H. P. Rieger & Co. v. Knight

97 A. 358, 128 Md. 189, 1916 Md. LEXIS 60
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 7, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 97 A. 358 (H. P. Rieger & Co. v. Knight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. P. Rieger & Co. v. Knight, 97 A. 358, 128 Md. 189, 1916 Md. LEXIS 60 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of the appellee for costs, after a demurrer had been sustained to the declaration of the appellant, who declined to amend. There are three counts in the declaration, and the demurrer was to each count. It is alleged in the first, that the plaintiff and defendant were engaged in the City of Baltimore in the manufacture, sale and erection of tombs, monuments and mausoleums, and they entered into competition for the obtention of a contract to erect a mausoleum for one Laura Praeger; that on or about the 21st óf February, 1910, the said Laura Praeger awarded to the plaintiff a contract for the construction of a granite mausoleum, to be erected in her family lot in Druid Hill Cemetery; that the plaintiff began the erection of said mausoleum and the “plans and specifications called and provided for a method of construction and ventilation and drainage of a mausoleum and the crypts or catacombs therein in a manner which was usual and customary and well known in the trade for a long period of years”; that having failed to obtain the contract, the defendant instituted suit on the 21st day of February, 1911, by exhibiting his bill of complaint in the United States District *191 Court against the plaintiff (and others named, who wrere sued individually) charging it with the infringement of certain letters patent, and prayed for an injunction and damages, to which the plaintiff filed an answer denying any infringement; proofs were taken on both sides and the case came on regularly to be heard by Judge Hose in said District Court, and after argument the said District Court passed a final decree dismissing the bill of complaint; that the defendant having been allowed an appeal prosecuted it in the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, and after argument that Court, on the 3rd of February, 1914, affirmed the decree of the District Court, dismissing the bill of complaint. That count then concludes as follows: “and the said defendant herein, by reason of his alleged claim to said pretended patent rights above mentioned, contrived to procure the said process of the said United States District Court against this plaintiff (who was one of the defendants in said cause) and its decretal order prohibiting the plaintiff from constructing said mausoleum and carrying on its business as above mentioned, without sufficient and probable ■cause) and for the purpose of oppressing it and to break up its business, and by so doing subjected the plaintiff to great loss and expense, both in time and money, costs and counsel fees, and greatly damaged and injured this plaintiff in its business, financial standing and otherwise.”

In the second count it is alleged that the defendant falsely pretended to have a patent right to the exclusive use of the method of construction and ventilation and drainage of mausoleums and the crypts or catacombs therein, although it was well known to the defendant that the method and manner of construction and ventilation and drainage as described and disclosed in his alleged patent were the usual and common ones being used, etc.; that by reason of his pretended claim to said alleged patent rights and the false affidavits filed in said cause, in the United States District Court, together with his bill of complaint for an injunction, “a pro *192 visional or preliminary injunction was on the 16th day of May, 1911, issued by said United States District Court, prohibiting and restraining the plaintiff and its co-defendants from completing and delivering the Praeger mausoleum and any other mausoleums the plaintiff was then engaged in erecting” ; that upon final hearing in said Court, upon the pleadings and testimony taken, the said -preliminary injunction was dissolved and the bill dismissed, on the ground that the said complainant had no valid patent rights to the method of construction and ventilation and drainage o'f mausoleums, etc., which order dissolving the said injunction and dismissing the bill was affirmed by. the United States Circuit Court of Appeals upon appeal prosecuted by him, “and by reason of the defendants’ action in procuring said injunction and restraining order of the District Court aforesaid the plaintiff was greatly damaged and injured by the defendant in its business, fináncial credit and otherwise.”

The third count is as follows: “And for that the said defendant falsely and maliciously.-procured said injunction to be issued against said plaintiff by falsely alleging in his bill of complaint against it filed in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, that the plaintiff was infringing his patent rights as above mentioned, while he well knew that the plaintiff was not infringing the alleged patent rights of the said defendant, but that the plaintiff was-using, as it had a perfect right to do, the common and usual method of construction and ventilation and drainage known to the trade for a long period of years; and by reason of the false and malicious charges against this plaintiff in said bill of complaint, and the false affidavits filed in said cause he ewas enabled to procure said injunction to be issued against this plaintiff for the purpose and with the intent of oppressing it and breaking up its business, and to prevent it from competing with him, the said defendant, in the monumental stone business, and that by so doing he subjected this plaintiff to great expense in money, and to great loss of both time *193 and business, but that after years of loss and litigation the Court of last resort, i. e., the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, decided that this defendant had no valid patent rights and passed an order affirming the decree of the United States District Court dissolving the provisional or preliminary injunction and dismissing the hill of complaint.”

It may be well to first recall some of the decisions of this Court in reference to suits for malicious prosecution of civil actions. McNamee v. Minke, 49 Md. 122, was an action on the case for a malicious prosecution of an ejectment suit, which this Court held could not be maintained. In the course of the opinion Judge Alvey said: “It is true, a party may he held liable for a false and malicious prosecution of either a criminal or civil proceeding; but when it. has been attempted to hold a party liable for the prosecution of a civil proceeding, it has generally been in cases where there has been an alleged malicious arrest of the person, as in Turner v. Walker, 3 G. & J. 377, or a groundless and malicious seizure of property, or the false and malicious placing the plaintiff in bankruptcy, or the like.” Then after quoting from Lokd Camdey, C. J., in Goslin v. Wilcox, 2 Wils. 302, and from 1 Bac. Abr., tit., Action on the Case, (H) 141, be continued: “But if the plaintiff declares that be has been falsely and maliciously arrested, or that, by reason of a false claim maliciously asserted by the defendant, be was required to give bail, and upon failure be was detained in custody, or his property was attached, there the action lies, because of the special damage sustained bv the plaintiff'. It- is not enough, however, for the plaintiff to declare generally that the defendant brought an action against him

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 A. 358, 128 Md. 189, 1916 Md. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-p-rieger-co-v-knight-md-1916.