When this case was before this Court at Spring Term, 1904, it was decided that there was a misjoinder of causes of action. 135 N. C., 73. The plaintiff is' now proceeding against the defendant company not upon attachment bond, but under the principles of the common law to recover damages for such alleged unlawful seizure. The defendant demurs to the new complaint, filed as a conse*176quence of tbe former decision of the Court, upon the following grounds; 1st. The complaint does not allege the institution of the suit or proceedings by the defendant against the plaintiff without probable cause. 2nd. It does not allege malice in the institution of the said suit or proceeding. 3rd. It does not allege the complete termination of said suit or proceeding.
We concur with the court below in over-ruling the demurrer. It is not necessary to consider whether this action is one for damages for malicious prosecution. If the facts in the complaint constitute a cause of action upon the proof of Avhich to the satisfaction of a jury damages are allowable, then the complaint is sufficient. In this view it is immaterial whether it is classified as an action for malicious prosecution or an action for abuse of legal process. It seems to us, however, that it more properly belongs under the latter classification. In some States the cause of action set out in the complaint is called an action for malicious attachment.
Lovier v. Gilpin, 6 Dana, (Ky.) 321. Smith v. Story, 4 Humphrey, (Tenn.) 159; and cases collected in Wait’s Actions and Defences, Vol. 1, page 248.
A malicious prosecution is said to be one in which the motive in suing out the process is a wrongful and malicious one; and an action for abuse of legal process is where the process has been put to a wrongful, illegal and unjustifiable purpose. Neither action can be maintained unless there is an actual seizure of the property of the plaintiff or an arrest of his person. A malicious prosecution has been defined as a “prosecution of some charge which is wilful, wanton or reckless, or against the prosecutor’s sense of duty and right, or for ends he knows or is bound to know are wrong and against the dictates of public policy.” 19 A. & E. Encyc. (2nd Ed.) 650.
In the case of Grainger v. Hill, 33 E. C. L., 333, Ghief Justice Tindal notes the distinction which he says exists be*177tween an action for malicious prosecution or arrest and one for abusing the process of the law. He says: “This is an action for abusing the process of the law by applying it to extort property or money from the plaintiff, and not an action for a malicious prosecution, in order to support which latter action the termination of the previous proceeding must be proved and the absence of reasonable and probable cause be alleged as well as proved.” That eminent Judge again says: “ITis complaint being that the process of law has been abused to effect an object not within the scope of the process, it is immaterial whether the suit which that process commenced has been determined or not, or whether or not it was founded on reasonable and probable cause.”
So the distinction seems to be well taken that in an action for wrongful and unlawful abuse of process of the court it is not necessary to allege the termination of the proceeding. To the same effect is Prough v. Entricken, 11 Pa. St., 81.
In Sneeden v. Harris, 109 N. C., 354, it is held that in an action for malicious abuse of process it is not necessary to allege the termination of the proceeding.
The case of Kirkhan v. Coe, 46 N. C., 423, was an action on the ease for wrongfully suing out an attachment. In that case Judge Pearson says that “the action may be maintained by showing a want of probable cause without alleging or proving that the defendant was actuated by malice.” The learned Chief Justice does not say that that character of action can be maintained* only and solely by showing a want of probable cause. He says: “To maintain an action like 'the present it is sufficient to show a want of probable cause. To maintain an action of slander it is sufficient to show malice. To maintain an action for malicious prosecution both a want of probable cause and malice must be shown.” Again, he says: “When one in the assertion of a civil right resorts to an extraordinary process without probable cause *178and thereby injures bis neighbor, there is no ground of public policy upon which to excuse him.”
In Williams v. Hunter, 10 N. C., 545, Taylor, C. J., states in substance that if the action is brought to oppress the defendant and with knowledge at the time he sued out the process that the plaintiff had no cause of action, it would give the injured party a right to sue.
The defendant further contends that the plaintiff must allege and prove malice in order to recover in this action. We do not think that malice is a necessary ingredient in an action for damages for unlawfully attaching the plaintiff’s property. In Kirkhan v. Coe, supra, Judge Pearson says: “It is a matter between private' citizens and if the wrongful act of one causes loss to another there is no reason why compensation should not be made. Whether in such a case proof of .malice would entitle the party not only to compensation, but to vindictive damages, is a question not now before us. It is sufficient to say, malice need not be proven in order to support the action, for the damage is the same to the plaintiff, and the ‘gist’ of action is that the defendant had injured him, caused him to sustain damages wrongfully, by suing out the process without probable cause.”
We will not undertake to reconcile the difference in the language used by Chief Justice Tindal and Chief Justice Pearson in regard to probable cause. We will, of course, follow the decision of our own Court and hold that in an action for damages for a malicious prosecution it is necessary to allege and prove malice, a want of probable cause, and that the prosecution has terminated. In an action for damages for abuse of legal process it is necessary to allege and prove a want of probable cause, but not necessary to allege or prove malice or that the proceeding has terminated, in order to recover actual damages. "Where punitive damages are claimed, in such latter action, it seems to be necessary to allege and prove malice or facts from which the law will *179infer malice. In the case before ns, tbe facts set forth in the complaint are such, that, jf true, the law will infer both malice and a want of probable cause from them, and they are tantamount to specific allegations of malice and want of probable cause.
It appears from the complaint that the defendant held a debt against the N. C. Coal & Colee Company for $416.00, and that in order to collect the said debt the defendant, the Wakefield Hardware Company, instituted an action to recover it from the Coal & Coke Company and from this plaintiff, the defendant well knowing that the plaintiff did not owe it a penny. The plaintiff further alleges that, in order to extort this money from the plaintiff, the defendant caused a warrant of attachment to be issued in the said proceeding and caused the plaintiff’s cars to be seized and held until the-day of April, 1903, thus depriving the plaintiff of the rise of its cars for more than two years. The plaintiff further says that at the April Term, 1903, of Guil-ford Superior Court a judgment of nonsuit was entered in said action as to this plaintiff, and the defendant, the Wake-field Hardware Company, obtained judgment for the amount of its debt against the N. C. Coal & Coke Company. The complaint alleges that said seizure of the plaintiff’s cars was wanton, wilful, reckless, uncalled for,, and was made for the purpose of coercing the plaintiff to pay this money which it did not owe, the defendant believing and hoping that this plaintiff, to avoid the expense of a law suit and the loss of the use of its cars, which were worth ten times the amount of the debt claimed, would pay the debt owing by the Coal & Coke Company. These allegations, as we have said, are tantamount to allegations both of malice and want of probable cause. There is no special virtue in that particular form of expression. The idea is clearly embodied in the language employed in the complaint, that the defendant in suing out his attachment and levying upon the plaintiff’s prop*180erty knew be bad no ground for bis action and that it was an unjustifiable and indefensible suit to extort money. The words used necessarily imply malice, which, in legal proceedings, does not necessarily mean personal ill will or spite. It means a wrongful act done intentionally without just cause or excuse. This is the famous definition given by Bailey, J., in Bromage v. Prosser, 10 E. C. L., 321, wbicb bas been quoted in hundreds of cases, both criminal and civil.
We bold tbat, if tbe plaintiff should prove tbat tbe defendant, knowing tbat tbe plaintiff was not indebted to it at all sued out an attachment and levied it upon tbe plaintiff’s cars, tbe plaintiff would be entitled to recover such actual damages as it bas sustained. Tbe allegation and proof sustaining it, tbat tbe defendant at tbe time it caused tbe attachment to issue knew that tbe plaintiff did not owe it anything is equivalent to an allegation and proof of want of probable cause and such proof would entitle plaintiff to recover actual damages. If tbe plaintiff should go further and satisfy tbe jury tbat tbe attachment was sued out by tbe defendant wantonly, recklessly and willfully, for the purpose of coercing tbe plaintiff to pay money it did not owe, tbat would be equivalent to proof of malice, for tbe law would infer malice from such facts, and tbe plaintiff would thereby lay tbe foundation to recover punitive damages, if tbe jury should find tbat tbe attachment was maliciously sued out, and should see fit to award them,
The judgment is
Affirmed.