Bill

Bill > SF2157


IA SF2157

IA SF2157
A bill for an act relating to malicious prosecution arising from civil actions between private parties.


summary

Introduced
01/29/2026
In Committee
02/25/2026
Crossed Over
02/24/2026
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

91st General Assembly

Bill Summary

This bill relates to malicious prosecution arising from civil actions between private parties. The bill defines “malice” as the initiation of a civil action for a primary purpose other than securing a proper adjudication of the claim, and “probable cause” as the existence of reasonably known facts and law that would lead a reasonable person to believe, in good faith, that the civil action was legally and factually justified at the time the civil action was initiated. The bill authorizes a person a bring a civil action for malicious prosecution against a private party who initiated or caused to be initiated a civil action against the person. To prevail, the plaintiff must prove that the underlying action was brought by the defendant and decided or dismissed in the plaintiff’s favor, that the defendant lacked probable cause to bring the action, that the defendant acted with malice, and that the plaintiff suffered actual damages as a proximate result of the malicious prosecution. The bill specifies that a plaintiff is not required to plead or prove arrest, seizure of property, restraint on liberty, issuance of an injunction, or any other heightened or special injury beyond the ordinary burdens associated with defending a civil action. The bill applies only to malicious prosecution actions between private parties and does not alter any doctrine governing standing to challenge governmental or public wrongs.

AI Summary

This bill establishes new rules for when someone can sue another private party for malicious prosecution in civil lawsuits, meaning when a lawsuit was filed without good reason and with bad intentions. It defines "malice" as starting a lawsuit for a reason other than to get a fair legal decision, and "probable cause" as having enough facts and legal basis to reasonably believe, in good faith, that the lawsuit was justified. Under this bill, a person can sue another private party for malicious prosecution if the original lawsuit was decided in their favor, the other party lacked probable cause and acted with malice, and the person suing suffered actual damages as a direct result. Importantly, the person suing does not need to prove they suffered extraordinary harm like arrest or property seizure, only the usual difficulties of defending a lawsuit. This law specifically applies to disputes between private individuals and does not affect how people challenge actions by the government.

Committee Categories

Justice

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Read first time, referred to Judiciary. H.J. 02/25. (on 02/25/2026)

bill text


bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...
Loading...