This writ of error was taken to a judgment awarding double damages and attorney fees for failure of the railrоad company to pay within sixty days after presentation a claim for a mule killed by the railroad сompany at a point where under the statute the company should have had, but did not have, its track fenced. The declaration alleges the value of the mule killed to be $125.00, and also alleges that “the plaintiff gave notice in writing of the time, place and value of the said mule” to the agent of the сompany, “but the said defendant has not paid the same or any part thereof, or offered so tо do, and more than sixty days have passed since the giving of the said notice and the said defendant has bеcome liable to the plaintiff for the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, being double, the amount of adamages caused by the killing of the mule aforesaid, and all costs, expenses, and a reasonable attоrney’s fee incurred by the plaintiff in collecting the same by suit.” A demurrer to the declaration was properly overruled, since the declaration was not subject to the criticism that it does not appear whether the railroad line
By motion in arrest of judgment the constitutionаl validity of the statute is assailed in so far as it provides “that upon the failure' to pay the claim within sixty days аfter its presentation the said railroad companies, person or persons owning or operating said roads not fenced as herein provided shall be liable for double the value of the animal killed or injured and for attorney’s fees.”
In St. Louis, I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Wynne,
In this case the defendant by stipulation “agrees and admits that all the material allegations of fact contained in said declaration are true, and may be considered аs true and proven, * * * and that the sum of fifty dollars would be a reasonable fee for the services rendered by * * * attorney for plaintiff.” The plaintiff acted on this agreement made a part of the recоrd in the cause. The declaration alleges the value of the mule killed by‘the defendant’s train to be $125.00 аnd that “the plaintiff gave notice in writing of .the time, place and value of the said mule killed as aforesaid,” that “more than sixty days have passed since the giving of the said notice,” and that “the said defendant has not paid the same or any part thereof or offered so to do.”
The court gave judgment for “twо hundred and fifty dollars, being double damages assessed by the jury, together with his cost in this behalf expended, including an аttorney’s fee of fifty dollars fixed by the court upon testimony as to it being a reasonable attorney’s fee to allow the plaintiff herein.”
Under the allegations of the declaration which are expressly admitted “as true and proven” it must be considered that in this proceeding “the prior demand is fully
This being so the statute Sections 2868 et seq. General Statutеs of 1906, may be constitutionally and validly applied to the facts here admitted.
A statute may be valid as applied to one state of facts, though under another state of facts an application of the statute may violate rights secured by the organic law. Kansas City S. Ry. Co. v. Anderson, supra ; Dutton Phosphate Co. v. Priest,
The judgment is affirmed.
