Gallagher v. Garrett

124 A. 898, 144 Md. 241, 1923 Md. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 5, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 124 A. 898 (Gallagher v. Garrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallagher v. Garrett, 124 A. 898, 144 Md. 241, 1923 Md. LEXIS 169 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 18th of August, 1922, Wm. B. Norris and Frederick W. Kuethe, Mr. Norris being an officer, and Mr. Keuthe an employee, of the Hicks, Tase & Norris Company, drew from the Commonwealth Bank a sum a little in excess of seven thousand dollars for the purpose of meeting the weekly pay-roll of the corporation. Having received the money at the bank, they proceeded eastward on Madison Street for one block to Park Avenue, where they were attacked. Mr. Norris was shot and killed 'by a young, man who alighted from an automobile, and Mr. Kuethe was seriously assaulted. The bandits, together with the money they had seized, then jumped into the automobile and made their escape eastwardly on Madison Street.

The afternoon “Sun” of the same date published a notice of a reward of five thousand dollars for “information resulting in the arrest and conviction of the bandits who had murdered Mr. Norris.” This notice Was repeated in the morning paper of the following day, and within a few days thereafter, other sums were added by various persons and asso *243 matrons to the amount thus offered by the “Sun,” until an aggregate amount oí ten thousand dollars had been reached.

A number of persons were arrested, supposed to be connected -with the murder and assault, and were tried, some in .Baltimore City, one in Baltimore County. Convictions were obtained, and some of tlie men are today serving life sentences in the State penitentiary as the parties guilty of the crime as principals.

Thereupon numerous persons appeared as claimants for the fund, or some portion of it, and those who offered the sums which made up the reward, in order to limit their liability to the amounts, which they had offered, filed a bill of interpleader in the Circuit Court. Eo. 2 of Baltimore City, setting* out the facts mentioned, asking1 that they be allowed to bring money into court and that the several claimants might be required to substantiate tbeir claims in the court.

The case came on to trial before the Judge of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City who was at that time assigned to the said Circuit Court Eo. 2, and by him portions of the reward were ordered to be distributed among seventeen different claimants. These awards were in each instance fixed as to tbeir amounts. From this decree two appeals were prayed.

By the decree of the Circuit Court Eo. 2, $575 was deducted from the gross amount of the reward offered, and the balance then remaining was ordered distributed among certain named claimants in specific amounts. The appeal having been taken, it necessarily follows that the costs in the case have been considerably increased, and therefore the amount remaining to be divided between the claimants will ho somewhat reduced. It is impossible for this Court to make a distribution of absolute sums, but it will be compelled to send the ease back with instructions to allow to certain of the claimants hereinafter named a specified percentage of the net amount in the hands of the clerk of the Circuit Court Eo. 2, proportioned to the relative value of the services rendered, after the payment of all of the oo-sts.

*244 The first appeal Was by Charles W. Gallagher, to whom no allowance whatever was made, and the second by the-William J. Burns International Detective Agency, upon the ground that the allowance named to that corporation was not as large as it was contended .that it should have been.

Upon the first appeal, that of Gallagher, no one appeared in this court at the argument, and no brief was filed in Mr. Gallagher’s behalf, though, after the argument, he did file with the clerk of this Court a letter with regard to his claim and a statement setting out the service which he claimed to have rendered.

This was somewhat irregular in form, and had there been ¿ motion for the affirmance of the decree for failure to file a brief, there would have been good reason to grant it. Independent of that, a very careful examination of the evidence fails to disclose such assistance rendered by this claimant as to justify this Court in admitting him to a participation in any distribution of the reward.

Ho question was raised as to the right to distribute the reward .among various parties. That has been too frequently decided to leave it an open question, and a citation of authorities would he superfluous. A collection of them will be found in 23rd R. C. L. 1133. There are but few questions of law to he passed upon. The first and most important is as to the right of police officials to share in any such distribution. Ho question arises with regard to the police officials of Baltimore City. Through the Attorney General they have disclaimed any right so to do.

The question arises mainly upon claims presented by certain police officers of Baltimore County and of the City of Washington. The question is one of public policy, whether officers of another jurisdiction should he permitted to participate in the distribution of a reward. With regard to this, adjudicated cases are not entirely harmonious. Quite a number of cases were cited, supposed to support the proposition that an officer of a county or state other than that *245 where the crime was committed, were so entitled to participate, while a smaller number of .cases take the opposite view'. Thus the general rule is supported by such cases as Smith v. Vernon County, 188 Mo. 501, which was a case of a policeman of another state. There are two eases in Louisiana, Murphy v. New Orleans, 11 La. Annual, 323, and Pielie v. New Orleans, 19 La. Annual, 274, which were cited as authority for the proposition that an officer was entitled to participate even in the jurisdiction where the offense was) committed In each of these cases, however, the decisions turned upon the fact that an unrepealed ordinance of the City of New Orleans granted the right to claim. In Gregg v. Pierce, 53 Barb. 387, a deputy sheriff had pursued one suspected or accused of the crime from his own state into another. In some of the cases the line is drawn as to whether the officer presenting' the claim was or was not acting in the line of his duty; if he is, then no reward was allowable, whereas, if his service was performed in a different jurisdiction, whether state or county, and in which he was lacking in legal authority to make an arrest, his act was. no more than that of any private citizen and participation was. to be allowed. In others of the cases, the. line has been drawn upon whether or not he had a warrant for such .arrest, and if he had not, then he was also entitled to participate Some well reasoned opinions will be found in the cases of Pool v. Boston, 5 Cushing, 219; In re Russell’s Application, 51 Conn. 577; Lees v. Colgan, 120 Cal. 262, and Gray v. Martino, 91 N. J. L. 462.

Accordingly, there can be no legal objection to including’ both the officers of Baltimore County and the City of Washington in the distribution of the reward.

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Bluebook (online)
124 A. 898, 144 Md. 241, 1923 Md. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallagher-v-garrett-md-1923.