122 Minn. 316 | Minn. | 1913
The complaint alleges that plaintiff is a ■ corporation, organized under the laws of this state and, at the times stated therein, engaged in the business of buying and selling grain and other farm products at Atwater, this state; that defendant Enge, in April, 1911, was a commission merchant residing and doing business as such at the city of Minneapolis; being duly licensed as such by the warehouse commission under and pursuant to sections 2114 to 2120, B. L. 1905; that at the time the license was so issued to Enge he duly executed to the state the bond required by the statute referred to, upon which defendant bonding and insurance company became surety; the bond was duly approved and conditioned in all respects as required by law, and that Enge would faithfully account and report to all persons intrusting him with grain or other agricultural products and farm produce, and faithfully perform all duties and obligations imposed by law upon him as such commission merchant; that, on April 27, 1911, plaintiff consigned to Enge a large quantity of wheat to be sold by him on the market at Minneapolis, and the proceeds accounted for, less commission charges; that Enge wholly failed to account for such grain or to pay over to plaintiff the receipts therefor, and, on the contrary, converted the same to his own use, to plaintiff’s damages in the sum of $1,253.07, no part of which has been paid. The complaint contains a second cause of action for the wrongful conversion by Enge of another consignment of wheat on May 8, 1911, to plaintiff’s damage in the further sum of $1,266.-14. The complaint further alleges, upon information and belief, that Enge is not indebted to any other consignor or consignors of grain intrusted to him as such commission merchant. Judgment is •demanded against Enge for the total value of the grain converted, and against the bonding company for the sum of $2,000, the penalty of the bond. Defendant bonding company interposed a general demurrer to the complaint, and appealed from an order overruling the same.
Section 2119, being one of the sections of the statute under which Enge was licensed as a commission merchant, and under which the bond in suit was executed, provides as follows:
“If any licensee shall fail to account for any consignment of any*318 of the commodities mentioned in this subdivision, or to pay to the consignor moneys due on such consignment, the consignor or his agent, within ninety days of the date of shipment, may file with the commission an affidavit setting forth the matters complained of. Thereupon such consignor, within a year after the cause of action accrues, may bring an action upon the bond of the licensee, and recover the amount due him on account of such consignment.”
The complaint does not allege that the affidavit mentioned in this quotation from the statute was made or filed with the warehouse commission, and the absence of the allegation is the foundation of defendant’s contention that the complaint fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. ' Whether the filing of the affidavit is essential to the right of action on the bond is therefore the only question presented, and that is solved by an answer to the further question, namely, whether the statute in this particular is mandatory or directory. The trial court held it merely directory, and the failure to file the affidavit not fatal to the plaintiff’s right of action.
If the statute as amended and revised in 1905 be construed as imposing upon the shipper or consignor the duty to file the affidavit as a condition precedent to his right of action on the bond, in other words, the statute be construed as mandatory, the order appealed from must be reversed, for it is neither alleged nor claimed that this requirement of the statute was ever complied with. Our conclusion upon the question is in harmony with that of the learned trial judge, namely, that the statute, as amended in 1905, is not mandatory, but
In the statute under consideration there is no positive command that the affidavit be filed, no clause therein declaring a failure to file it fatal to the right of action on the bond, and it seems clear that the protection of the rights of third persons was not in contemplation at all. It was clearly not intended for the benefit of the surety on the commission merchant’s bond, for no provision is contained therein for the service of the same upon the surety, or for notification that it has been filed. Upon the filing of the affidavit, reads the statute, an action may be brought upon the bond. If there had been any purpose to protect the surety, undoubtedly some provision for communicating to him the default of the principal and of the filing of the affidavit would have been included in the statute. Instead of making any such provision, or any other provision indicating a purpose to protect the rights either of the surety or third persons, the statute simply says, “the affidavit may be filed.” And though the language of the statute cannot be ignored, some force must be given its provisions, we are clear that they cannot be construed in the light contended for by defendant.
The original statute is free from criticism. It constitutes a complete workable statute. The only purpose of an affidavit or complaint,
The statute was confused and rendered somewhat ambiguous by the amendment of 1901. The section of the original act authorizing suit upon the bond was amended in two respects: First, by requiring the filing of the affidavit, and second, by declaring that the affidavit, when filed, should not be construed as “a complaint within the meaning of section 3 of this act.” Just what purpose the legislature had in mind in making this change in the statute is far from clear, and is exceedingly difficult to determine. But if it had been carried forward into the revision of 1905, it would be the duty of the court to ascribe to the change some definite purpose, however difficult it might be to ascertain the intention of the legislature.
However, the revisers of the statutes did not incorporate the amendment of 1901 into the revision, either in form or substance. On the contrary, a substantial alteration of the language was made, and approved by the legislature. The clause of the amended statute providing for filing the affidavit was couched in permissive language, and the clause providing that it should not be construed as a complaint within the meaning of section 3 wholly eliminated. This change is particularly significant, leaving the inference that the revisers and legislature were of opinion that the only purpose of an affidavit was the commencement of inquisitorial proceedings before
The case is wholly unlike Grant v. Berrisford, 94 Minn. 45, 101 N. W. 940, 1113. That was an action upon a contractor’s bond. The statute authorizing the action expressly provided that “no action shall be maintained on any such bond unless plaintiff, within ninety days after performing the last item of work * * * shall serve upon the principal and the surety or sureties in said bond, a written notice specifying the nature and amount of plaintiff’s claim. * * #
The statute here involved contains no such requirement or anything the equivalent thereof. The affidavit here provided for is not required to be served upon the surety, nor is there any provision in the statute requiring notice of an intention to sue, or of de
It is probable that, in a controversy between different shippers, the statute might properly enough be construed to exclude from participation in the pro rata distribution of the recovery on the bond all those who failed to file the affidavit. The question, however, is not presented and we do not so decide. But conceding such a construction of the statute to be permissible, it in no way involves the surety on the bond. His liability is fixed and certain, and he is not concerned in the distribution thereof among different claimants.
We have carefully considered all the arguments of counsel in support of the contention that the statute is mandatory with the result stated. No reasons of sufficient force are advanced to sustain or justify that construction of the statute.
Order affirmed.