68 Wis. 384 | Wis. | 1887
The complaint states substantially the following facts: In 1881 the respondent Edward Devlin was appointed by the county judge of Iówa county guardian of 'one Prank J. Rowe, an insane person, resident of said founty, and sometime thereafter, and previous to the 3d day of December, 1885, he placed said insane person in the Milwaukee county insane asylum at Wauwatosa, for treatment and safe-keeping, and at said last-mentioned date said insane person escaped therefrom and could not be found or his whereabouts ascertained. On the 17 th day of December thereafter the. said Devlin published in the Milwaukee Sentinel an offer of a reward of $300 to any person who would return said insane person to said insane asylum, and gave a description of his person. On the 12th day of December, 1885, an unknown demented person was sent to the Fond du Lac county poor-house by the authorities of the town of Metomen, of said county, and the appellant, the plaintiff in this suit, was at the time the overseer of said poor-house and county asylum of the county • of Pond du Lac', and he wrote numerous letters to the authorities of insane institutions in different parts of the state, describing said insane person, with a view of locating his proper abode. On the 18th day of December, 1885, R. M. Wigginton, the superintendent of the Northern Hospital for the Insane, in Winnebago county, wrote to the plaintiff in
The complaint is very indefinite, vague, and uncertain as to the legal character of the institution, called in the first place a “ poor-house,” and in the second place a “ poor-house and county asylum,” and as to the name and duties of the officer in charge of it, who is called in the first place “ overseer of the poor-house,” and in the second place “ overseer of the poor-house and county asylum,” and, in the brief of plaintiff’s counsel, “ superintendent and keeper of the pooi’-house and asylum.” It cannot be known by the complaint what particular official relations the plaintiff bore to this insane person, or what his special duties were as his keeper in the institution under his charge. In deciding, therefore, upon the question whether the complaint states a cause of action, we must do so upon probabilities and legal presumptions mainly, and in view of the statutes which govern a poor-house as such, and an insane asylum as such, of the county of Fond du Lac, and which prescribe the
The learned counsel of the appellant claims the right of the plaintiff to this reward only because he acted as a private person and not as an officer, and that as an officer he admits he had no right to perform these acts. He says in his brief that “ neither is there any common, law requiring superintendents of such institutions to arrest and return escaped lunatics and paupers to institutions over which they have no authority or control.” We most fully agree with the learned counsel in this, and he might as well have added that he had no right to be absent from his proper place as such keeper, and spend time the law devotes to such public uses and services, and compensates him therefor, in carrying such demented persons about the state. The reasoning of the learned counsel would lead to this: that the plaintiff had no right as an officer to do these high-handed and unauthorized acts; but that he could lay aside and utterly neglect his official duties as keeper or overseer, leave the institution in his charge without a keeper, lay aside his robes and insignia of office, or vacate his office for a time and transform himself into a private person, let out or take out of the institution the lawful inmates thereof, and carry them about the state for rewards or for any other purpose. Let us see how this thing would work. Richard Ring, as keeper, overseer, and superintendent of the poor-house and asylum, delivers over to Richard Ring, aprivate person, one of the inmates of the institution, lawfully detained and kept therein, and allows him to take him away and carry him a long distance and place him in another institution for a $300 reward. Richard, the officer, is not influenced or corrupted by any sordid motive of reward, for he ought not to be; but Richard, the private, is so influenced and has the right to be. Richard, the officer, receives a postal card containing the offer of a reward of $300 if he will take out of his insti
The learned counsel of the appellant further admits, and such is clearly the law, that “ the Revised Statutes of Wisconsin do not require the superintendent of a county poorhouse or asylum to arrest and return any person escaping from any poor-house or asylum in the state, other than the one over which he has supervision, and then only when authorized hy rides and regulations adopted by the board of supervisors of the county having jurisdiction of such superintendent.” And he further admits “ that an offer of reward to a public officer to do what it is his legal duty to do without such reward, is contrary to public policy, and cannot be enforced.” Hatch v. Mann, 15 Wend. 44; Pool v. Boston, 5 Cush. 219; Preston v. Bacon, 4 Conn. 471. If, then, such officer has no right to receive such reward for doing what it is his duty to do, and it would be against public policy for him to do so, so much less has he the right to receive a reward, and so much more would it be against public policy for him to do what it was not only not his duty to do but in violation of his duty and the law for him to do either as an officer or as a private person; and this rule he also admits in the above quotation and makes it emphatic. It follows most conclusively that the plaintiff shows by his complaint that he has no right to recover. The promise of the defendant Devlin and the guaranty of
By the Court.— The order of the circuit court is affirmed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings according to law.