The questions for decision on this appeal, arise upon the action of the court below in sustaining the general demurrer of appellees to all the counts of appellant’s declaration, and giving final judgment for appellees, and for costs against appellant. The demurrer having been general only, no technical questions of form are involved. If any one count of the declaration be found to contain a cause of action, that is, found to be good in substance, the judgment of the court below should be reversed.
We are not prepared to hold that a'defendant, in every civil suit, where there was no arrest of his person or attachment of his goods, may, upon the suit being decided in his favor, turn around and upon the mere allegation that the suit was brought maliciously and without any reasonable and probable cause, maintain an action on the case against the plaintiff as for malicious prosecution. The drift of the opinion of the court, in Gorton v. Brown, 27 Ill. 489, although much that is said is mere obiter diotum, and that not from a very comprehensive view of the authorities, is manifestly against such actions being maintainable, except upon the ground of some special grievance. But where the case shows such special grievance, we are prepared to hold that the action will lie; and in that view we are of opinion that the first count of the declaration, although objectionable in form and containing some matters that may be rejected as meaningless surplusage, does set forth a cause of action good in substance. It shows the bringing by the appellees maliciously and without probable cause, and in pursuance of an unlawful conspiracy between them to annoy, liarrass and injure plaintiff, and to obtain and extort money from him by persecution and abuse of legal process, a succession of suits (in the first of which they procured an adjournment) before a justice of the peace, at a great distance from where all the parties resided, and then letting sucli suits be dismissed by the justice for want of prosecution, thus subjecting plaintiff to annoyance and expense for which the taxable costs would be no adequate compensation. These facts show a special and particular grievance and take the case out of the ordinary rule. The acts of appellees, as set out, were, as regards appellant, unlawful, constituting a wrong, in the legal sense; and the expenses and trouble to which the latter was thereby subjected, constitute an injury to his property, and therefore actual legal damages. So that we have here unlawful acts by appellees, and actual legal damages sustained by appellant as a proximate result. It is a familiar maxim of the common law that there is no wrong without a remedy, and in our State constitution it is declared one of the fundamental principles in civil rights that “ every person ought to find a certain remedy in the laws for all injuries and wrongs which he may receive in his person, property or reputation.” There being here a concurrence of actual and legal damages to appellant, and a wrongful act committed by appellees, we have no doubt that upon established principles of the common law, a cause of action is stated. Wright v. N. W. R. Co. 7 Bradwell, 438, and authorities there cited. The case of Pangburn v. Bull, 1 Wendell, R. 345, is a direct authority in support of the count in the declaration under consideration, on the ground of abuse of legal process.
We are inclined to the opinion that if the second, third and fourth counts of appellant’s declaration respectively contained the allegation that appellant resided, as well as did business, in the city of Chicago, they would have shown a cause of aetion; upon the ground that suing out a process, from a justice of the peace, maliciously and without probable cause, at a great distance from where appellant resided and did business, thus unnecessarily compelling him to go that distance to defend against such suit, lays the foundation for such special grievance as will support the action. In these counts it is alleged that appellees, at the respective times stated, willfully and maliciously, and without probable cause, and for the purpose of injuring, annoying, vexing and extorting money from appellant, caused the suit, etc., to be commenced before Asa Farnham, a justice of the peace, and caused process to be served on appellant, requiring him to appear, etc., at the office of said justice, twenty-one miles from the city of Chicago. Each count avers that appellant was engaged in business in the city of Chicago, but neither of them that he resided there.
For aught appearing in these counts, the appellant may have resided at the place where the justice’s office was, though he did business in Chicago. The judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to that court to overrule the demurrer of appellees to the first count of appellant’s declaration, and sustain it to the other counts, giving appellant leave to amend the same, if he choose so to do.
Keversed and remanded.