Hodgson v. Hatfield

1925 OK 511, 240 P. 69, 112 Okla. 134, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 560
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 16, 1925
Docket15383
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1925 OK 511 (Hodgson v. Hatfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodgson v. Hatfield, 1925 OK 511, 240 P. 69, 112 Okla. 134, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 560 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

THREADGILL, C.

This was an action against the sheriff, his bondsmen, •and other parties to recover money alleged to have been taken, from a prisoner and illegally appropriated.

The facts, according to the record, are substantially as follows:

The plaintiff is the administrator of the estate of D. A. Pollock, deceased; the defendant Harry H. Hodgson was sheriff of Woods county, and defendants Harry E. Mason, H. A. Matteson, G. 0. Nickel, E. Westling, Fred Fash, and E. A. Haines were the sheriff’s bondsmen; Porter Wynn was the prisoner from whom the money wag taken by the sheriff, and John Barry was the attorney representing said Wynn, and to whom the money was paid as a fee for representing him. In September and up to October 7, 1920, the decedent, D. A. Pollock, and defendant, Pouter Wynn, were living together in a three-room house in the northeast hills of Woods county, where they were engaged in the illicit business of making and selling whisky. Pollock’s home was in Anthony, Kan., where his wife lived and their two children. Wynn and his wife and children lived together and occupied one room of the house out in the said hills, and Pollock, with a mistress, occupied the other room of said house. On October 7, 1920, the two men had an altercation in the kitchen before breakfast, caused by Pollock rebuking Wynn for slapping his wife, or insinuating conduct of Pollock to Wynn’s wife. Pollock’s mistress became alarmed over the trouble, and requested him to take her at once to Hartner, Kan. They started .and tried to go in Pollock’s Ford ear, but it would not work, and then they proceeded to walk, and intended to go a distance o-f about *135 two miles to where their landlord, Ezra Mays, lived, where they expected to get transportation to Hartner, Kan.; when they had walked about a mile and a half and were in about one-half mile from Mays’ house, Wynn came up out of a gorge upon them, and pointing a gun at them, commanded them to throw up their hands and to throw upon the ground their pocket books, which they did. Wynn picked up the pocket books and took from Pollock’s $500, in five, ten, and twenty dollar bills, and marched them baqk the way they came, the distance of a mile, then shot Pollock two or three times, which caused his death a few hours later, and Wynn took his family and escaped across the line to Kiolwa, Kan., where he was arrested the next day at the railway station, and where he had bought a ticket and was waiting for a train to take him north. They 'took firom hite /person Sthe money in controversy and turned the same over to the sheriff, defendant in this ease, and said sheriff brought, him to Alva, and put him in jail, and he was thereafter tided, convicted, and sent to the state penitentiary for manslaughter. Soon after Wynn was placed in jail he employed John Barry, as his attorney, and the sheriff, after consulting the county attorney and being advised that the state did not need the money as evidence, and after advising with the county judge, who acted as the examining magistrate, and who told him he did not know any reason why he should not return the money, delivered it to the attorney, John' Barry, at the request of Wynn to pay a part of his fee for representing hitm. It appears from the record that the sheriff had information that the money had been taken by force from Pollock. After the administrator was appointed he made demand ' of the sheriff for the money, which being refused, this action was commenced to recover double the amount.

After issues joined the cause tw;as tried to a jury, October 23, 1923, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, and the defendants appeal by petition in error and case-made.

1. They first contend that the sheriff owed no special duties to any individual who might have been the owner of the money that was taken from the prisoner, Wynn.

Defendants say this proposition is supported by the holding in the case of Eberhardt v. Board of County Commissioners, 186 Pac. 492, a Kansas case. We have examined this authority very carefully and it appears that the court holds that where a contractor enters into a contract with the county commissioners and constructs improvements under said contract, (without proper noitieja given as required by statute, that the contract is void, .and there is no liability upon the county to pay, and this upon the theory that under a void contract there is no duty owing the individual by the public official, and without a legal contract there is no liability.

The statutory requirements must be complied with in order to fix liability. We cannot see how this holding of the court had any application to the defendant’s proposition, that the sheriff of Woods county owed no duty to any person who might toe the owner of the money in controversy. The case cited and discussed involved a void contract, and the court, in discussing the duty of public officials, states that they awe a duty to the public where the public interest alone is involved, and they also owe a duty to the individual where the individual interest is involved. In the instant case the sheriff had notice, from parties who knew the facts, that Wynn took about $509 from Pollock toy force before he shot him. The next day after the killing the sheriff attended the coroner’s inquest at the house of Ezra Mays and heard the testimony of the witnesses as to what took place between the two men in the difficulty. He heard* ¿he testimony as to the money taken from Pollock ; he also had information as to the amount of money taken from Pollock and about the flwto pocket books, from parties who seemed to know the facts at the time he ¡went to Kiowa, Kan., as sheriff, to bring the prisoner, Wynn, back to Oklahoma— all this information was sufficient notice to warn him that the money he received, with the prisoner, was claimed by the heirs of Pollock, and 'that he should take care of it or put it in the way of being taken care of for at least six months, subject to the orders of the court and rights of the oiwmers. The statutes, sections 2944 and 2948, provide a procedure for taking care of and disposing of moneys stolen or embezzled, which are applicable when the defendant is arrested, charged, and tried for the crime, but in a ease where there is no arrest and trial for the particular crime, as in ease the defendant is killed in flight after the robbery, or-is charged and tried only for murder, where the murder follows the robbery, as in the instant case, the procedure provided in above sections is not applicable, still the officer or any other person getting possession of money taken from a prisoner or a thief, with notice of claimants, must hold such money a rea *136 sonable length of time subject to the rights of the lawful owners, under the Jaw of bailment. Because the defendant, Wynn, was not changed with robbery and not tried for taking this money from Pollock, would not give the sheriff license to take it from Wynn and dispose or it as he saw fit when, he had notice that Pollock’s heirs claimed it, and then justify his act by saying the prisoner was not charged with robbery, larceny, or embezzlement at the time he so disposed of the money, although he was charged with murder, and he had notice of the robbery. This would be using the statutes fixing a procedure in certain cases to aid wrongdoing in cases where die procedure is not applicable.

Defendants also cite the case of McPhee v. U. S. Fidelity & Guarantee Company, a Washington case, 100 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 511, 240 P. 69, 112 Okla. 134, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodgson-v-hatfield-okla-1925.