Hoggard v. Dickerson

165 S.W. 1135, 180 Mo. App. 70, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 220
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 165 S.W. 1135 (Hoggard v. Dickerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoggard v. Dickerson, 165 S.W. 1135, 180 Mo. App. 70, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 220 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

STURGIS, J.

The jury in this case by its verdict held the defendant liable to plaintiffs for the payment pf a reward of $5000, alleged to have been offered by defendant to the public for the capture of the slayer of Stanley Ketchel, who was shot and robbed on October 15,1910, at a farm owned by defendant in Webster county, Missouri, known as the Dickerson ranch. There was little or no doubt at the time that one Walter Dipley, then living on such ranch, was the guilty party and the reward offered was practically, if not in terms, applicable to him.. The friendship existing between defendant and the slain man was very close and Ketchel was at the time of his being shot a guest of defendant at his ranch. Ketchel was well known as the middleweight champion pugilist and the defendant is a prominent business man of Springfield, Missouri. The shooting of Ketchel occurred in the morning and Dipley, who did the shooting, at once fled, heavily armed. On defendant being informed of it, he at once chartered a special train at Springfield, took with him a man with .bloodhounds, gathered all the officers within reach, and with some of his close friends went to Conway, the nearest railroad point to the scene of the killing. ■ He was evidently very much wrought up and showed a determination to have the guilty man captured and punished. Efforts were made at the ranch to track the escaped murderer but without avail. The defendant, with his friends, officers, etc., took the slain man back to the special train at Conway in the afternoon and from there to Springfield.

[75]*75It is claimed that the defendant, both publicly and privately, offered a reward of $5000 to any one who would capture the person who shot Ketchel, both while at the farm and at Conway just before the special train departed on its return to Springfield. While defendant, by his answer, denies the allegations of the petition generally, his evidence shows and he admitted that he did offer a reward for the body of the person who shot his friend Ketchel but that his offer was “for him dead, not one cent for him alive.” The defendant also sets up.the defense of a settlement between plaintiffs and himself, whereby the plaintiffs accepted $15 in full settlement of' their claim. There were a large number of witnesses examined on both sides, the battle being waged for the most part as to whether défendant offered a reward for Dipley dead or for him dead or alive. It was admitted on the trial that Dipley was tried and convicted of the murder of Ketchel and sentenced to the penitentiary for life. It was also shown, without contradiction, that plaintiffs,who were farmers in Webster county, captured Dipley the next morning after the commission of the crime and delivered him to the sheriff and jail of that county. We will speak more of the manner of the arrest in connection with the plaintiffs’ knowledge of and reliance on the reward in making it.

A careful analysis of all the evidence is well calculated to convince a jury, as it doubtless did, that while defendant’s preference was, in his anger, excitement and intense feeling against the murderer of his friend, to have the guilty party killed rather than captured and brought to trial, yet, that he did offer a reward for his capture regardless of his being brought in de.ad or alive. The evidence shows that he began talking this offer of reward even before reaching the scene of the killing; he stated it several times at the farm to different men or groups of men; he stated it two or three times on the return to Conway [76]*76before the train left for Springfield. It is doubtless true that he did not always state it in the same terms, though there is no variation as to the amount. He evidently gave way, especially in talking to individuals who were his friends, to his desire for revenge in stating his offer of reward and told them to bring him in dead, or that he was armed and dangerous and to shoot him down and take no chances,' or to shoot him first and cry halt afterward, and other such expressions, showing a desire to have him killed rather than captured. There is abundant evidence to show, however, that to other persons and especially when making the offer publicly, as he did from the car door at Conway, he stated the reward would be given for him dead or alive, or simply for his capture. In finding for the plaintiffs the jury may not have discredited the witnesses who testified to his making the statement that he desired to have him killed, nor even'as to his saying on one or two occasions that he only wanted him dead and would not pay one cent for him alive. The evidence shows that on the return of defendant and his party from the ranch to Conway, and just prior to the special train leaving for Springfield, the defendant from the car door made a public proclamation of his offer of reward, repeating it two or three times, to a hundred or more persons gathered there. While the witnesses do not all state the offer made on this occasion in the same words, yet, the preponderance, as to numbers, is in favor of plaintiffs that he did not then annex to the offer of $5000 for the slayer of Ketchel that he be killed or brought in dead. The defendant claims that there were only four witnesses who testi-' fied that the reward was offered for him dead or alive, while plaintiffs claim that seventeen witnesses so testified. The difference is in the fact that the defendant counts only those who testified that he used the words “dead or alive,” while plaintiffs count those who testified that he stated that he would pay the reward for [77]*77the slayer of- Ketehel but without specifically using the words ‘ dead or alive. ” We think that an offer to pay a reward for a man or for his capture should be taken as meaning for his capture in a lawful manner. We, however, do not weigh the evidence and even four witnesses are sufficient to give some substantial evidence on which to base a verdict.

The jury found for plaintiffs on an instruction requiring them to find that defendant “offered a reward of $5000 for the person who shot Stanley Ketehel.” They found against defendant on his instruction that if they found that he only offered “a reward of $5000 to the person or persons who killed the slayer of Stanley Ketehel, then the plaintiffs cannot recover.” These instructions placed this issue before the jury in the most favorable light for defendant. It doubtless had some weight with the jury that defendant was asking a construction to be placed on his offer of reward which would require of the person earning it the commission of a crime. No valid offer of reward involving the commission of a crime could be made and the jury was doubtless inclined to put a construction on this offer which would make it a valid and bona fide offer, consistent with enforcement of the-law, rather than one looking to the commission of a further crime and therefore incapable of enforcement: against the person taking the offer. An offer of reward is in the nature of a contract with any and every person undertaking to comply with its terms. [34 Cyc. 1730; Elkins v. Board of County Comrs., 86 Kan. 305, 120 Pac. 542, 46 L. R. A. (N. S.) 662.] The construction of contracts of reward is governed by the same rules applicable to contracts in general, 34 Cyc. 1741, and it is a familiar rule of law that a contract should be given a reasonable construction and one that tends to make it valid rather than destroy it altogether. [9 Cyc. 586, 587; Wiggins Ferry Co. v. Railroad, 128 Mo. 224, 245, 27 S. W. 568, 30 S. W. 430.]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 S.W. 1135, 180 Mo. App. 70, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoggard-v-dickerson-moctapp-1914.