Legal Question in Civil Litigation in California

Malicious prosecution?

I sued a business partner for breach of

contract--$18,000. The contract was a copyright

assignment that he did not pay in ful. He counter sued

me for $200,000 dollars claiming i ruined his

screenwriting career. His case? I took too long in

returning the signed copyright assignment. I took ten

days , and because of that he says i ruined his

relationship with the production company. Is this a case

of malicious prosecution? If i win my case --it's still in

superior court--should i sue my partner and his firm?

Seems like the Malicious prosecution bar is high.


Asked on 3/08/06, 5:28 pm

4 Answers from Attorneys

JOHN GUERRINI THE GUERRINI LAW FIRM - COLLECTION LAWYERS

Re: Malicious prosecution?

Malicious prosecution is one of the "disfavored torts", and the threshold to meet to succeed in prosecuting a claim for Mal Pro is very high. A fact finder would have to find that there was no reasonable basis for the Cross-Complaint. Tough hurdle. So what you need to do now, to try to set up the Mal Pro claim, is to tear apart the cross-complaint and move for, and obtain, summary judgment.

Presumably, any attorney with half a brain can serve some targeting discovery to your adversary, to necessary third parties, and then conduct a deposition or two. Then move for summary judgment. Once you obtain summary judgment, you are in a better position to assess what your likelihood is of prevailing on the merits of a Mal Pro claims.

The last thing you want is to send the Cross-Complaint to trial, especially in front of a jury. Anything less than an absolute, unqualified victory will likely mean no Mal Pro claim for you.

If you don't already have an attorney well-skilled in business litigation, find one soon. There are strict deadlines for discovery and making summary judgment motions. If you do not have an attorney and wish to consult at no charge, please call or email.

Good luck.

***No Legal Services or Attorney Client Relationship - Although this email may provide information concerning potential legal issues, it is not a substitute for legal advice from qualified counsel. You should not and are not authorized to rely on this email as a source of legal advice. Until a formal Retainer Agreement is executed, any communication between you and The Guerrini Law Firm cannot create any attorney-client relationship between you and The Guerrini Law Firm.***

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Answered on 3/10/06, 9:16 am
Robert F. Cohen Law Office of Robert F. Cohen

Re: Malicious prosecution?

Sounds like a lawyer with good deposition skills could take the cross-complainant apart. How speculative is it to ruin someone's career by a slight delay? Perhaps your partner self-destructed. Good luck.

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Answered on 3/09/06, 7:57 pm
Gregory Cartwright The Cartwright Law Group, APLC

Re: Malicious prosecution?

it MAY be a case of malicious prosecution, however, you must first have a determination on the merits before you can sue. If you do, such a suit could be subject to a Special Motion To Strike called an Anti-SLAPP motion. If you are represented by counsel, your attorney should know these issues. If not, find a lawyer in your area immeidately.

Feel free to email me privately with further questions.

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Answered on 3/09/06, 8:04 pm
Jonathan Stein Law Offices of Jonathan G. Stein

Re: Malicious prosecution?

In addition to the good advice you have already been given, consider that almost any determination short of a jury verdict finding 100% in your favor, may bar a malicious prosecution case. Malicious prosection (which is actually the criminal name, and not the civil cause of action) is a disfavored case. You really need to think long and hard about whether you want more litigation when this is all done.

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Answered on 3/09/06, 10:11 pm


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