Court Opinion

ID: 7134434
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:22:23.840985+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:34.624483
License: Public Domain

Opinion of the court by
JUDGE PAYNTEER
Reversing.
In August, 1898, the Governor of the Commonwealth, by his proclamation, offered a reward of $150 for the arrest of Howard Clark, he being charged with murder, and at that time a fugitive from justice, and directed that he should be delivered to the jailer of Jefferson county. In October of the same year, the proclamation offering the reward not having been withdrawn, the appellant was searching for Clark, and, arriving at a place near by him, he opened fire upon the appellant, placing his life in peril, when he, in his necessary self-defense, fired, and fatally wounded him. Clark lived for a time, but before he could be delivered to the jailer of Jefferson county he died, and his remains were delivered to his family, and buried near Louisville. The appellant presented his claim to the criminal division of the Jefferson Circuit Court, which allowed it. The Auditor of Public Accounts refusing to issue to him a voucher for the sum allowed, this action was instituted to compel him to do so.
Clark’s death prevented the appellant from delivering him to the jailer of Jefferson'county. The question here is, was the reward earned? The appellant performed the hazardous duty of apprehending the fugitive, which placed him in a position where, had Clark remained alive, he could have delivered him to the jailer of Jefferson county. The object of rewards is to secure, the apprehension of persons charged with public offenses, thus protecting society, so far as possible, from the criminal conduct of such *494fugitives. It is usually a laborious act to find, and a hazardous one to apprehend, a fugitive. ' Here the appellant had performed both, and, except for the death of Clark, he would have complied with the Governor’s offer according to the letter of the statute. In our opinion, he complied substantially with the Governor’s proclamation and the statute. Having done this, the reward offered has been earned. In Stephens v. Brooks, 2 Bush, 140, the court had under consideration a statute substantially the same as the present one, and in discussing the question as to whether the reward had been earned by the party who arrested the fugitive, said: “We think a fair and liberal construction of the statute is especially required by the beneficial objects of its enactment, and that generally a substantial compliance with its requirements in apprehending a fugitive criminal and bringing him to justice should entitle the party rendering this important and often dangerous service to the reward offered by the Governor in accordance with law.” The Auditor of Public Accounts should issue his warrant on the Treasurer, to the appellant for the sum of fl50, the amount of the reward. The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.