80 Mo. App. 463 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
This is an action which was commenced before a justice of the peace.
When the cause reached the circuit court the plaintiffs amended their statement by claiming $63.76 for cash paid for storage and elevator charges, and $20 for additional freight made necessary by delay. It was therein alleged that .these “items of loss and damage were caused by the neglect of defendant in ordering the Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis to deliver to warehouse a certain freight car, containing four hundred sacks of bran, said car having been delivered to
Via Wabash Station and R. R. Oar No. 7399. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe R. R. Co.
Via Station and Lexington Junet. R. R. Initials, M. K. & T. Wabash. Way-bill from Kansas City to St. Louis. Date, Sept. 4, 1891. Way-bill.
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In the meantime storage charges had accrued amounting to $63.16 and the summer lake and rail rates existing on the Clover Leaf and other lines connecting and extending to the end of the transit at the time the car was stopped by defendant had been discontinued, so that when the transit was resumed the rate had been so increased that the plaintiffs’ purchaser had to pay the delivering carrier $20 additional freight charges, which the plaintiffs would not have had to pay but for the negligence of the defendant. These charges were a lien and until paid the carrier would not deliver the car. It seems to us that under the peculiar circumstances of the case the evidence touching the correctness of the storage and freight charges and the payment thereof was ample. In view of the law as declared by the authorities hereinbefore referre.d to, we think the plaintiff was entitled to a submission of the case to the jury.
It is quite true that the way-bill which defendant received of the preceding carrier did not fully and clearly state the address of Hall & Robinson, consignees, but this omission we think afforded no justification or excuse for the action
But the ordinary meaning of the word must be presumed intended unless that would defeat the object of the statute. It is only where it is necessary to give effect to the clear policy and intention of the legislature that such liberty can be taken with the plain words of the statute. Thompson v. Lessee, etc., 22 How. loc. cit. 434; Minor v. Bank, 1 Pet. loc. cit. 64. It is manifest that this is not a case for the application of the rule requiring “may” to be construed as “must.” The word as used in the plaintiffs’ instruction implied permission to the jury to allow or disallow interest as it thought fit. It was not used in a mandatory sense and can not be so construed in a case like this. The plaintiffs’ instruction is therefore not subject to defendant’s criticism.
The judgment will be affirmed.