Hauser v. Bartow

7 N.E.2d 268, 273 N.Y. 370, 1937 N.Y. LEXIS 1215
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 23, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by127 cases

This text of 7 N.E.2d 268 (Hauser v. Bartow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hauser v. Bartow, 7 N.E.2d 268, 273 N.Y. 370, 1937 N.Y. LEXIS 1215 (N.Y. 1937).

Opinions

Hubbs, J.

This is an action to recover damages for malicious abuse of process. The lower courts have dismissed the complaint on the ground that it fails to state a cause of action. The complaint alleges that respondent conspired with others “ maliciously and wilfully, and without legal cause or warrant ” to have appellant declared incompetent so that she might control his property and prevent his executing a new will; that without the knowledge of appellant, respondent commenced a proceeding in the Supreme Court to have herself appointed committee of his person and property, and falsely and maliciously represented in that proceeding that he was violent and that it would endanger his life to appear in court and thereby induced the court to issue its process; that she was thereafter appointed committee of his person and property; that she caused him to be removed as an officer and director of a company in which they were each stockholders, sold certain securities and otherwise managed his property; that appellant was unaware of these proceedings until some time thereafter when respondent threatened to deprive him of his liberty; that he then applied to the Supreme Court, a jury trial was had on the issue of his competency, resulting in a verdict to the effect that appellant was then competent and an order was entered discharging respondent as committee and ordering her to account, and that she accounted and allowances were made to her for commissions, attorneys’ fees and other expenses.

The sole question before the court is: Do the facts so pleaded constitute a good cause of action?

*373 The legal purpose of appointing a committee of one’s person and property is to conserve the property of the incompetent and to look after, care for and protect the person.

The complaint in effect alleges that such was not the purpose of the respondent, but that knowing that he was not incompetent, she conspired with others to have him wrongfully declared to be incompetent for a wrongful and ulterior purpose; that the apparently lawful act was unlawful because done untruthfully and maliciously with the sole purpose of injuring and damaging the appellant in order to bring about a financial benefit to herself. Assuming, as we must, that the allegations of the complaint are true, if it alleges a cause of action it should not have been dismissed because it was given a wrong label. If it sets forth facts which constitute a legal wrong which the law recognizes, it is sufficient as a pleading.

“ The gist of the action for abuse of process lies in the improper use of process after it is issued. To show that regularly issued process was perverted to the accomplishment of an improper purpose is enough.” (Dean v. Kochendorfer, 237 N. Y. 384, 390). “ The action is not for the wrongful bringing of an action or prosecution, but for the improper use, or rather ' abuse,’ of process in connection therewith — as the Pennsylvania court has aptly put it, for a perversion of legal process. The process of law must be used improperly and this means something more than a proper use from a bad motive. * * * If the process is employed from a bad or ulterior motive, the gist of 'the wrong is to be found in the uses which the party procuring the process to issue attempts to put it. If he is content to use the particular machinery of the law for the immediate purpose for which it was intended, he is not ordinarily hable, notwithstanding a vicious or vindictive motive. But the moment he attempts to attain some collateral *374 objective, outside the scope of the operation of the process employed, a tort has been consummated. * * * The tortious character of the defendant’s conduct consists of his attempt to employ a legitimate process for a legitimate purpose in an improper manner, and this point must be clearly shown by the plaintiff to entitle him to maintain his action.” (Harper on The Law of Torts, § 272, pp. 593-595.)

It is not enough that the actor have an ulterior motive in using the process of the court. It must further appear that he did something in the use of the process outside of the purpose for which it was intended. (Cf. note, 27 Harvard Law Review, p. 594.) Every one has a right to use the machinery of the law, and bad motive does not defeat that right. There must be a further act done outside the use of the process — a perversion of the process. If he uses the process of the court for its proper purpose, though there is malice in his heart, there is no abuse of the process. He may be liable for malicious prosecution, but the distinction between these two wrongs must be kept in mind. As soon as the actor uses the process of the court, not to effect its proper function, but to accomplish through it some collateral object, he commits this tort. A concrete example may make this more intelligible. If one resorts to legal process to have another declared incompetent, and uses it for that purpose, he does not commit the wrong, though he may be guilty of another wrong, no matter what his motives, hopes or expectations may be. But if he makes use of that process, not for the purpose of attaining its proper end, but to extort fnoney, or to coerce action, that is a perversion'of process.

In this case, whatever may have been respondent’s motives, she used the process of the court for the purpose for which the law created it. She used it, she did not abuse it. Nowhere in the complaint can there be found any allegation that respondent did any act by virtue of *375 the order adjudging the appellant incompetent and appointing her as committee of his person and property which was not within the scope of her duties as such committee or was in excess of the powers granted to her as such committee. The complaint, therefore, fails to state a cause of action for abuse of process.

It is urged that the complaint may be sustained as a complaint in an action for malicious prosecution. It appears, however, that the former proceeding has not been determined in appellant’s favor. That it has been so determined is a necessary allegation in an action for malicious prosecution. If the rule were otherwise there might exist at the same time two judgments between the same parties directly in conflict upon the same issue. True it is that there are cases to the effect that the action will lie without such allegation where the original proceeding was without personal service and the defendant therein had no opportunity to defend. (Bump v. Betts, 19 Wend. 421; Swensgaard v. Davis, 33 Minn. 368; Apgar v. Woolston, 43 N. J. L. 57; Whitten v. Bennett, 86 Fed. Rep. 405.)

«Assuming, however, that even though the order appointing the committee may have been jurisdictionally void, and that it would furnish no bar to an action for malicious prosecution of the incompetency proceedings, nevertheless the alleged incompetent thereafter appeared in the proceeding and, after his appearance, there was a conclusive adjudication of the validity of the original order.

The complaint alleges:

“ Nineteenth.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.E.2d 268, 273 N.Y. 370, 1937 N.Y. LEXIS 1215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hauser-v-bartow-ny-1937.