after stating the facts: The testimony tends to prove that plaintiff ordered a jug of whiskey'to be shipped to him by defendant from Salisbury, N. C.; that it was so shipped on 22 December, 1906, .and that its value was $2, the price prepaid by plaintiff. At the commencement of this action, on 10 April, 1907, the whiskey had not been delivered. There is no evidence that it was burned, stolen or otherwise destroyed, and no evidence which tends to exonerate the defendant under the act of 1907, ch. 461. We find error *345in tbo record in respect to the rulings of the court upon any issue except the fifth and ninth, relating to the $50 penalty. His Honor should have given defendant’s prayer for instructions, “That if the jury believed the evidence in this case the plaintiff is not entitled to recover the penalty of $50 for failure to pay the claim of $2, the value of the whiskey, under section 2632 of the Revisal of 1905, and they would answer the issue accordingly.”
It is immaterial to consider whether the action was commenced before the sixty days allowed for adjustment by the statute had expired. The plaintiff’s own testimony proves that the demand for the $2 was a verbal demand and that no claim in writing was filed with the agent of defendant. The statute giving the penalty is section 2634 of the Revisal of 1905, and provides that “Every claim for loss or damage to property while in possession of a common carrier shall be adjusted and paid within sixty days in case of shipments wholly within this State, and within ninety days in case of shipments from without the State, after the filing of such claim with the agent of such carrier at the point of destination of such shipment,” etc.
The language of the statute plainly contemplates that the claim shall be put in writing by the person making it, or some one for him, and filed with the agent of the carrier, to the end that he may transmit the claim as filed to the proper authorities of the carrier for adjustment. The word “file” has a well-understood meaning as well as legal significance, and, inasmuch as it is impossible to file an oral demand, the words of the statute, its purpose and intent and the object to be accomplished by it cannot be met except by a written statement of the claim. The lexicographers derive the word “file” from the Latin filum, a thread, and its application seems to be drawn from the ancient practice of placing papers upon a thread or file for ready reference. Webster says to file means to lay away papers for presentation and reference. Bouvier *346says a paper is said to be filed when it is delivered to the proper officer. To the same effect is Bube v. Morrell, 76 Mich., 114, and Black Law Dict., 492. What is meant by “filing a claim” is considered by the Supreme Court of Alabama in Phillips v. Beene, 38 Ala., 251, and is held to be placing a paper in the proper custody. The words “to file” have received judicial construction and have been defined as “receiving a paper into custody.” State v. Lamson, 9 S. D., 420; 3 Words and Phrases, 2765; Lamson v. Falls, 6 Ind., 309, 310. A large number of eases are collected in Words and Phrases which support the proposition that in order to comply with our statute the claimant must present his demand in writing and leave it with the agent of the carrier at the point of destination. The object in requiring the claim to be in writing is because the claimant is permitted to file it with an agent who has no authority to pay it. It is the duty of such agent to transmit the claim as made out and filed to the proper corporate authorities. It is important, to all parties to have the written evidence of the demand as well as of the time when filed, because the failure to adjust within a certain period subjects the carrier to a penalty.
It is suggested that the case of Slonestreet v. Frost, 123 N. C., 646, is an authority against our construction-of the statute. We have examined the case and do not so regard it. In that case a Sheriff held in his hands an execution against the intestate at the time of his death. lie presented the execution to the administrator within twelve months. The court held that such presentation Avas a substantial compliance with section 164 of The Code. The Sheriff did not make an oral demand on the administrator for the defendant, but presented to him the written evidence of it in the form of judicial process, which the law prohibited him from leaving with the administrator. The court did not hold or even intimate that a mere verbal demand upon the part of the Sheriff without presenting the written evidence of the debt would have been *347a substantial compliance with the statute. And we think no authority can be found for any such position, for our statute declares in express terms that the creditor must “exhibit his claim or be forever barred,” and upon a claim being presented the personal representative may require an affidavit to accompany it. The Code 1883, secs. 1424, 1425; Revisal 1905, secs. 39, 41. In view of these express statutory provisions it is plain that the court did not hold or intend to hold in the case cited that an oral demand was a substantial compliance with the law.
In the case at bar, the plaintiff did not even present to the agent a written statement of his claim or anything that could be filed. The statute is a penal statute and must be strictly construed, and the plaintiff, having failed to comply with it by delivering or filing his claim in writing, is not entitled to recover the penalty.
Unless the judgment be modified by consent in the Superior Court, there will be a new trial upon the fifth and ninth issues.
New Trial.