Morphy v. Shipley

41 A.2d 671, 351 Pa. 425, 1945 Pa. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 19, 1945
DocketAppeal, 223
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 41 A.2d 671 (Morphy v. Shipley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morphy v. Shipley, 41 A.2d 671, 351 Pa. 425, 1945 Pa. LEXIS 342 (Pa. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

The suit out of which this appeal grows embraced two separate causes of action, the one, for damage to furniture whereof the plaintiff claimed to be the owner and, the other, for the defendants’ alleged malicious use and abuse of legal process in causing the sheriff to levy upon the furniture and advertise it for sale pursuant to writs of execution issued upon judgments to which the plaintiff was not a party. The learned trial judge excluded the latter cause as lacking legal basis under the facts of the case but submitted the former to the jury which returned a verdict for the defendants. Motion for new trial was denied. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment entered upon the verdict.

Appellant no -longer questions that the evidence adduced at - trial was sufficiént to support the verdict so *427 far as it.bears upon the cause of action submitted to the jury. The matter now assigned for error relates solely to the action of the court below, both at trial and on the motion for new trial, in denying the plaintiff a right of action for the defendants’ alleged malicious use and abuse of legal process under the circumstances present. Whether the lower court’s action in such regard was error constitutés the one question involved on this appeal.

The facts, as disclosed by the pleadings and proofs, show the following: On October 17, 1934, the defendants by written agreement leased to one Irving J. Lavinsky a certain dwelling house for use as an “antique shop and antique storage warehouse?’. The lease, which was for a term of one year, was thereafter continued in force from year to year, down to February 24, 1937, under a provision for . its automatic renewal in certain circumstances. On the date last mentioned the lessee, by agreement with the defendants, surrendered the lease, which covered the whole of the premises, and accepted a new lease for portions of the second and third floors of the dwelling, which were to be used as “storage room for furniture”. On May 27, 1938, pursuant to a warrant of attorney contained in the lease, the defendants entered judgment by confession against the lessee for arrearages in rent. On June 13, 1938, the. defendants executed a new lease to Lavinsky for a term of six months from May 1,1938, for the third and fourth floors of the same dwelling for use as “storage rooms for furniture”. On November 2, 1938, the lessee having failed to pay the rent called for by the lease last mentioned, the defendants competently entered judgment against hifn by confession in accordance with the lease for the amount of the unpaid rent.

On November 2,1938, the defendants caused writs of execution to issue upon both of the above mentioned judgments, i. e., a writ of fieri facias on the judgment confessed under the 1937 lease and a writ of habere faeias *428 possessionem, with a writ of fieri facias conjoined, on the judgment confessed under the 1938 lease. In accordance with the defendants’ instructions, the sheriff executed these writs by levying upon and advertising for sale the goods and household furniture, found upon the demised premises, and by removing the furniture to a storage house forthwith in execution of the possessory writ. On November 22, 1938, the plaintiff filed with the sheriff a claim to ownership of the furniture taken in execution. As a result of that notice, the sheriff postponed the sale. Nor did he thereafter sell the furniture down to the time of the trial of this case some four and one-half years later. During all of that time the furniture remained in storage where the sheriff had placed it.

Mrs. Morphy, as plaintiff, avers that she occupied a portion of the demised premises (for storage of the furniture in question) as a sublessee of Lavinsky from as far back as September 1935 and that her sublease was expressly renewed by Lavinsky upon each subsequent change of lease to him from the defendants. Each of the leases to Lavinsky provided that he should not sublet the premises or any part thereof “without the written consent of [the] Lessor first had and obtained”. The plaintiff neither averred nor proved any such written consent.

However, she did allege knowledge on the part of the defendants of her subtenancy and of her ownership of the furniture stored on the premises. Without implying that her proofs were sufficient to establish a waiver of the express provision against subletting without written consent from the lessors, for present purposes, we shall presume in the plaintiff’s favor both with respect to the existence of her subtenancy and as to the defendants’ alleged knowledge of her ownership of the furniture. It is indeed very doubtful whether the evidence was sufficient to support a finding of such knowledge on the part of the defendants until after the sheriff had made his levies under the writs. Furthermore, it appears in the plaintiff’s case (by written response from defend *429 ants’ representative to plaintiff’s counsel which was offered generally) that “Lavinsky ha[d] repeatedly advised * * * [the defendants] that certain of the goods on the premises taken out on the hab. fac. belonged to him” and that “Neither he or Mrs. Morphy ha[d] ever offered to distinguish or identify the goods which belonged to them separately.”

In her statement of claim, the plaintiff charges a malicious use and an abuse of legal process. There is a distinction between the two which it is important to keep in mind when appraising the averments and.proofs. Where a suit is for malicious use of legal process, it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to aver and prove that the defendant acted not only maliciously but without reasonable or probable cause: Mayer v. Walter, 64 Pa. 283, 286; Johnson v. Land Title Bank & Trust Company, 329 Pa. 241, 242-243, 198 A. 23. But, a plaintiff need prove neither want of probable cause nor malice where the claim is for an atuse of legal process. See Mayer v. Walter, supra, at p. 286; Siegel v. The Netherlands Company, Inc., 59 Pa. Superior Ct. 132, 138; and Korrallas v. Griffiths, 70 Pa. Superior Ct. 431, 433. Malice and want of probable cause are concomitant ingredients of conduct which amounts to an abuse of legal process. “An abuse is where the party employs it [i. e., legal process] for some unlawful object, not the purpose which it is intended by the law to effect; in other words, a perversion of it.” See Mayer v. Walter, supra, and the illustrations there given at p. 286.

In the present instance, the writs of execution were regularly issued upon valid judgments 1 and were issued *430 for a proper, and not some indirect or ulterior, purpose. They were designed to obtain satisfaction of judgments for rent out of goods upon the demised property and, by removal of the goods, to give the landlords possession of the premises to which they were rightfully entitled because of their lessee’s established defaults. The case does not involve an abuse of process. It cannot justifiably be said that either the issuance or the use made of the writs was a perversion of them. Shane v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 A.2d 671, 351 Pa. 425, 1945 Pa. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morphy-v-shipley-pa-1945.