Dietrich Industries, Inc. v. Abrams

455 A.2d 119, 309 Pa. Super. 202, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 6091
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 30, 1982
Docket316
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 455 A.2d 119 (Dietrich Industries, Inc. v. Abrams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dietrich Industries, Inc. v. Abrams, 455 A.2d 119, 309 Pa. Super. 202, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 6091 (Pa. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

HESTER, Judge:

Appellant filed a complaint against appellee, Attorney David Abrams, who represented Jonnet Corporation in a series of legal actions against appellant. In its five-count complaint, appellant alleges malicious use of process and/or abuse of process with respect to three separate actions instituted by appellee. Preliminary objections and demurrers to each count were filed and sustained by the trial court and the complaint was dismissed without leave to amend. This appeal followed. 1

To properly analyze appellant’s claims, it is necessary to outline the procedural history of the three actions in question. These actions were filed by appellee’s client in response to two lawsuits filed by appellant. Appellant’s lawsuits, which were later consolidated for trial, attempted *205 to break a lease agreement between appellant as lessee and Jonnet as lessor. 2 In the first action challenged herein, Jonnet confessed judgment in the amount of $158,626.00 based upon appellant’s default of the lease. Contemporaneously, Jonnet procured a Writ of Execution, which was served upon Mellon Bank as garnishee. A stay of said judgment and all other proceedings subsequently was entered and, two years later, the judgment was stricken.

The second proceeding which appellant attacks involved an action in receivership against appellant. Said action was predicated upon the judgment which had been confessed and upon which the stay order had been issued. The receivership action was eventually dismissed.

The third action was directed against Mellon Bank, N.A., and was allegedly an attempt to secure privileged information about appellant in contravention of the stay order which barred further discovery. A protective order was issued to Mellon Bank, N.A., and the venture at discovery was eventually non prossed.

Appellant’s complaint alleged in five counts:

(1) That appellee caused the receivership action to be initiated while he was aware that insufficient grounds existed to sustain said action;
(2) That appellee caused a Writ of Execution to be served and instituted garnishment proceedings against appellant’s financial institution, Mellon Bank, N.A., while he was aware that insufficient grounds existed to sustain said action;
(3) That appellee caused an action in equity to be filed against Mellon Bank, N.A., to obtain confidential information about appellant in violation of both the National Banking Act and the stay entered by the trial judge.
*206 (4) That appellee caused a judgment to be improperly confessed against appellant; and
(5) That appellee knowingly filed untrue responses to interrogatories and pretrial statements indicating his client’s losses were significantly higher than they were so as to acquire a greater lien on appellant’s property.

Appellant contends that the above actions were instituted for reasons other than as set forth in the pleadings, inter alia, to create great distress, inconvenience, and expense in defending against these actions so as to force appellant to pay amounts which were the subject of other litigation.

Appellee filed preliminary objections to the above complaint, contending that the complaint failed to set forth: (1) that he acted other than as counsel for Jonnet, and (2) elements of a cause of action for trespass. The trial court found that appellant’s complaint attempted to set forth several causes of action for malicious use of process. However, that court ruled that the complaint failed to allege the required elements of that cause of action and consequently was fatally flawed.

Appellant asserts in this appeal that the lower court erred in improperly sustaining appellee’s demurrers. In the alternative, appellant argues that it should have been permitted to amend its complaint.

The tort known as malicious use of process 3 is often confused with another tort of a deceptively similar name, abuse of process. Abuse of process occurs when the legal process is utilized for some unlawful purpose, and not for which it was intended. Triester v. 191 Tenants Ass’n., 272 Pa.Super. 271, 279, 415 A.2d 698, 702 (1979); DiSante v. Russ Financial Co., 251 Pa.Super. 184, 380 A.2d 439 (1977); Casa DiSardi, Inc. v. Alpha Motors, Inc., 227 Pa.Super. 415, 323 A.2d 288 (1974); Morphy v. Shipley, 351 Pa. 425, 41 A.2d 671 (1945). Malicious use of process is a separate *207 and distinct tort which arises when a party institutes a lawsuit with a malicious motive and lacking probable cause. Triester v. 191 Tenants Ass’n., supra; Dumont Television & Radio Corp. v. Franklin Electric Co., 397 Pa. 274, 154 A.2d 585 (1959).

In order to successfully pursue a cause of action for malicious use of process: (1) a party must obtain a favorable termination of the wrongfully instituted action, DeSalle v. Penn Central Transportation Co., 263 Pa.Super. 485, 398 A.2d 680 (1979); (2) the legal process must have been used with malice and without probable cause, DeSalle v. Penn Central Transportation Co., supra; Hugee v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 376 Pa. 286, 101 A.2d 740 (1954); Simpson v. Montgomery Ward Co., 354 Pa. 87, 46 A.2d 674 (1946); and (3) a seizure of property or, if the underlying action were a criminal prosecution, an arrest of the person must have occurred, 4 Blumenfeld v. R.M. Shoemaker Co., 286 Pa.Super. 540, 429 A.2d 654 (1981); Triester v. 191 Tenants Ass’n., supra; Garcia v. Wall & Ochs, Inc., *208 256 Pa.Super. 74, 389 A.2d 607 (1978); DeLeo v. Munley, 261 Pa.Super. 90, 395 A.2d 957 (1978).

As the reviewing court of an order sustaining preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer to a complaint, we are required to view the allegations in appellant’s complaint as true and accord them all inferences reasonably deducible therefrom. Interstate Traveller Services, Inc. v. Commonwealth, Department of Environmental Resources, 486 Pa. 536, 406 A.2d 1020 (1979); Zelik v. Daily News Publishing Co., 288 Pa.Super.

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Bluebook (online)
455 A.2d 119, 309 Pa. Super. 202, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 6091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dietrich-industries-inc-v-abrams-pasuperct-1982.