State ex inf. Hadley v. Goffee

91 S.W. 486, 192 Mo. 670, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 23, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 91 S.W. 486 (State ex inf. Hadley v. Goffee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex inf. Hadley v. Goffee, 91 S.W. 486, 192 Mo. 670, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 9 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

The information filed by the Attorney-General- gives the court to understand that respondents Goffee and others are officers of the Board of Trade of Kansas City,'and that respondents Miller and others have been appointed by that board to weigh grain brought to or shipped from that market, and under such appointment have usurped the office of weighmasters created by law under article 3 of chapter 117, Revised Statutes 1899, entitled, “Inspection of Grain,” and have excluded therefrom certain persons named, to-wit, J. T. Bradshaw and others, who- were duly appointed by the Board of Railroad and Warehouse Commissioners and who have qualified according to law; that respondents refuse to permit the official weighmasters to weigh any grain except such as is received into or sent out of a public warehouse, and the members of the Board of Trade refuse to accept the certificates of the State weighmasters as to the weight of grain or to pay the lawful fees for the same except grain going into or out of a public warehouse.

The answer of respondents admits that the Board of Trade have appointed Miller and other respondents named as weighmasters, and that they do now weigh for the members of the Board of Trade all grain handled by them in that market except what goes into- public warehouses, and that the Board of Trade accepts the certificates of weight furnished by them, but they deny that in so doing the weighers appointed by the Board of Trade usurp the office of the State weighmasters. They say that the weighmasters appointed by the Board of Railroad and Warehouse Commissioners have authority under the statute to weigh only grain that goes into a public warehouse, but that the weighing of their grain that does not go into a public warehouse is a matter of their own private business with which the [679]*679State has nothing to do. They say that under the law the State inspectors have no authority to inspect any grain except that which goes into a public warehouse, but that the State inspectors have for a long time, for convenience, been permitted by respondents to inspect all grain dealt in by them, whether coming from or going into public elevators or elsewhere, except that sold by sample and upon actual examination; the result being that all grain handled in that market, except as above stated, is sold on certificate of the State inspector as to classification, but on certificate of respondents’ weighers as to weight.

They say to construe the statute to mean that they cannot buy and sell grain which does not go into a public warehouse without having it inspected by a State inspector and weighed by a State weigher, would be to bring the statute in conflict with sections 4 and 30 of article 2 of our State Constitution, and section 8 of article 1 and the fourteenth amendment of our Federal Constitution.

The cause is submitted on a motion of the Attorney-General for judgment on the pleadings.

I. If all that the Attorney-General claims as the official rights of the State weighmasters be conceded, it is still doubtful if quo ivarranto is the proper remedy. The members of the Board of Trade have a right on their own account to employ men to weigh their grain for them and to accept their certificates of weight, even if it is the duty of the State weighmasters also to weigh the same grain and to give certificates of the weights. And if the law gives to the certificates of the State weighmaster a legal effect as evidence, still if the person buying or selling the grain should prefer to have it weighed by some other person and to base his business transaction in reference to it on.the unofficial rather than the official certificates, he would have a right to do so. Such a course would not prevent the State weigh-master from performing his official duty or deprive him [680]*680of Ms fees. The statute, of course, could not give to the official certificate the force of conclusive evidence, because that would be to deny a party whose rights were affected the right of trial under due process of law. But statutes frequently give official certificates the force of prima-facie evidence and in so doing they violate no constitutional provision.

It is not alleged that respondents, Miller and others, weighers appointed by the Board of Trade, are pretending that they were appointed by the Board of Railroad and Warehouse Commissioners or that they are claiming to act under the statute relating to official weighmasters; they are only weighing the same grain and issuing certificates of the weight thereof that it is alleged in the information it is the official duty of the State weighmasters to Weigh and certify. In order to do what they are doing it is not necessary for the unofficial weighers to intrude into the office of the State weighmasters, nor do their weighing and certifying prevent the officials from also weighing and certifying.

But it is alleged in the information, and not denied, that the respondents refuse to allow the State weigh-masters to weigh any grain except that consigned to public warehouses, and since counsel on both sides seem to recognize that as an intrusion of the unofficial weighers into the office of the State weighmasters, we will so far defer to the learned counsel as to consider the legal questions in the form presented in their briefs.

II. The statute authorizing the appointment of official weighmasters to weigh grain brought to market in this State was passed in 1893, and is now section 7676, Rev. Stat. 1899, the first sentence of which is: “It shall be the duty of the chief inspector provided for by this article, to nominate to the commissioners suitable persons to act as weighmasters at such points in this State wherever State grain inspection may be established in conformity with section 7655 of this article.”

[681]*681Respondents in their brief interpret that sentence to mean that wherever State grain inspection is established in conformity with section 7655, State weigh-masters are to be appointed, and on that interpretation they base the argument that since section 7655, Revised Statutes 1899, is exactly the same as section 5637, Revised Statutes 1889, and since the Act of 1899 was interpreted in State ex rel. v. Smith, 114 Mo. 180, to establish State grain, inspection at public warehouses only, therefore when section 7676, of the present statute, authorizes, the weighing of grain wherever State grain inspection is established in conformity to section 7655, it means that the weighing of grain is authorized at public warehouses only. The conclusion there drawn would be correct if the interpretation of section 7676 on which the argument is based was correct, but that interpretation is not correct.

The reference in section 7676 to section 7655 is not for the purpose of ascertaining where State inspection is established, because section 7655 does not relate to that subject, but it is for the purpose of ascertaining the manner in which the appointments are to be made. Section 7655, which is the same as section 33 of the original Act of 1889 (Laws 1889, p. 124), was not referred to in the opinion of State ex rel. v. Smith, above cited. That case turned on the construction of other sections in that act which did provide for the establishment of grain inspection, and it was decided that the act authorized the establishment of State inspection of only such grain as went into or out of public warehouses.

Section 7655 refers only to the manner of appointment of a deputy inspector and assistant inspectors and their qualifications.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 S.W. 486, 192 Mo. 670, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-inf-hadley-v-goffee-mo-1906.