Plaintiff brought two actions against defendant. The first consists of a petition in six counts; the second, a petition in four counts. These petitions were consolidated and tried as one action. All the causes of action except the first were assigned to plaintiff. The judgment was for plaintiff on all the -counts.
The first count is for killing plaintiff’s cow. This embraces two causes of action, one for negligently failing to maintain a proper and reasonably safe cattle guard as required by statute, which “thereby caused the killing of one red, white-faced cow,” whereby he was damaged in the sum of sixty ($60) dollars. The second cause is at common law and alleged that the “cow walked and strayed onto the defendant’s track where the same was not fenced and defendant, by its servants, negligently and carelessly ran its engine and cars over said cow, and negligently and carelessly struck and killed said cow,” whereby he was damaged in the sum of sixty dollars.
The remaining five counts of the first petition and the four counts of the second petitions are for overflows, or backing up of water onto the lots of plaintiff’s assignor; one count for each year from 1907 to 1915 inclusive.
It seems that plaintiff’s assignor (who is his father) owued two lots in the village of Brimson in Grundy county. The counts are founded on the allegations that there runs through the lots a small branch (dry except after rains) which is -a natural drainage for a small district in that vicinity. But that defendant so constructed its roadbed and embankment as to dam the water below the lots and cause it to “back up” and overflow the lots, doing damage to grass, chickens, eggs, etc. The allega*73tions are that defendant negligently failed to put in and maintain openings through and across its right of way and roadbed so that there would be a sufficient outllet and drain to carry off the water of the branch and other surface water, but left the same so as to be, dammed up by such railroad bed. That but for such negligent failure the surface water and that collected in the branch would have found its natural flow without injury to plaintiff’s assignor as it had before defendant’s road was built. Each overflow count contains a proper allegation of an assignment to plaintiff.
All of the overflow counts are based on section 3150, Revised Statutes 1909, though only three of them ask judgment for the two hundred dollars penalty provided for in such statute, and plaintiff’s instructions confined his recovery to damages without the addition of the penalty of two hundred ($200) dollars allowed by that statute.
The objection that the first count for killing the cow is defective in that it joins both statutory negligence as to the cattle guard and common-law negligence must be overruled. [White v. Railroad, 202 Mo. 539, 560, 561.] We are of the opinion that there was evidence under that count upon which the verdict of the jury may be supported.
The action as to the overflow is conceded to be brought under the statute. That statute makes it the duty of the railway company to provide drains along the sides of its tracks and suitable openings through the roadbed to afford sufficient outlet for surface waters wherever the drainage has been obstructed by the construction of the road. The statute provides that any railway company “failing to comply with the provisions of this section shall incur a penalty not to exceed two hundred dollars and be liable for all damages done by said neglect,of duty, and each neglect of duty shall be a separate offense.”
The cause of action accrued on all the counts within five years before the institution of the action, but three of them ueerued more than three years before bringing the action. Defendant pleaded against the latter the Stat*74ute of Limitations (section 1890, R. S. 1909) barring certain actions within three years. It reads: . . . Second, an action upon a statute for a penalty or forfeiture, where the action is given to the party aggrieved, or to such party and the State.” Defendant’s claim is that the statute is penal.
Our opinion is that the statute is both penal and remedial. Each action is separately provided for. The remedial portion is for the sole benefit of the party aggrieved, and, as has been decided by the Supreme Court (Skinner v. Railroad, 254 Mo. 228) the penal part for the School fund. There may be a remedial clause and a penal clause in the same section of a statute, and in such case each may receive the construction which its class may demand. [Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, sec. 332; 2 Lewis’ Sutherland Statutory Construction, sec. 532; Huntington v. Attrill, 146 U. S. 657, 667.] So the appropriate part of the Statute of Limitations should be applied to each .clause. The three year statute above quoted has been held to apply to an action for double damages against a railroad for killing stock. [Revelle v. Railroad, 74 Mo. 438.] But that was on the, ground that the statute in allowing double damages was penal, while we have seen that that part of the section upon which this action is based is only remedial. There is another part of the section imposing double damages for injury resulting from failure to clean, burn and remove from the right of way, twice a year, all dead vegetation, so as to prevent spread of fires; but that part is distinct from the duty and liability as to drainage, and a failure to discharge the latter duty does not authorize double damages.
A.part of defendant’s argument is based on McFarland v. Railroad, 175 Mo. 422, wherein it is held that the penalty of two hundred dollars prescribed in this statute, as well as the damages, is recoverable by and payable to the injured party; and hence it is claimed that since both damages and the penalty go- to the party aggrieved, as in stock cases where no fences had been built (Gorman v. Railroad, 26 Mo. 441; Barnett v. Railroad, 68 Mo. 56), the three years limitation for penal actions applies. But the *75McFarland case is overruled in Skinner v. Railroad, supra, wherein, as we have stated, it was decided the penalty went to the school fund, and hence defendant’s point is left without support.
Besides, even if the penalty of two hundred dollars prescribed in the statute here involved was recoverable by the aggrieved party along with his damages, yet the right would not rest on the same ground with the penalty in double damage stock cases prescribed for failure to fence. There is no common-law obligation resting on a railway company to fence its tracks and the action arises solely on the statute; but there is a common-law action against one who gathers the surface water and floods his neighbor. In such cases where the statute gives the same right as existed at common law, and merely increases the damages by adding a penalty payable to the party aggrieved, it is not a penal statute. [Ellis v. Whitlock, 10 Mo. 781, 783.] And is not governed by the Statute of Limitations as to penal actions. [Hall v. Hall, 112 Maine, 234; City of Atlanta v. Chattanooga Foundry, 127 Fed. 23, 29; Meeker & Co. v. Lehigh Valley R. R., 236 U. S. 412, 423.]
Having determined that the statute in one part is penal, but in another separate and distinct part is remedial; and having shown that as the penalty goes to the school fund, plaintiff can have no interest in the penal part, it must follow that his action is where he placed it at the trial, solely under the remedial part, not limited by the Statute of Limitations as to penalties but controlled by the five year period of that statute. [Sec. 1889, R. S. 1909.]
There is this additional phase presented in plaintiff’s case: In three counts he asked the imposition of the penalty part of the statute, but disclaimed it at the trial. We assume the reason he abandoned the claim was that he learned the Supreme Court had overruled McFarland v. Railroad, wherein he was given a right to such penalty by deciding, in Skinner v. Railroad, that he had not such right. We think a plaintiff in such case may abandon an untenable, separable and distinct part of his claim without harm to the proper part.
*76The verdict and judgment as to the first count for killing the cow is approved as there is no longer any controversy in reference to the same.
It seems that on the authority of Scott v. Realty Co., 241 Mo. 112, 122, a judgment in a case involving several counts may he reversed and carry with it a count found on appeal to he properly decided and that the verdict on such count will stand without retrial of that count, and when the entire case is finally determined, a judgment on that count may then be entered for the plaintiff.
Defendant insists that the action could not be assigned. We think the point not well made. Such rights of action have been held to be assignable since Snyder v. Railroad, 86 Mo. 613; Remmers v. Remmers, 217 Mo. 541; Coffman v. Railroad, 183 Mo. App. 622. An action for trespass for cutting timber in which treble damages were sought was held assignable. [Chouteau v. Boughton, 100 Mo. 406, 410.]
The constitutional question attempted to be injected into the case by defendant after the granting of the rehearing herein, is raised for the first time too late. If the statute sued on is unconstitutional, that point could have been raised in the lower court.
We think defendant’s criticism of plaintiff’s instruction No. 4 concerning the counts for overflows, on the ground of ambiguity and liability to mislead is well taken. While it was, of course, not intended, yet the instruction is so worded that it might be taken to mean that if any of the overflows were caused by defendant’s negligence the jury should find for plaintiff on all of them.
Instruction No. 7 is faulty. After reciting that plaintiff “is not entitled to have the damage done assessed twice, but would be entitled to have it assessed once.” it continues thus: “that is to say, if the jury find for plaintiff you will assess such damages on each count, according to the measure,” etc. That might well be *77taken to mean that if the jury found for plaintiff at all, they would assess damages on each count.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
All concur.