Fargo v. Arthur

43 How. Pr. 193
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 43 How. Pr. 193 (Fargo v. Arthur) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fargo v. Arthur, 43 How. Pr. 193 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1872).

Opinion

Learned, J.

—This is an action ¡of interpleader, brought to determine who, among numerous claimants, are entitled to the reward of $5,000 offered by the American M. U. Express Company, after the robbery of Thomas A. Halpine, one of their messengers. The plaintiffs are the company, and they have brought into court the amount aforesaid. The defendants are the persons who severally claim to be entitled to the amount, or to a part of it. At about 8 P. M. on the 6th of January, 1871, Halpine was robbed and nearly murdered while on an express car on the Boston and Albany Railroad. The deed was done while the train was crossing the railroad bridge at Albany. On the 7th, the company published an offer in these words: u $5,000 reward will be paid for the arrest and conviction, or information leading thereto, of the person or persons who attempted to murder, and did rob, the messenger of the Am. Merchant’s Union Express Company, while crossing the railroad bridge at Albany, on Friday evening, Jany. 6th, 1871. For the company, J. C. Fargo, Gen. Superintendent.”

Ho person was then suspected by the company, or the public authorities.

On the morning of January 8th, Thomas Braidwood informed Mr. Dwight, the superintendent of the company, that on the afternoon of Jany. 6th, he had seen John I. Filkins in a pawnbroker’s shop looking for a pistol, but that he did not buy one. In consequence of that information, Dwight saw Filkins that afternoon and became satisfied that he had some guilty knowledge of the crime.

On the morning of Jany. 7th, Robert A. Scott sent word to the police headquarters that he had sold a pistol on the day before and gave a description of the purchaser, and on the evening of the 8th, he had another interview with the police.

On the afternoon qf Jany. 8th, William pL Whalen found, near the spot where the crime had been committed, the pistol with which it was done; and this pistol. he gave, on the same day, through his mother, to one of the employees [195]*195of the railroad, from whom the information of the discovery came to the public authorities.

On the evening of January 8th,' Jeremiah Flood informed the superintendent of the railroad that he saw a person, known to him by sight but not by name, jump on the express car and ride to the depot on the evening of the robbery; and he gave the same information to Mr. Kyle, the special policeman of the railroad, on Monday. This person was proved to be Filkins.

During all this time Filkins was at his house, not arrested and not suspected by the public. On the 11th of January, in the early morning, he fled and was at once suspected by the public of this crime.

On the evening of January 12th, William H. Foos, of Ballston, left a telegraphic dispatch at the office in Ballston, to the police at Albany, that Filkins had breakfasted at his house and was on his way to Canada, or (according to other witnesses) to Galway. The dispatch was forwarded on the morning of the 13th.

George F. White, of Saratoga, late on the morning of the 13th, telegraphed to the police that a suspicious-looking man ' (who proved to be Filkins) stayed at, his house and went away in the morning, saying that he was' going to Canada. Mr. White’s dispatch did not reach Albany until after the dispatch from Foos had been received.

On the 15th of January, Altentor Hall, of Whitehall, received a telegraphic dispatch from the Express Company, saying that Filkins was going towards Canada, and requesting that pursuit should be made. On the same day, Hall showed the dispatch to Herman Ingraham and Oliver Thomas of the same place. Ingraham ordered a team, and he and Thomas went in pursuit of Filkins. By Ingraham’s .advice, they went by Fort Ticonderoga. They were lost on the lake, and reached Fort Ticonderoga the next morning, the 16th. There Ingraham showed William A. G. Arthur the dispatch and proposed that he should go. Ingraham was ill and [196]*196could not go on- Arthur and Thomas started that day from Fort Ticouderoga, in search of Filkins. They reached John D. Bur well’s hotel, at Salmon Lake, and went on to Pottersville, where they put up for the night. At about eight o’clock on that evening, Filkins arrived at Burwell’s house, on a stage driven by Charles F. Leland, and registered himself by a fictitious name. Immediately on his arrival, Bur-well suspected him to be Filkins. After he had gone to bed, Burwell sent Leland and Joel Potter to Pottersville, for Arthur and Thomas, and they came back together about 11 P.M. That night these five men arrested Filkins. They brought him to Albany. He was subsequently tried, convicted of this crime, and sentenced to the state prison for twenty years.

All of the persons whose name's have been mentioned as giving information, or as participating in the arrest, claim the reward or some part of it. Their views are very conflicting. Some claim that the person who first furnished any information which ultimately led to the conviction, is entitled to the whole amount. Some claim that the persons who made the arrest are entitled to the whole, exclusive of all others. Some claim that there should be an equitable distribution of the award among all, including those who furnished information and those who made the arrest. And still another claim is, that those who made the arrest are entitled to $5,000 and those who furnished information to another $5,000. Burwell, Thomas, Leland, Arthur and Potter, however agree to share among themselves whatever they or any of them shall be entitled to.

1. A case like this is peculiarly proper for an interpleader. The plaintiffs are ready to pay to the persons lawfully entitled. Some of the defendants claim the whole; some claim an equitable distribution. It is evidently a .case in which the matter should be adjusted in one suit, and to which the plaintiffs do not know to whom they ought to pay the money (2 Story Eq., §§ 806 and 29: City Bk. agt. Bangs, 2 Paige, 570).

[197]*1972. I am satisfied that this is an offer of only $5,000 reward. Perhaps by a strict logical construction, it might be urged that an offer in the alternative for two things is an offer for each. But a paper like this ought to be construed as the public, to whom it was addressed, would understand it, and I think, no one would suppose it to be an offer of $10,000. Besides, it is an offer for the arrest and conviction, or information leading thereto. Now, it is admitted that conviction” is a pre-requisite condition before any one can claim the reward. Conviction must be preceded by arrest; and the information for which a reward is offered is such, as leads to arrest and conviction.

3. The case of Fitch agt. Snedaker, (38 N. Y., 248), holds that under such an offer, a person is not entitled to recover for anything done before the offer was made. In the present case, all the defendants base their claims on acts done after the offer. Their motives are immaterial (Williams agt. Carwardine, 4 Barn. & Ald., 274).

4. Is there any reason to construe this offer as entitling either of the two classes, viz., he or they who informed and those who arrested, to the whole reward, exclusive of the other class 1 I-think not; for these reasons, as above noticed, an informant or informants, could not be entitled to recover until conviction; and arrest must precede conviction.

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Bluebook (online)
43 How. Pr. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fargo-v-arthur-nysupct-1872.