79 Minn. 416 | Minn. | 1900
Action to recover over $6,000 for the violation of the statute which provides that as against any person storing wheat under the
“On the return or presentation of such receipts by the lawful holder thereof, properly indorsed, at the elevator or warehouse where the grain represented therein is made deliverable and upon the payment or tender of payment of all lawful charges, * * * the grain shall be immediately delivered to the holder of such receipt, * * The grain represented by such receipt shall be delivered within twenty-four hours after such demand shall have been made and cars or vessels or other means of receiving the same from the elevator or warehouse shall have been furnished.
If not delivered upon such demand within twenty-four hours after such car, vessel or other means for receiving the same shall have been furnished, the warehouse in default shall be liable to the owner of such receipt for damages for such default, in the sum of one cent per bushel, and in addition thereto one cent per bushel' for each and every day of such neglect or refusal to deliver.” Laws 1895, c. 148, § 4.
The plaintiff had in store at the defendant’s warehouse at Correll,.in this state, upwards of 1,900 bushels of wheat. On July 31, 1896, plaintiff and one Woods, defendant’s agent in charge of the warehouse, had a settlement for warehouse charges, and the proper storage receipts under the warehouse law were delivered to plaintiff. There had been a general clearing out of the wheat for the past season. The grain had all been shipped out of the elevator, and the term of Woods’ service as general agent under his contract had expired on the day last mentioned. The agent, Woods, had a store adjoining the elevator, where he had previously transacted its business, as defendant’s agent in paying off and settling with its customers, and continued to retain the keys of the elevator and to transact business for the defendant, with its consent, some time after August 1 following. On August 1, the day after the receipts were issued, the plaintiff made out a written demand for the wheat, and went to the elevator with the amount of charges for its storage, and the proper means of receiving and shipping the grain provided for in the statute. The elevator was closed and empty. Plaintiff then went to the store of Woods, in the absence of the latter, and, after nine o’clock at night, served a written demand for his wheat on Woods’ minor son, who was temporarily in charge of
Upon proof of these facts, the trial court dismissed the action upon the ground that no proper -demand to set the statute in operation had been made. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled. An appeal therefrom is taken to this court.
We agree with the learned trial court that the demand for the wheat was insufficient to set in motion this severe and rigorous statute, under which, by mere force of its operation, dependent upon demand, and the running of time thereafter, the defendant would, by its alleged default, not only be liable for the grain itself, which it afterwards paid for, but for something over $6,000 for its refusal to deliver 1,900 bushels of wheat on demand. We are willing to go to the utmost limit, which reason will justify, to sustain the warehouse laws of this- state; and, though the consequences may be severe for not complying with the statutory duty, such consequences for the refusal to comply therewith must be considered as a punishment, and the proof of demand should not be in doubt. Under the section of the statute referred to, the money claimed being in the nature of a penalty,- — a severe one, if recoverable, — it must be held that the demand which is the basis for the penalty should be made in strict obedience to the statute. Clearly, in this case it was not so made.
Conceding that Woods was the agent of the defendant company, the warehouse being closed, and he being in occupation of his store, which was the usual place of business for the elevator, and having the keys at that place, a demand should at least have been made upon him personally, if it could have been done, and it does not seem in doubt but that it could, although the plaintiff might have been required to wait overnight, or for a day or two, to have served the written claim upon him. The boy of Woods had helped his father to some extent about the elevator, it is true, but was not the agent or subagent of the defendant, in any sense. Such a service of a summons in a civil action as was made in this case would not have been a good service on Woods personally, nor even a sub
The order appealed from is affirmed.
BROWN, J., having tried this case when district judge, took no part.