Gore v. Taylor

1990 OK CIV APP 24, 792 P.2d 432, 61 O.B.A.J. 1712, 1990 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 31, 1990 WL 82229
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 10, 1990
Docket70716
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1990 OK CIV APP 24 (Gore v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gore v. Taylor, 1990 OK CIV APP 24, 792 P.2d 432, 61 O.B.A.J. 1712, 1990 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 31, 1990 WL 82229 (Okla. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

BRIGHTMIRE, Chief Judge.

The dispositive issue presented for review in this abuse of process action filed by the counterclaimants is whether the third-party plaintiffs challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence should have been sustained and a verdict directed for the third-party plaintiff.

We answer in the affirmative and reverse the judgment appealed.

I

Underlying the lawsuit — initially filed by a bank in Pottawatomie County against the guarantors of a $580,000 note, appellant Richard J. Gore, Gregory L. Mahaffey, and one George Shaw — -is the business involvement of the parties in the exploration for oil and gas.

During the pleading stages defendants Gore and Mahaffey became third-party plaintiffs by filing third-party actions, on August 12, 1986, against a number of third-party defendants, namely, Sunbelt Energy Development Company, Donald L. Goodman, and Goodco Drilling and Operating Company. On May 18, 1987, they added *433 Betty Taylor, Jim Seymour, Robert R. Jones, Paul Hoover, Steve Stalcup, and Five Way Investment Corporation. The third-party claims were that Goodman and Sunbelt had made fraudulent misrepresentations inducing the third-party plaintiffs to sign the guarantees in question and that the guarantors had been damaged because assets of Sunbelt had been fraudulently transferred by Sunbelt to Five Way Investment Corporation at the direction of Sunbelt’s stockholders, the other third-party defendants. The allegations were founded on representations previously made by Mr. Goodman, who later at trial admitted he had made them but was “mistaken.”

On September 18, 1987, shortly before filing an answer to the third-party petition, third-party defendant Stalcup testified he called Mr. Mahaffey and asked him why the third-party lawsuit had been filed against the third-party defendants. He said Mr. Mahaffey replied “that he felt like we had fraudulently transferred an asset.” Later on in the conversation, continued Mr. Stalcup, the two started talking about attorney fees and Mr. Mahaffey said he was upset about the fact his legal fees had never been paid and “if there was someway that we could get together on that, fine, to settle our differences, but, otherwise, if this puts a little pressure on us to settle the matter, then so be it. And that was the conversation.” 1

A few days later, on September 24, 1987, the third-party defendants, Taylor, Seymour, Jones, Hoover, Stalcup and Five Way Investment Corporation, filed a counterclaim against third-party plaintiffs Ma-haffey and Gore, alleging the latter had instituted the third-party action “maliciously and with no reasonable or probable cause.” They further alleged the action was instituted “with process not for the purpose of pursuing a legally cognizable claim but for the purpose of harassment and to coerce the payment of a previous obligation [attorney fee] allegedly owed [to the law firm of] Mahaffey and Gore.” The third-party counterclaim asked for the attorney fee incurred in defending the third-party claim and punitive damages in the amount of $100,000 against each third-party plaintiff.

Late in the week preceding the January 4, 1988, trial date, Mahaffey and Gore received some documents from opposing counsel which had been requested during discovery. They showed, contrary to Goodman’s representation, that the main asset owned by Sunbelt Company, a drilling rig, was mortgaged — a fact that Mr. Mahaffey concluded virtually destroyed their claim that Sunbelt assets had been fraudulently transferred. Consequently, on the morning of trial they dismissed their third-party claim and the counterclaim proceeded to trial.

At the close of the evidence the third-party plaintiffs demurred to the counterclaim-ants’ evidence on the ground it was insufficient to sustain a cause of action for abuse of process. 2

On January 6, 1988, judgment by inference was entered on jury verdicts awarding the counterclaimants $12,112.06 compensatory and $4,000 punitive damages against third-party plaintiff Mahaffey, and $12,-112.06 compensatory and $1,000 punitive damages against third-party plaintiff Gore. 3 Timely filed motions for a new trial *434 were overruled and third-party plaintiff Gore appeals. 4

II

The first proposition raised by the appellant is that his challenge to the counter-claimants' evidence should have been sustained and the counterclaim should have been dismissed for lack of sufficient evidence to sustain a cause of action for the tort of abuse of process.

To begin with, it is to be noted that there is no statutory law specifically creating a civil wrong known as abuse of process. The tort has, however, been recognized for many years by the high court of this state, but for the most part it has been defined in general terms and applied to factual situations which differ from the one we have here.

The earliest case in Oklahoma to recognize abuse of process as an actionable tort appears to be Spencer v. Arnold, 152 Okl. 189, 4 P.2d 55 (1931). It was an action brought to recover for various “acts of trespass” which included: (1) dispossession of the plaintiff, from land she owned, by the defendant and a deputy sheriff under the “claimed authority of writs of assistance issued in [a foreclosure] action ... to which she was not a party;” (2) “an assault and battery;” and (3) “a wrongful arrest in an attempt to eject her from the premises.” In short, after being told by the plaintiff that she owned the land and had never given a mortgage, the defendant nevertheless without further inquiry obtained writs of assistance from the court on two occasions and along with a deputy sheriff set to gain possession of the land. In the process all the unlawful acts complained of were committed. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for both actual and punitive damages, and the defendant appealed. The court emphasized the wrongfulness of the defendant’s aggressive attempts to dispossess the plaintiff with process issued in a case to which she was not a party. And, at the end of the opinion, after saying that the verdict was fully justified, the court added this:

“The conduct was tortious and was an abuse of process, for which [the defendant] was responsible as well as was the deputy sheriff. James v. Graham, [114 S.C. 107, 78 S.E. 82 (1913)]; 50 C.J. Process, § 383, p. 618, and cases cited.”

Later the high court handed down Neil v. Pennsylvania Life Insurance Company, 474 P.2d 961 (Okl.1970). In it the court expressed doubt that the plaintiffs’ evidence presented “a case of abuse of process” as distinguished from a “malicious use of process.” The court’s concern was whether a restraining order which had been issued at the request of the defendant and which formed the foundation for the plaintiffs’ abuse of process claim, was in fact and effect a temporary injunction. If the latter, it was void because no bond had been posted as required by 12 O.S.1961 § 1392. The court drew on the text of 1 Am.Jur.2d

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1990 OK CIV APP 24, 792 P.2d 432, 61 O.B.A.J. 1712, 1990 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 31, 1990 WL 82229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gore-v-taylor-oklacivapp-1990.