delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented upon this appeal, arises upon the construction of the sixth section of the Act of Assembly of 1872, chap. 244, which is as follows: “And he it enacted that all grain arriving in the City of Baltimore, must be reported to the grain weighers’ office, whether by steamers, sail vessels of all descriptions, barges, or canal boats; and it shall be the duty of the Weigher General of grain to have weighed all grain carried to said city for sale, except grain carried to the city on wagons, carts,, railroad cars or through elevators ; provided however, all grain sent to said city must be weighed by said Weigher General, if the owners of said grain shall request it to be-weighed by him. It shall be the duty of the WeigherGeneral to proceed to weigh all grain within at least two hours after the same is reported, and continue weighing until the weighing is completed ; and for every failure-to comply with this provision, the said Weigher General shall be liable to a penalty of twenty dollars, to be recovered before any justice of the peace in Baltimore City, one-half of the fine to go'.,to the informer, and the other half
In construing statutes the intention of the Legislature is to be carried out, and that intention is to be collected from the words of the statute, by considering every part of it, as well as the cause or necessity of making the Act, or from foreign circumstances. Frazier vs. Warfield, 13 Md., 301. That was a case involving the rights and duties of a weigher of grain arising under the Act of 1858, chap. 256. This Court has said in that case that “the object and general purpose of the law was to provide a competent and suitable officer to inspect grain sold in the City of Baltimore, and to ascertain with fairness and accuracy the true quantity sold, by weighing and measuring; to establish a system by which the Legislature supposed the farmer would more honestly receive, and the merchant-more honestly pay, exactly for what is sold and bought. The Act proposes to accomplish this result, not by introducing a new mode of weighing and measuring, but by placing between the buyer and seller an impartial officer of the law, with duties defined, and their faithful performance secured by a bond and. oath." The Act of 1872, being analogous to the Act of 1858, it may be assumed
It was contended by the counsel of the appellee that, as it does not appear from the statement of facts, that the grain, mentioned in the bill of particulars, has ever been taken from the elevators, it must be presumed it still remains in them, and, therefore, that it cannot be said that it has ever passed “ through” the elevators. To this view we cannot agree. When grain has been removed from the vessels and taken up into the elevators, and thence let down into hoppers and weighed, and after weighing has been disposed of as described in the agreed statement of facts, it has been carried “ through ” the elevators in contemplation of the Act, and is exempt from being again weighed by the grain weighers of the State.
The judgment appealed from must therefore be reversed.
Judgment reversed.