This is a suit by the appellee to recover a statutory penalty of the railway for failure to deliver freight upon tender of charges. The statute under which the suit was brought is as follows : ‘ ‘Any railroad company, its officers, agents or employes that shall refuse to deliver to the owner, agent or consignee, any freight, goods, wares, and merchandise, of any kind or character, upon the payment, or tender of payment of the freight charges due, as shown by the bill of lading, the said railroad company shall be liable in damages to the owner of said freight, goods, wares or merchandise, to an amount equal to the amount of freight charges for every day said freight, goods, wares, and merchandise, is held after payment, or tender of payment, of the charges due, as shown by the bill of lading, to be recovered in any court having competent jurisdiction.” Sec. 3 of the act of February 27, 1885.
The undisputed facts are that the plaintiff purchased four wagons in St. Louis, Mo., and caused them to be shipped over the appellant’s line of railway to his place of business in Arkansas. They were taken down and shipped in parts as one consignment of freight — the bill of lading calling for the list of articles which went to make up the four wagons. When they arrived, it was discovered that one nut used to hold a wheel on the axle was missing. The appellee refused to receive the damaged wagon or to pay its proportion of the freight charges, but demanded the other three, and tendered three-fourths of the amount of the freight due under the bill of lading, which the railway declined. The tender was repeated and refused on three several days, when the appellee brought an action of replevin for the three uninjured wagons, and caused them to be taken from the custody of the railway. Thereafter the railway replaced the missing nut, when the appellee made a tender of one-fourth of the amount due under the bill of lading and demanded delivery of the fourth wagon. The railway offered to deliver it on payment of the whole amount due under the bill of lading and refused to surrender it upon tender of payment of a less amount. The appellee repeated his tender upon the two succeeding days, took the wagon by replevin, and brought this action to recover the penalty for each day’s refusal to deliver the freight demanded — that is, for three times the amount of charges which the bill of lading showed to be due. He recovered judgment for the amount claimed.
1. Railway’s refusal to deliver tendered-The facts do not sustain the recovery. The action is upon a penal statute, and the plaintiff has not shown a violation of its letter or spirit. He could put the railway in and recover the penalty under the statute only upon a tender of the amount due as freight under the contract evidenced by the bill of lading. That is the condition prescribed by the statute, and no penalty can be incurred in the absence of a sufficient tender.
2. Right of consignee to abandon dam-The fact that the carrier is not entitled to freight on goods which through his fault are not delivered, does not relieve the plaintiff’s position. If the bill of lading and freight charges called for four wagons, and the carrier transported only three, freight could be legally demanded for the carriage of three wagons only, for no more would be earned; and it may be that in such a case the carrier would incur the penalty imposed by the statute by refusing to deliver the wagons actually carried upon tender of three-fourths of the charges called for by the bill of lading. But that is not this case. The several parts of four wagons were billed and charged for as one shipment of freight, and they were offered for delivery at their destination. One wagon was in a damaged condition, and the injury may have occurred through the fault of the carrier. But it was still of value as a wagon, and was capable of being made whole at a trifling expense. The merchant had no right therefore to abandon it to the carrier and hold the latter liable as for a conversion (Railway v. Mudford, 44 Ark., 439), or deprive it of the right to receive pay for its service as carrier, even though the injury had occurred through the carrier’s culpability. Dakin v. Oxley, 15 Com. Bench, 646; S. C. 109 Eng. Com. Law, 644. In such a case the owner of the property has his action for damages for the injury, and where it is clear that the injury is culpable, and the damage greater than the charge for carriage, it has been held that the owner is entitled to his goods without payment of freight. But that doctrine could not aid the appellee, for if it could have application at all in a suit for a penalty, still theinjury was inconsiderable as compared with the freight.
The tender of three-fourths of the amount of freight due was not sufficient to put the railway in default. The subsequent tender of one-fourth was inadequate as to the remaining wagon, because, the four having been shipped as one consignment, the freight for all was a lien on each, and until the whole amount was discharged, the carrier could lawfully retain possession of either.
Reverse the judgment and remand the cause.