Court Opinion

ID: 7134147
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:22:08.713843+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:33.716566
License: Public Domain

JUDGE DuRELiLE
delivered-the opinion of the court.
A reward of $400 having been offered by the Covernor of Kentucky for the apprehension of .the unknown person or persons guilty of the murder of Daisy Sullivan, in Marshall county, “and their delivery to the jailer of Marshall county, and conviction of said crime,” appellee, Wickliffe, obtained a warrant of arrest for one Noah Franklin, delivered it to the sheriff, accompanied him, and assisted him in arresting Franklin, and in person accompanied the sheriff in charge of the prisoner to the jail of Marshall county, where he was delivered to the jailer, the jailer’s receipt reciting that the body of Franklin was delivered to him by the sheriff, in company with appellee. After-wards appellee caused witnesses for the Commonwealth to be summoned before the grand jury. An indictment was returned against Franklin, and a trial had, at which appellee co-operated with the Commonwealth’s attorney in the prosecution of the charge, and which resulted in a verdict of guilty, fixing the punishment at imprisonment for life; and a judgment was thereupon rendered sentencing the prisoner. The account against the Commonwealth for the amount of the reward was approved and allowed by the circuit court, and ordered to be certified to the Auditor for payment; but, that officer refusing payment, appellee instituted this proceeding for a mandamus, to compel the issuance of a warrant on the Treasurer.
A demurrer to the petition was properly overruled, the objection urged on behalf of the Auditor that the petition shows the arrest to have been made by the sheriff being, as *255we think, not well taken; for, if the averments of the petition are true that appellee ascertained that Franklin was the murderer of Daisy Sullivan, swore out the warrant, delivered it to the sheriff,' ascertained Franklin’s whereabouts, and assisted in his arrest and delivery to the jailer, he was entitled to the reward, provided the remaining prerequisite to the earning of the reward, viz., the conviction of the prisoner, within the meaning of the proclamation, had taken place. To entitle himself to the reward, so far as the arrest was concerned, it was not essential that appellee should personally and alone make the arrest; but he was entitled to the assistance of the arresting officers of the counity, and to have a pósse oomitatus summoned, if necessary to the capture of the culprit. The essential fact in this behalf is the causing of the arrest.
It is not necessary to consider the second objection urged in appellant’s brief, as that appears to have .been abandoned.
Another objection made is that the receipt of the jailer filed as an exhibit recited that “the custody of him (Franklin) was delivered to me as jailer of Marshall county, charged with the murder of. Daisy Sullivan, by the sheriff of Marshall county, J. H. Little, and W. A. Wickliffe was with him at the time” that this exhibit contradicted the averment of the petition that appellee delivered Franklin to the jailer; and that the exhibit controls the averment of the petition, and destroys its effect, so that it must be read as if the averment was not there. Without going into the question whether the doctrine announced in Green v. Page, 80 Ky. 370, was intended to apply to a case where there was direct contradiction between the exhibit and the allegation of the pleading, it is sufficient to say that the question which was there actually decided is exactly par*256allel to the question presented in the case at bar; i. e., that where the exhibit did not show all the facts necessary to support the averment of the pleading, but, on the other hand, did not directly contradict those averments, the pleading was not thereby rendered demurrable.
An answer was filed, alleging that, within the period allowed by law, Franklin had appealed from the judgment against him and that appeal was then pending in this court, and that appellee was not entitled to the reward, and the circuit court had no jurisdiction to allow it, until the case was finally determined. To this answer a demurrer was sustained, and the Auditor has brought the case here for review. v
The reward appears to have been offered under section 1932, Ky. St. The Governor inserted in h;s proclamation a provision for the conviction of the guilty person or persons — a matter not provided for in the statute. But as appellee assumed to act under this proclamation, and is here claiming the reward in virtue of it, he can not complain of its insertion. Moreover, in a case like this, where the reward offered was for the apprehension of an unknown guilty person, it would seem essential that the guilt should be shown by a judgment of conviction before the reward could be considered earned.
A large number of authorities and definitions from the text-books are cited as showing that a verdict of guilty by a jury is, in many States, held to be a conviction, and a verdict of guilty followed by a sentence is everywhere so considered. In none of these cases, however, with three exceptions, does the question of a reward for conviction arise. Some of the text-writers cited, in defining conviction, were speaking of a time when there was no appeal in criminal cases. In some cases the question was whether a *257defendant was convicted,- after verdict and before sentence, in meaning of a constitutional provision forbidding a pardon before conviction. Some presented the question whether an elector was deprived of his franchise by a jury finding him guilty of a felony, and other like questions.
In Wilmoth v. Hensel, 151 Pa. St., 200, [25 Atl., 86], a reward had been offered for the prosecution and conviction of persons guilty of bribery and corruption at elections. The claimant of the reward had instituted a prosecution, and a plea of, guilty had been entered. The court suspended sentence, and claimant was held to be entitled to - the reward. This was proper. The claimant had performed all the service required of him, and further- proceedings had been prei'ented by the action of the court, over which he had no control. The case had reached a conclusion “within the meaning of the defendant’s offer.” So, in Buckley v. Schwartz, 83 Wis. 304, [53 N. W. 511], the question was presented.of a personal contract for the arrest and conviction, in tiie circuit court, of a person guilty of setting fire to certain buildings. A verdict of guilty was obtained; and, though the court arrested judgment, the claimant was held to be entitled under his contract for securing a conviction in tiie circuit court, as, under a somewhat peculiar ruling of the Wisconsin courts, an arrest of judgment does not operate to set aside the verdict. “The verdict remains and is available to the accused in a second prosecution for the same offense, under the plea of autrefois convict. The question is not an open one in this court.”
In Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. Goodnight, 10 Bush, 553, (19 Am. R., 80) a band of armed men having thrown a train from the company’s track, and robbed the passengers, the company offered a reward *258of $1,000 for 'the capture and conviction of each of the parties to the offense, and $10,000 for the capture and conviction of all the offenders. The appellees in that case captured’and delivered to the authorities two men who, it was conceded, were engaged in the train robbery, who were indicted, and each in open court repeatedly confessed his guilt. Through the efforts of the company’s attorneys, with a view to using the two men as witnesses against the others implicated in the train robbery; the cases against them were dismissed; and it was held that the captors were entitled to the reward, for, “if the happening of the event upon which their right to the reward depended was hindered or prevented by the act of the company, such hindrance was, in law, equivalent to the completion of the condition precedent, and the railroad company is liable on its contracts to pay the reward, although it may have acted in the matter with the utmost good faith.”
It is manifest that none of these cases reaches the question presented by the case at bar. The proclamation of the Governor, accepted and acted upon by appellee, constitutes the contract under which relief is here sought. In order to ascertain the meaning of this contract, the object of the proclamation should be first considered. That object was the punishment of the murderer — not merely that a trial should be had for the offense which had been committed, but that he should be actually punished. Now, if we construe this contract to refer only to the obtention of a verdict of guilty, subject to be^et aside as the result of appeal to this court, the object of -the contract may be entirely frustrated, for, upon a new trial being granted, appellee Avould be under no obligation, and would have no motive, to co-operate with the Commonwealth’s attorney, to aid'in securing witnesses for the prosecution, or in obtain*259ing evidence of the prisoner’s guilt. And this very case presents an apt illustration of this, for, while it does not. appear in this record, counsel for each side has stated in argument that this case has- already been reversed by this, court, and remanded for new trial. Assuming this to appear, Franklin is, under section 270 of the Criminal Code (Com. v. Arnold, 83 Ky. 1), “in the same position as if no-trial had been had.” The judgment of conviction is suspended by the appeal. Cr. Code, sec. 336. The object of the proclamation — that is, the punishment of the guilty person — is plain to any one who considers its language. It is equally plain that that object is not attained where, as in this case, an appeal has, within the period allowed by law, been taken to this court, and the conviction relied upon is liable to. become a nullity. ■ We think appellee was bound by what appears to us to be the plain intent and meaning of the proclamation, viz., that the reward was not to be paid until a final conviction. We do not mean that, if the Commonwealth took steps which would prevent appellee from completing his title to the reward — as by pardon, which directly implies an admission of guilt, or by nolle prosequi, after admission of guilty — appellee would not be entitled to the reward; but that, so long as the question whether he shall be or remain-convicted is still in litigation, appellee is not so entitled.
In this view of the case, the question, of costs as against the Auditor is not necessary to be considered.
Wherefore the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded, with directions -to award appellant a new trial, and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The whole court sitting.