Scheide v. Home Credit Company

162 A. 321, 107 Pa. Super. 204, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 156
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 29, 1932
DocketAppeal 74
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 162 A. 321 (Scheide v. Home Credit Company) 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
Scheide v. Home Credit Company, 162 A. 321, 107 Pa. Super. 204, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 156 (Pa. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

This is an action to recover damages for an alleged malicious use of civil legal process. The plaintiff alleged that he gave to the Overhead Door Sales, Inc., a corporation, a note containing power of attorney to confess judgment for $172.40, payable in ten equal monthly installments in payment for merchandise; that the note was assigned to the defendant, the Home Credit Co., to whom the plaintiff paid several installments; that he paid the entire balance due on the note before the installments were all due pursuant to an arrangement with the Home .Credit Co.; that notwithstanding the fact that the note had been paid in full and within a few days after such payment, the defendant caused judgment to be entered on the note, issued an execution, levied on all the personal property of the plaintiff and advertised the same for sale. Thereupon the plaintiff in this action and defendant in the judgment presented a petition to court and a rule was granted on the plaintiff in the judgment, defendant in this action, to show cause why the judgment should not be opened and defendant let into a defense. After the granting of this rule the statement of claim alleges that “upon hearing the judgment was ordered satisfied, and same was properly done on December 30, 1927, by H. E. Kipp acting as attorney for the Home Credit Co.5’

At the trial evidence was offered in support of and tending to prove all of these allegations except that with reference to a hearing and order. There was no proof of such a hearing or order by the court and on the contrary, the evidence was that counsel for the defendant in the original action met counsel for plaintiff in that action and as a result the judgment was immediately satisfied and costs paid by the Home Credit Co. The charge limited the amount that could be recovered to compensation for the loss of time and *207 expenses necessitated in obtaining satisfaction of the judgment. There is no complaint as to the instructions of the trial court on the subject of damages, nor was there any cause for complaint. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $51 which was the value placed by the plaintiff upon his loss of services for two days and fees paid to counsel.

“There is a distinction between a malicious use and a malicious abuse of legal process. An abuse is where the party employs it for some unlawful object, not the purpose which it is intended by the law to effect; in other words, a perversion of it. Thus, if a man is arrested, or his goods seized in order to extort money from him, even though it be to pay a just claim other than that in suit, or to compel him to give up possession of a deed or other thing of value, not the legal object of the process, it is settled that in an action for such malicious abuse it is not necessary to prove that the action in which the process issued has been determined, or to aver that it was sued out without reasonable or probable cause: Grainer v. Hill, 4 Bing. N. C. 212. It is evident that when such a wrong has been perpetrated, it is entirely immaterial whether the proceeding itself was baseless or otherwise. We know that the law is good, but only if a man use it lawfully.

“On the other hand, legal process, civil or criminal, may be maliciously used so as to give rise to a cause of action where no object is contemplated to be gained by it other than its proper effect and execution. As every man has a legal power to prosecute his claims in a court of law and justice, no matter by what motives of malice he may be actuated in doing so, it is necessary in this class of cases to aver and prove that he has acted not only maliciously, but without reasonable or probable cause. It is clearly settled also, that the proceeding must be determined finally before any action lies for the injury; because, as it is said in *208 Arundell v. Tregono, Yelv. 117, the plaintiff will clear himself too soon, viz., before the fact tried, which will be inconvenient; besides, the two determinations might be contrary and inconsistent”: Mayer v. Walter, 64 Pa. 283, 285.

“It is necessary that the proceeding (original proceeding) should have come to an end, and that end must have been a successful one to the plaintiff”: Mayer v. Walter, supra. The case to which we have just referred is also authority for the proposition that the determination in favor of the plaintiff need not have been on the merits. To sustain a claim for damages there must be “an actual interference with either the person or property of the defendant’’: Muldoon v. Rickey, 103 Pa. 110, 112.

The case we are considering is definitely identified as one for malicious use of legal process. The position of the defendant is that the judgment when it was confessed constituted a final determination favorable to the defendant in this action, that the satisfaction does not contradict such favorable determination and that the plaintiff is therefore barred as a matter of law from recovery. Counsel for appellant suggests that this action could only have been maintained by the plaintiff in this action pursuing his petition to open the judgment and having the matter judicially determined in his favor by the court in that proceeding.

It will be noted that the rule requiring a determination in the original proceeding favorable to a plaintiff in an action for malicious use of process is based by Mr. Justice Shabswood, in Mayor v. Walter, supra, on the fact that the “plaintiff will clear himself too soon, viz., before the fact tried, which will be inconvenient; besides, the two determinations might be contrary and inconsistent.” Mr. Justice Walling in Garland v. Wilson, 289 Pa. 272, 275, says: “This is manifest, for one of the necessary requisites of such *209 action is want of probable cause, which cannot be determined until the suit is ended.” In the case of a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the original action it would “establish beyond the possibility of denial the fact that defendant (in original action) had a good cause of action”: Rosenstein v. Brown, 7 Phila. 144; Marcus v. Buchman, 89 Pa. Superior Ct. 512, 516; which is more, than probable cause. A verdict for defendant in the original action would not adjudicate the question of probable cause. “A judgment on warrant of attorney is as much an act of the court as if it were formally pronounced on nil dicit, or a cognovit; and till it is reversed or set aside, it has all the qualities and effect of a judgment on verdict”: Braddee v. Brownfield, 4 Watts 474, 475.

The case of Montague v. McDowell, 99 Pa. 265, furnishes a precedent nearer to the question involved than any we have found or to which we have been referred. In that case a note was given providing for a usurious rate of interest. Under a power of attorney contained in the note, judgment was confessed and the interest at the excess rate was paid for a ,time when the judgment was paid and a new note given in its place providing for usurious interest and containing a power of attorney to confess judgment. A judgment was again confessed when a petition was presented averring that the judgment included a large amount of usurious interest. A rule to open was granted and defendant let into a defense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 A. 321, 107 Pa. Super. 204, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scheide-v-home-credit-company-pasuperct-1932.