84 Kan. 177 | Kan. | 1911
In a petition for a rehearing attention is called to the recent case of Chantangco v. Abaroa, 218 U. S. 476. There the court held an acquittal upon
“The foregoing considerations eliminate any question of the effect of such a judgment of acquittal under the principles of the common law.” (p. 486.)
The petition for a rehearing also urges that the injunction action here involved is in its essential nature penal, because the statute requires an unsuccessful defendant to pay the plaintiff’s attorney’s fee. Granting that this requirement is justified only on the theory that a wrong to the public has been committed, the attorney’s fee is not strictly and solely a penalty; it is also compensatory. (See A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. The State, 22 Kan. 1, 15, 16.) Moreover, the object of the injunction action is not to exact the payment of the attorney’s fee — that is merely incidental.' The purpose is not punishment for a past offense, but security against its repetition.