintiff in a civil proceeding employs the court’s process in order to execute an object which the law intends such a process to subserve, but proceeds maliciously and without probable cause. McElreath v. Gross, 23 Ga. App. 287 (98 S. E. 190); Roberts v. Willys-Overland Inc., 27 Ga. App. 304, 305 (108 S. E. 138). In the instant case it does not appear that in the trover proceeding the court’s process was misapplied in order to obtain an object which such a process is not intended by law to effect, since ‘the legitimate purpose of making an affidavit to require bail in an action to recover personal property is to require bond to be given for the forthcoming of the property to answer such judgment, execution, or decree as may be rendered or issued in the case, or, on failure thereof, to have the officer seize the property, or, if it is not to be found, to have the defendant committed to jail until the property shall be produced or bond be given, unless the defendant shall be released without security.’” In McElreath v. Gross, supra, it was said: “No misapplication or perversion of the court’s process is made to appear. The object attained in suing out the petition for injunction was not a perversion of that process. If the purpose and effect of suing out the process had been to maliciously injure, harass, and humiliate the plaintiff, and it had been instituted without probable cause, but not actually put to some unauthorized use, there would have been a malicious use of legal process; but in order for there to be a malicious abuse of process, it must be wilfully misapplied or perverted to some use which the law did not intend that such a process should subserve.”

These rulings by the Court of Appeals of this State are sup[536]*536ported by numerous authorities which are to be found both in text-books and in the decisions of courts of other States. In 1 R. C. L. 102, it is said: “The two kinds of actions really necessary to be distinguished are actions for abuse of process and actions for malicious prosecution. The distinctive nature of an action for malicious abuse of process, as compared with an action for malicious prosecution, is that it lies for the improper use of process after it has been issued, not for maliciously causing it to issue.” It is further said: “It would seem to be only when process is perverted, i. e., directed outside of its lawful course to the accomplishment of some object other than that for which it is provided, that one, acting upon probable and reasonable cause, may yet become liable for so misusing the process as to be guilty of an abuse thereof. And to constitute such improper direction of process, the mere existence of an ulterior motive in doing an act proper in itself does not suffice, but there must be such a use of it as is in itself without the scope of the process and improper, from which motive may perhaps be inferred. It would seem both from authority and reason that to sustain the action these two elements are essential: (1) the existence of an ulterior motive, and (2) an act in the use of process other than such as would be proper in the regular prosecution of the charge. The first of these elements may, perhaps, be inferred from the second, but the existence of the first can not, in reason, dispense with proof of the second; for if the act of the prosecution be in itself regular, the motive, ulterior or otherwise, is immaterial. The test is probably whether the process has been used to accomplish some unlawful end, or to compel the defendant to do some collateral thing which he could not legally be compelled to do.” In the case of Glidewell v. Murray-Lacy & Co., 124 Va. 563 (98 S. E. 665, 4 A. L. R. 225), the court said: “The distinctive nature of an action for abuse of process, as compared with the actions for malicious prosecution and false imprisonment, is that it lies for the improper use of a regularly issued process, not for maliciously causing process to issue, or for an unlawful detention of the person,” citing Cooley on Torts (3d ed.), 355, where tlie author says: “Two elements are necessary to an action for the malicious abuse of legal process: first, the existence of an ulterior purpose; and, second, an act in the use of the process not proper in the regular prosecution of the proceeding. [537]*537Begular and legitimate use of process, though with a bad intention, is not a malicious abuse of process.” The Virginia court, in the Q-lidewell ease, supra, said: “The plaintiff’s case, however, . . can not be maintained. It may be conceded that the first essential element of the tort, an ulterior motive, was established. To say the least of it, the evidence tended strongly to show that the real purpose of the defendants was not to enforce the criminal law, but to collect their debt; and as a general proposition, it is illegal to use the criminal processes of the State merely to redress a private wrong.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.E. 212, 174 Ga. 532, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davison-paxon-co-v-walker-ga-1932.