The causes assigned for this demurrer are not sufficient to support it, and it must be overruled.
I. Although the acts charged in the declaration are not, by the common law, penal offences, but are made such by St. 1855, c. 188, § 4, yet since the passing of St. 1852, c. 312, it is not necessary, as it was previously, (9 Pick. 162,) to allege that they were committed against the form of the statute. In that statute, forms of declaration for the recovery of a penalty are furnished, which contain no reference to any statute, though the penalty,in each of the cases for which the form is set forth, is imposed by statute only.
2. As the St. of 1855, c. 188, does not prescribe the mode in which the penalty thereby imposed shall be recovered, it is to be sued for and recovered in an action of tort. Rev. Sts. c. 118, § 42, and St. 1852, c. 312, § 1. Nye v. Lamphere, 2 Gray, 295.
3. It was not necessary to the maintenance of this action that there should have been a sworn weigher of coal in the town *322of Westfield, and of course it was not necessary to allege that there was such a weigher there. The prescribed penalty is for selling coal not weighed by a sworn weigher of the town where it Is sold or delivered; and if there is no sworn weigher of coal, there cannot be any lawful sale of it in a quantity of five hundred pounds or more. By St. 1855, c. 188, § 5, the selectmen of Westfield were “required to appoint one or more persons to be weighers ” of coal; and their neglect to appoint a weigher did not render lawful the sales made by the defendants. In Miller v. Post, 1 Allen, 434, it was decided that the sale of milk in Boston, in cans that were not sealed as they were required to be, by St. 1859, c. 206, was unlawful, though the city sealer of weights and measures who was required, by that statute, to seal cans, refused to seal them. The. decision must have been the same, if the city authorities, in neglect of their duty, had not appointed a sealer. In the present case, the penalty for selling coal not weighed by a sworn weigher is imposed absolutely, and not on condition that city or town officers shall perform the duty required of them, by appointing weighers. Herein this case differs essentially from that of Soper, in error, v. The President, &c. of Harvard College, 1 Pick. 177, which was cited in support of this third cause assigned for demurrer. In that case, the action was against the keeper of a livery stable, on St. 1819,' c. 37, which enacted that no such stable keeper should give credit to any under-graduate of a college, without the consent of such officer of the college as might be authorized by the government thereof to act in such cases, or in violation of such rules as should from time to time be established by authority of the college. No college officer, whose consent should be obtained, was designated by the statute, nor did it require the appointment of any such officer, or the establishment of any rules by the college authorities. The court therefore held that the penalty prescribed by the statute for giving credit to an under-graduate was not incurred, unless some rules had been made on that subject, or some officer had been authorized to give consent to such credit; and that the declaration, which did not aver the appointment of such officer, nor the *323establishment of such rules, showed no cause of action, and would not sustain a judgment against the defendant. The penalty was, in legal effect, imposed conditionally, to wit, on condition that an officer of the college should be appointed to grant consent to the giving of credit to under-graduates, or that rules on the subject should be made by authority of the college. And it is a familiar rule of pleading, that when the right of recovery depends on a condition precedent, the declaration must allege performance of it, or what is equivalent to performance, to entitle the plaintiff to recover.
4. It was unnecessary that the plaintiff should allege that he sued as well for the town of Westfield as for himself. Such allegation is usually made in qui tam actions, but in a case like this it is not required. 1 Chit. PI. (6th Amer. ed.) 128, 404. In a case in which an informer sued, by information in the name of the king, for a forfeiture, one half of which, by St. 5 Anne, c. 14, § 4, was given to the informer, and the other half to the poor of the parish, the informations were held to be good, although the informer did not therein pray that he might have a moiety of the forfeiture, nor state for whom he sued. The King v. Lovet, 7 T. R. 152. See also Archbold on Commitments and Convictions, 187, 188. In such a case, the court render a judgment that will secure the disposal of the penalty according to the statute on which the information is founded.
In the case at bar, the conclusion of the several counts — averring that the defendants have forfeited the sum of thirty dollars, and stating the uses to which that sum is forfeited — secures to the town a moiety of the forfeiture. See Inhabitants of Raynham v. Rounseville, 9 Pick. 44; Burley v. Burley, 6 N. H. 200; Bradway v. Le Worthy, 9 Johns. 251.
If, in either of the four counts, there is any demurrable defect which is not specially assigned as a cause of demurrer, it is not now open to the defendant. St. 1852, c. 312, §$ 21, 22.
We have not referred to any of the provisions of the General Statutes, because this action was commenced before they took effect.
The last two counts being for the same causes of action that *324are set forth in the first two, judgment is to be rendered for the amount of two penalties, namely, for the sum of sixty dollars, one half thereof to the use of the plaintiff, and the other half to the use of the town of Westfield.
Demurrer overruled.
Judgment on the facts agreed.