S. H. Broadnax v. A. L. Ledbetter
No. 1618
Supreme Court of Texas
100 Tex. 375; 99 S.W. 1111; 1907 Tex. LEXIS 238
February 27, 1907, Decided
PRIOR HISTORY: Question certified from the Court of Civil Appeals
for the Third District, in an appeal from Dallas County.
OPINION BY: WILLIAMS
This case is sent up by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third District upon the
following certificate:
"The Court of Civil Appeals of the Third Supreme Judicial District of the State of
Texas, certifies that the above styled and numbered cause is now pending on appeal in this
court, and states that the cause of action asserted by the appellant against appellee is
set out in plaintiff's original petition, which is as follows:
"'State of Texas, County of Dallas. In the County Court of Dallas County, Texas.
"'To the Hon. Judge of said Court:
"'Your petitioner, S. H. Broadnax, who is a resident citizen of Dallas County, Texas,
hereinafter called plaintiff, complaining of A. L. Ledbetter, who resides in Dallas
County, Texas, hereinafter called defendant, respectfully shows to the court:
"'That defendant is now and was on the dates hereinafter mentioned, the duly elected,
qualified and acting sheriff of Dallas County, Texas.
"'That heretofore towit: on or about the 21st day of December, 1904, one Holly Vann was, in the Criminal District Court of Dallas County, Texas, duly convicted of murder in the first degree, and his punishment assessed at death; that from the date of conviction as aforesaid, until the 25th day of January, 1905, said Vann was a prisoner in the custody of said defendant, as sheriff of Dallas County, Texas, and was confined in the county jail of said county.
"'That on said last named date, and pending the appeal of said case
of said Vann to the Court of Civil Appeals of the State of Texas, he, the said Vann, by
some method and means unknown to plaintiff, effected his escape from said jail, and from
the custody of said defendant, and remained at large, a fugitive from justice, until the
evening of the 25th day of January, 1905.
"'That after the escape of the said prisoner Vann, and during the time he was at
large, a fugitive from justice, said defendant did make and cause to be made, publish and
cause to be published, circulate and cause to be circulated, an offer, to the effect, that
he, the said defendant, would pay as a reward the sum of $ 500 to any party or parties who
would recapture the said prisoner Vann and return him to the Dallas County jail, from
which he escaped, or to any other jail or jailer in the State of Texas.
"'That said offer to pay such reward was made to the public generally, that is, to
any person or persons who would capture the said prisoner and return him to custody, as
aforesaid, and was not made to any special person or officer.
"'That subsequent to the making, publishing and circulating of said offer to pay such
reward, and in conformity therewith and before the revocation thereof, said plaintiff did,
on towit, the 25th day of January, 1905, recapture, restrain, hold and return the said
prisoner Vann for whose capture said reward was offered, to the custody of said defendant,
and to the county jail of Dallas County, Texas, and there delivered said prisoner to the
custody of said defendant, and performed all the conditions contained in said offer to pay
such reward.
"'That by reason of the premises and the full performance by plaintiff, of the
services for which said reward was offered, said plaintiff is entitled to said reward, and
said defendant became liable to plaintiff, and promised to pay plaintiff the full amount
thereof, towit, $ 500.
"'That though often requested, defendant has failed and refused and still fails
and refuses to pay the same or any part thereof, to plaintiff's damage in the sum of
$ 500.
"'Wherefore your petitioner prays for citation hereon, as required by law, and upon
final hearing for judgment for the sum of $ 500 and for cost of suit, and for general and
special relief.'
"In the trial court the appellee interposed demurrers on the ground that the petition
stated no cause of action, because it was not alleged that plaintiff had knowledge or
notice of the reward when the escaped prisoner was captured and returned to jail by the
plaintiff. These demurrers were by the court sustained, and plaintiff declining to amend,
judgment was entered dismissing plaintiff's case, with a judgment against him for all
costs, etc.
"In view of the above statement, we propound the following question: Was notice or
knowledge to plaintiff of the existence of the reward when the recapture was made
essential to his right to recover?"
Upon the question stated there is a conflict among the authorities in other states. All
that have been cited or found by us have received due consideration, and our conclusion is
that those holding the affirmative are correct.
The liability for a reward of this kind must be created, if at all, by contract.
There is no rule of law which imposes it except that which enforces contracts voluntarily
entered into. A mere offer or promise to pay does not give rise to a contract. That
requires the assent or meeting of two minds and therefore is not complete until the offer
is accepted. Such an offer as that alleged may be accepted by any one who performs the
service called for, when the acceptor knows that it has been made and acts in performance
of it, but not otherwise. He may do such things as are specified in the offer, but, in so
doing, does not act in performance of it and therefore does not accept it, when he is
ignorant of its having been made. There is no such mutual agreement of minds as is
essential to a contract. The offer is made to anyone who will accept it by performing the
specified acts, and it only becomes binding when another mind has embraced and accepted
it. The mere doing of the specified things without reference to the offer is not the
consideration for which it calls. This is the theory of the authorities which we regard as
sound. (Pollock on Contracts, 20; Anson on Contracts, 41; Wharton on Contracts, secs. 24,
507; Story on Contracts (5th ed.), 493; Page on Contracts, sec. 32; 9 Cyc. Law and Proc.,
254; 29 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 956.) The decisions of the courts upon the question are
cited by the authors referred to.
Some of the authorities taking the opposite view seem to think that the principle of
contracts does not control the question, and in one of them, at least, it is said that
"the sum offered is but a boon, gratuity, or bounty, generally offered in a spirit of
liberality, and not as a mere price, or a just equivalent simply for the favor or service
requested, to be agreed or assented to by the person performing it, but when performed by
him, as justly and legally entitling him to a fulfillment of the promise, without any
regard whatever to the motive or inducement which prompted him to perform it." (
Eagle v. Smith, 4 Houst. (Del.), 293.) But the law does not force persons to bestow boons,
gratuities or bounties merely because they have promised to do so. They must be legally
bound before that can be done. It may be true that the motive of the performer in
rendering service is not of controlling effect, as is said in some of the authorities
above cited in pointing out the misapprehension of the case of Williams v.
Carwardine, 4 B. & Ad., 621 (6th English Rul. Cas., 133), into which some of the
courts have fallen. But this does not reach the question whether or not a contractural
obligation is essential.
Other authorities say that it is immaterial to the offerer that the person doing that
which the offer calls for did not know of its existence; that the services are as valuable
to him when rendered without as when rendered with knowledge. ( Dawkins v. Sappington, 26
Ind., 199; Auditor v. Ballard, 9 Bush., 572.) But the value to the offerer of the acts
done by the other party is not the test. They may, in supposable cases, be of no value to
him, or may be no more valuable to him than to the person doing them. He is responsible,
if at all, because, by his promise, he has induced another to do the specified things.
Unless so induced, the other is in no worse position than if no reward had been offered.
The acting upon this inducement is what supplies, at once, the mutual assent and the
contemplated consideration. Without the legal obligation thus arising from contract
there is nothing which the law enforces.
Reasons have also been put forward of a supposed public policy, assuming that persons
will be stimulated by the enforcement of offers of rewards in such cases to aid in the
detection of crime and the arrest and punishment of criminals. But, aside from the fact
that the principles of law to be laid down can not on any sound system of reasoning be
restricted to offers made for such purposes, it is difficult to see how the activities of
people can be excited by offers of rewards of which they know nothing. If this reason had
foundation in fact, it would hardly justify the courts in requiring private citizens to
minister to the supposed public policy by paying rewards, merely because they have made
offers to pay upon which no one has acted. Courts can only enforce liabilities which have
in some way been fixed by the law. While we have seen no such distinction suggested, it
may well be supposed that a person might become legally entitled to a reward for arresting
a criminal, although he knew nothing of its having been offered, where it was offered in
accordance with law by the government. A legal right might in such a case be given by law
without the aid of contract. But the liability of the individual citizen must arise
from a contract binding him to pay.
Question is answered in the affirmative.