76 F. 217 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California | 1896
Plaintiff sues to recover $5,000 as a reward for the arrest and delivery to the sheriff of Tulare county, Cal., of one John Sontag, The defenses to the action are as follows: (1) A denial that plaintiff made the arrest of Sontag; (2)-a special plea in bar, that plaintiff was a deputy sheriff of Tulare county, and for that reason cannot recover; (3) another special plea in bar, that plaintiff is estopped from claiming the reward by his declarations, made immediately after the arrest and delivery of Sontag.
The facts of the case are chiefly these: Defendants, in September, 1892, jointly offered a reward of $10,000 for the arrest and delivery to the sheriff of Fresno or Tulare counties of John Sontag and Chris Evans, or $5,000 for the arrest and delivery to either of the said sheriffs of either said John Sontag or Chris Evans, — said reward to be payable on said delivery. On the 11th of June, 1893, George E. Gard, H. L. Rapelje, H. E. Jackson, and Thomas Burns, who were in pursuit of said outlaws, had an encounter with them, about 16 or 18 miles towards the foothills from Visalia, in Tulare county, Cal. The fight occurred in the evening, about or just before dusk. Gard and his associates were in a cabin -at the beginning of the fight, and, on discovering Evans and Sontag approaching the cabin, opened fire on them. The outlaws got behind an old pile of straw, about 80 yards off, and commenced firing upon the cabin. A number of shots were exchanged between the parties, and the firing then ceased. Evans and Sontag lay behind the straw pile until dusk, when Evans jumped up and ran away. During the fight, Jackson, one of Gard’s party, was shot in the leg, and Sontag through the shoulder. A wagon was procured from a neighboring
“The man never made any exertion, apparently, to try to help himself, that 1 saw. The canteen was held to his mouth, and he was laying back this way, and the canteen was tipped up to his mouth, and he drank that way a few swallows, and then they took it away from him, and directly they gave him some more, and somebody gave him some whisky eventually.”
While there is some conflict as to the exact condition of Sontag, when the parties went up to him, I am satisfied that lie was in a condition of helplessness, and utterly without ability or intention to make any resistance. The occurrences a,t the straw pile, after plaintiff and others reached it, are thus stated by plaintiff:
“I went up to Sontag, and, as I said, I was informed It was Oliris Evans; and as I went up to him, I knelt down over him. He had a pistol in his left hand, a, 44 Colt—a 44 Smith & Wesson, cocked. I put my left knee right on that hand, and reached over for his other hand; and, as I reached over, he says, ‘Don’t.’ ‘Well,’ T says, ‘you showed me a whole lot of mercy when you had me.’ * * * I says, ‘You showed me a whole lot of mercy when you had mo shot down,’ I says. And at That time I thought it was Chris Evans. And, after I had him disarmed, and took his pistol, told him that he was my prisoner, he says, ‘George, you are mistaken.’ I says, T see I am now.’ I said, T thought it was Chris Evans.’ And I said, ‘Sontag, I am sorry the way. I spoke lo you, but I thought it was Chris at first.’ ’.’ • ■
1. With reference to the first of the three defenses above mentioned, my conclusion is that plaintiff did not make the arrest in question. Whatever may have been said by plaintiff, when he approached Sontag at the straw pile, it is unquestionably true that Sontag, in consequence of the wounds inflicted upon him by Gard’s party, was unable to offer the slightest resistance, or make any effort at an escape. Indeed, for 10 or 12 hours previously, he was in the power and under the control of Gard. Nor is this important fact at all affected by the circumstance that Gard may not have-known — indeed, did not know — the extent of Sontag’s helplessness.
2. If the arrest, however, had been made by plaintiff, I am of opinion that the fact of his being a deputy sheriff, together with the other circumstances of the case, would bar a recovery. While the office of deputy sheriff, perhaps, did not impose upon the plaintiff the duty of making a general search for Sontag, yet, when the specific information was conveyed to him that a felon was at a particular locality within his jurisdiction, it was clearly his duty to take prompt measures for the apprehension of such felon, and the law will not now' permit him to claim that an arrest thus effected, pursuant to official duty, was made in his private capacity as a citizen. Herein lies the distinction between the case at bar and that of Russell v. Stewart, 44 Vt. 170, relied upon by plaintiff. Directly in point, however, is the case cited in this connection by defendants, which was an action of interpleader, to determine who was entitled to a reward which had been offered for the arrest and conviction of a certain felon. The facts were as follows:
“On ihe 16tli of June, a man. who afterwards proved to be the one for whom the reward was offered, stopped for a. short time at the house of defendant Orosley. The next day Orosley received a copy of a newspaper, in which the notice offering the reward and a description of the felon was published, and the suspicions of himself and wife were then aroused that the person who had slopped at their house the day before was the felon. * * * Crosley thereupon sent his wife to Koucher to tell him of the circumstances, and procure him to go to St. Paul and get an officer to arrest the man. This she did, and Koucher immediately went to St. Paul, to the defendant Grace, who was deputy sheriff of Ramsey county, stated to him the information he had received from the wife of Crosley, and desired him to go and arrest the man. Gra.ee, accompanied by Koucher, to show him where the man was. went and arrested him. without process, it being in Ramsey county, lodged him in the common jail of the county, and there delivered him, three days after, to the sheriff of Carver county.”
Ou these facts the court said:
“A sheriff or other peace officer may probably perform services in the detection and punishment of crimes, and recovery of property stolen, which it is not his official duty to perform, and for such services may receive a reward. We will not undertake to specify what acts or services might come within tiffs class. The act of Grace in making the arrest, under the circumstances. did not. He merely arrested the man upon the information given or ‘charge’made’ by others. When the felon’s whereabouts bad been discovered*222 and communicated to turn for the purpose of procuring him to make the ar: rest, if he was satisfied that the information or charge was true, it was his duty to arrest and deliver the felon to the proper authorities.” Warner v. Grace, 14 Minn. 487 (Gil. 364).
The following cases, also cited by defendants, are confirmatory of the conclusion which I have announced: Pool v. Boston, 5 Cush. 219; Day v. Insurance Co., 16 Minn. 408 (Gil. 365); Gilmore v. Lewis, 12 Ohio, 281; Smith v. Whildin, 10 Pa. St. 39; Kick v. Merry, 23 Mo. 72; Davies v. Burns, 5 Allen, 349; Railroad Co. v. Grafton (Ark.) 11 S. W. 702; Brown v. Godfrey, 33 Vt. 120.
The circumstance that plaintiff did not have with him the wax*rant for Sontag’s arrest is immaterial.' His genei*al authority as a peace officer was entirely adequate. Pen. Code Cal. § 836. See, also, as to the authority and duty of a deputy sheriff, Pol. Code Cal. §§ 865, 4176.
3. The plea of estoppel, I think, is supported by the evidence. On the morning after the arrest, plaintiff stated to the special agent of one of the defendants that he considered only those who made the fight entitled to the reward, and that he himself did not and would not claim any part of the same. Acting upon this statement, so far, at least, as concerned the plaintiff, defendants paid the reward, soon thereafter, to Gard and his associates. Plaintiff contends that these declarations of his are not an estoppel, because they involved propositions of law, and were not mere statements of facts; citing McKeen v. Naughton, 88 Cal. 462, 26 Pac. 354. That case, however, it seems to me, is against, rather than in support of, plaintiff’s contention. The principle there decided was that:
“A representation, in order to work an estoppel, must generally be a statement of fact, and the statement of a proposition of law will not conclude tbe party making it from denying its correctness, unless it is understood to mean nothing but a simple statement of fact.”
The declarations of the plaintiff, fairly construed, imply that he was not the person who made the arrest, and defendants were justified in ascribing that meaning to them. Plaintiff’s declaration that he did not claim the reward was also the statement of a fact. These declarations, and the settlement made by defendants with Gard in consequence of them, I think, estop the plaintiff from now claiming the reward. Bigelow, Estop. § 445; Dolbeer v. Livingstone, 100 Cal. 617, 35 Pac. 328. There may be an estoppel without intentional fraud on the part of the person sought to be estopped. Continental Nat. Bank v. Bank of Commonwealth, 50 N. Y. 575; Thompson v. Simpson, 128 N. Y. 270, 28 N. E. 627; Mitchell v. Reed, 9 Cal. 204. Other cases, cited by defendants, and in point, are Storrs v. Barker, 6 Johns. Ch. 166; Moore v. Nye (Sup.) 21 N. Y. Supp. 94; Blodgett v. McMurtry, 34 Neb. 782, 52 N. W. 706.
.Plaintiff further contends, as follows:
“The defendants cannot and ouglic not to be heard to complain in this case. It was the easiest matter in the world for them to have asked the sheriff of Tulare county who arrested and delivered Sontag to him. It was their plain and simple duty, and their lips should be forever closed when they failed to do their plain duty; and when they come in and invoke the doctriné of estoppel without having done so, they are without merit.”
Judgment will be entered for the defendants.