Empire Carbon Works v. Barker & Co.

199 S.W. 929, 132 Ark. 1, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 344
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 22, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 199 S.W. 929 (Empire Carbon Works v. Barker & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Empire Carbon Works v. Barker & Co., 199 S.W. 929, 132 Ark. 1, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 344 (Ark. 1917).

Opinions

HART, J.,

(after stating the facts). In Patapsco Guano Co. v. North Carolina Board of Agriculture, 171 U. S. 345, the court held: " The act of the Legislature of North Carolina of January 21, 1891, must be regarded as an act providing for the inspection of fertilizers and fertilizing materials in order to prevent the practice of imposition on the people of the State, and the charge of twenty-five cents per ton is intended merely to defray the cost of such inspection; and as it is competent for the State to pass laws of this character, the requirement of inspection and payment of its cost does not bring the act into collision with the commercial power vested in Congress, and clearly this can not be so as to foreign commerce, for clause two of section 10 of article 1 expressly recognizes the validity of State inspection laws, and allows the collection of the amounts necessary for their execution; and the same principle must apply to interstate commerce.”

(1) In Florence Cotton Oil Co. v. Anglin, 105 Ark. 672, the court held: "In an action on a promissory note given for the purchase of a commercial fertilizer for an agreed price, it is a good defense that the sale of the fertilizer was made in this State, and that the'fertilizer had never been analyzed by the Coinmissioner of Mines, Manufactures and Agriculture, nor tags affixed to the bags as required bjr law.” This holding was in application of the general rule that a contract to do an act which is prohibited by statute is void and can not be enforced in a court of justice.

Counsel for the plaintiff concede that the inspection laws of the State of Arkansas were not complied with and recognize the principles of law above announced, but they contend that our inspection statute can have no extra-territorial effect, and that there was no completed sale in this State. That under the facts as they appear in the record the transaction was a Missouri contract, and that being a valid contract under the laws of the State of Missouri, it is valid here and that the principles above announced have no application in the present case. Assuming that the sale was completed in the State of Missouri, still we think the transaction falls within the ban of our statute. The agent of the plaintiff company came into the State of Arkansas and solicited the defendants to purchase fertilizers from his company and a written contract for their sale was entered into and signed by them subject to the approval of the officers of the company at St. Louis, Missouri.

(2-4) The Legislature of 1913, passed an act to amend Act No. 398 of the Acts of 1907 providing for the registration, sale, inspection and analysis of commercial fertilizers in the State of Arkansas. Acts of 1913, p. 758. Section 1 of the act provides that all manufacturers, jobbers and manipulators of commercial fertilizers and fertilizer materials to be used in the manufacture of same who may desire to sell or offer for sale in the State of Arkansas such fertilizers and fertilizer materials shall file with, the Commissioner of Agriculture upon forms furnished by him, the names of the brand of such fertilizers or fertilizer material, with guaranteed analysis. '

Section 2 provides that all persons, companies, manufacturers, dealers or agents before selling or offering for sale in this State any fertilizers or fertilizer materials shall brand or attach to same tags in the manner provided by the statute.

Section 18 provides that any person selling or offering for sale any cotton seed material, fertilizer or fertilizer materials without first having complied with the provisions of this act, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined in any sum not less than $100 nor more than $500.

It is insisted that the transaction shown in the record does not constitute an “offer for sale in the State of Arkansas” within the meaning of the statute. It is claimed that these words are designed to prevent a person or corporation from placing fertilizers in his store or warehouse in this State and throwing open the doors to the public and thus exposing the fertilizers for sale. The majority of the court however, think this is too narrow or restricted a meaning to be given to the words “offer for sale in the State of Arkansas.” If this had been the purpose of the Legislature, doubtless it would have used the words “keep for sale” instead of “offer for sale.” The majority of the court are of the opinion that the words “offer for sale” should be given a broader meaning. Of course we think that if a person or corporation should keep fertilizers in his store and expose them for sale in the State of Arkansas, this act would constitute an offer for sale. In other words we think that the fertilizer materials could be offered for sale without any overt act of solicitation. We feel equally sure that proof tending to show any overt or individual offer of the fertilizers for sale within the State of Arkansas constituted an “offering for sale” within the State of Arkansas within the meaning of the act. In other words we think an actual proffer of the sale of the fertilizer by an agent of the seller to some particular person within the State of Arkansas constituted an “offer for sale within the State,” within the meaning of the statute. In reaching this conclusion we are not unmindful of the legal maxim that penal statutes must be strictly construed. Another cardinal rule of construction is to find the legislative intent and in discovering this the object of the statute should be considered.

In the case of St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Waldrop, 93 Ark. 42, the court said: “This statute is a penal law, and the legal maxim is that such a law should be construed strictly. But this does not mean that the words of the statute should be so narrowed as to exclude cases which those words, in their common and ordinary acceptation, would comprehend.”

In State v. Sewell, 45 Ark. 387, the court recognized that while penal statutes are to be construed strictly we are also committed to the principle that the intention of the Legislature must govern in the construction of penal as well as other statutes and that penal statutes are not to be construed so strictly as to defeat the intention of the Legislature. In that case the court quoted with approval from Bishop on Statutory Crimes, the following: “The rule of strict interpretation does not prevent our calling in the aid of other rules, and giving each its appropriate scope, yet so as not to overturn this one. For example, penal statutes are not to be so construed as to work an absurdity, or defeat their purpose or the process of the court instituted for their enforcement.”

The intention of the Legislature in passing statutes of this kind is clearly expressed by the Supreme Court of Alabama in the case of Steiner v. Ray, 4 Sou. 172, as follows: “As we understand the statute, its controlling purpose was to guard the agricultural public against spurious and worthless compounds sometimes sold as fertilizers; to fix on sellers a statutory guaranty that fertilizers sold by them contain the chemical ingredients, and in the proportions, represented; and to furnish to buyers cheap and reliable means of proving the deception and fraud, should such be attempted.

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.W. 929, 132 Ark. 1, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/empire-carbon-works-v-barker-co-ark-1917.