Summary
reasoning that permitting a malicious prosecution counterclaim for an action which is integrally related to the pending suit would raise new issues, such as probable cause and malice, which would be irrelevant to the main suit and would be unfairly prejudicial to the plaintiff
Summary of this case from Medina v. United Christian Evangelistic AssociationOpinion
01-31-1925
Action by the Kassel Poultry Company, Inc., against the Sheldon Produce Company. On motion to strike out counterclaim. Motion allowed.
This action was begun by an attachment, and the complaint is based upon a debt which is alleged to be due from the defendant to the plaintiff. The defendant has filed an answer setting up a counterclaim against the plaintiff, in which the defendant alleges that the plaintiff had no reasonable or probable cause to make the affidavit, nor to cause the said writ of attachment, which initiated the plaintiff's suit, to be issued. There is, of course, no allegation in the counterclaim that the proceedings thus alleged to have been maliciously instituted have been terminated in favor of the defendant, for the reason already stated, that the affidavit and writ of attachment are the same which preceded the filing of the complaint in this very cause.
Plaintiff now moves to strike out the counterclaim upon the ground that it does not disclose a cause of action, for the reason that it does not allege a prior termination ofsaid attachment proceedings, and that any damages caused by an attachment action cannot be set up by way of counterclaim by the defendant in the same action in which the attachment was issued. At the argument it. was conceded that in an action for the malicious prosecution of a criminal complaint an allegation of prior termination is necessary, but the defendant insists that a different rule prevails where the medium of the malicious prosecution is a civil suit, and especially one begun by attachment. This question does not seem to have been directly passed upon in the state of New Jersey, but a careful examination of the reports of other states indicates that, according to the weight of authority, an action will not lie for a malicious attachment until a termination of the attachment suit in favor of the defendant therein. 26 Cyc. 56, and cases cited.
The defendant argued, however, that inasmuch as the Practice Act of our state provides that "the defendant may counterclaim or set-off any cause of action" (P. L. 1912, p. 379. § 12), there can be no objection to allowing the same jury which passes upon the questions involved in the attachment suit from also deciding, if they find that the plaintiff therein cannot prevail, whether the proceedings were maliciously instituted by the plaintiff therein, for it is claimed that in such an event the jury, under proper instructions from the court, would have to decide the attachment suit first, which would be a practical termination of such proceeding, before they could pass upon the question of a malicious prosecution thereof, and that litigation would thereby be lessened and much time and expense saved. The fallacy with this argument is that a counterclaim is based upon the same principles as a complaint in an independent suit, and that all of the elements necessary to make up a legal complaint must likewise be alleged in a counterclaim, and inasmuch as the great weight of authority supports the proposition that an action will not lie for the malicious prosecution of an attachment until a termination of the attachment suit in favor of the defendant therein, therefore, at the time of the filing of the counterclaim in the case sub judice, there was no cause of action upon which to base the counterclaim, which must necessarily speak as of the time of the filing thereof.
Furthermore, to permit such a counterclaim to be filed would raise issues which would unduly prejudice the proper determination of the attachment suit, because the questions of want of probable cause and malice necessarily raised by such a counterclaim would permit the introduction of evidence, which would otherwise be entirely irrelevant in the main attachment suit, for it is perfectly evident that in the ordinary attachment suit it would be entirely immaterial how much malice the plaintiff may have bad against the defendant therein, so long as he had probable cause for instituting the proceedings, and, if evidence of malice were introduced in support of the counterclaim for malicious prosecution, it might tend to prejudice the minds of the jury against the plaintiff in the attachment suit, regardless of the question of probable cause in instituting such proceedings.
For the reasons last mentioned, I should feel disposed to strike out the counterclaim in the case sub judice, regardless of whether or not the allegation of prior termination of the attachment proceedings was a necessary element therein, under the authority given to the court by the Practice Act, wherein it is provided that, in cases of a counterclaim, "in the discretion of the court, separate trials may be ordered, or, if the counterclaim cannot be conveniently disposed of in the pending action, the court may strike it out." P. L. 1912, p. 379, c. 231, § 12.
The counterclaim will therefore be stricken out, first, upon the ground that it does not set forth a legal cause of action in failing to allege the prior termination of the attachment proceedings in favor of the defendant (Veysey v. Bernard, 49 Wash. 571, 95 P. 1096; Sonsee v. Jones & Green, 157 Ark. 131, 248 S. W. 289; Gunnis v. Cluff, 111 Pa. 512, 4 A. 920; Donnegan v. Armour, 3 Ohio Cir. Ct. R. 432; 2 O. C. D. 244; Kramer v. Thomson-Houston Electric Light Co. of Boston, 95 N. C. 277; Jeffreys v. Hancock, 57 Cal. 646; Carver v. Shelly, 17 Kan. 472), and also for the reason that the issue attempted to be raised by the counterclaim is one which cannot conveniently be disposed of in the main action; and an order may be presented accordingly.