Miles v. Booth

152 S.W.2d 577, 287 Ky. 246, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 13, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 152 S.W.2d 577 (Miles v. Booth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miles v. Booth, 152 S.W.2d 577, 287 Ky. 246, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 513 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Eeversing in part and affirming in part.

The Kentucky Bankers Associasion (to which we will hereinafter refer as the “Association”) is a Kentucky corporation, and in 1938, during which the matters herein involved occurred, J. C. Nichols, who resided in Payette County, was its president. By its proper authority there was established and published a standing offer of reward of $500 for the arrest and conviction of each person who robbed a member bank. A copy of that offer was conspicuously posted in the bank of each of its members, in which it was said that the reward was to be paid, if earned under its terms for the robbing of ‘ ‘ This bank.” Another stipulation therein said: “If conflicting claims are made for This reward, the Association shall be discharged from all liability upon paying such re *247 ward into the Circuit Court of This County which shall finally determine such claims. This bank is a member of the Kentucky Bankers Association and one of the Guarantors of the Reward.”

A copy of the offer was posted beside the cashier’s window of the Farmers Bank of Milton, Kentucky, located in Trimble county. On February 8, 1938, at about noon that bank was robbed by William Burgess, Frank Burgess, Carl Willis and Sidney Carter. They were afterwards indicted in the Federal District Court for the Eastern District for Kentucky, and each of them convicted under a plea of guilty, followed by verdicts to that effect and sentence entered. The offered rewards by the Association for the arrest and conviction of Carter and Willis were setled and neither of them is involved in this litigation. But conflicting claims were made by appellee and plaintiff below, Omer Booth (who was the jailer of Clark County), and the two defendants, Carroll Miles and H. A. Spillman, as to who was entitled to the rewards due from the Association for the arrest and conviction of Frank and William Burgess, amounting in the aggregate to $1,000. Claiming the exclusive right to both rewards appellee filed this action in the Clark circuit court against the Association and Miles and Spillman, in which he averred that he, on or about March 4, 1938, arrested Frank Burgess in Clark County and kept him in his jail until about March 18th of the same year, on which latter day he (Frank Burgess) confessed to the robbery and implicated his three later convicted partners as joint participants therein. Plaintiff further averred that on the day set for the trial three of the accused entered a plea of guilty, but William Burgess entered a plea of not guilty, but which he retracted on the next day when informed of the confession of his brother Frank by plaintiff, and he then entered a plea of guilty. Therefore, plaintiff claimed that he was entitled to the $500 reward offered for the arrest and conviction of Frank Burgess and that he was entitled to the same amount for the conviction of William Burgess because he had informed the latter of the confession of his brother Frank, which induced him to withdraw his first plea of not guilty and substitute therefor a plea of guilty.

The Association answered and stated, in substance, that there were conflicting claims to the reward offered *248 for the arrest and conviction of William and Frank Burgess, and that its offer in that event prescribed that it might pay the amount due “into the circuit court of This (Trimble) County, which shall finally determine such claims. ’ ’ It then alleged that it was ready and willing to pay the claim as prescribed in its offer, but that it had no right to pay the amount in any other manner or in any other way. However, the Court ruled otherwise and directed it to pay the amount ($1,000) to L. C. Aldridge, clerk of the Clark circuit court, “who shall hold same subject to the further orders of this court.” That order was complied with by the Association and it retired from the case. The other two defendants and appellants here, Carroll Miles and H. A. Spillman, were and are citizens of Trimble County, the former being the sheriff at the time of the involved bank robbery; while Spillman was then only a private citizen of that county, and they were each summoned by the sheriff of their county. They each appeared in the Clark circuit court and filed special demurrer to plaintiff’s petition whereby the venue of the action was drawn in question, but the court overruled them and they then each made motion to quash the return on the summons on them by the sheriff of Trimble County whereby they were attempted to be brought into the Clark circuit court, and those motions were also overruled. They then answered to the merits in which they denied the necessary services performed by plaintiff to entitle him to either reward, for which he sued, followed by a statement of facts under which they claimed the fund in contest.

Following pleadings made the issues and a trial before a jury under the instructions given by the court resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the entire reward offered for the arrest and conviction of Frank Burgess, and for one-third of the reward due to be paid by the Association for the arrest and conviction of William Burgess. The other two-thirds of the latter reward was divided by the jury equally between Miles and Spill-man. From that judgment they prosecute this appeal, and plaintiff has moved for and been granted a cross-appeal, whereby he claims that he was entitled to the entire reward offered for the arrest and conviction of William Burgess, and that the court erred in not so instructing the jury.

Miles and Spillman properly raised the question of *249 the venue of the action as laid by plaintiff in the Clark circuit court, based upon the two grounds, (1) that the offerer of the reward incorporated therein, the venue or the particular court that should have venue to try any dispute between contesting claimants which was in this case the Trimble circuit court, and that if plaintiff obtained any rights at all to the reward by what he did 'in the premises he could assert them in no other court than the Trimble circuit court, since in performing his alleged services to entitle him to the reward, if any, he thereby accepted the offer as made and is bound by all of its terms, and (2) that the alleged local defendant (Kentucky Bankers Association) was improperly served in Clark County — it being done by the sheriff of that county on its president when he neither resided in that county nor was the company’s principal office in the state located in that county, and that when he was served in Clark County it was while he was casually within it on a mission wholly disconnected with any of the matters involved. To say the least of it each of such grounds are more or less complicated, and, since we have concluded that on the merits plaintiff did not manifest his right to receive the rewards which he sought to recover by this action, neither of the grounds supra, contesting the venue of the action, will be determined and our opinion will be rested solely on the merits of the case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 S.W.2d 577, 287 Ky. 246, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miles-v-booth-kyctapphigh-1941.