How to run Treble Damages in DocketMath for Missouri
3 min read
Published February 15, 2026 • Updated May 16, 2026 • By DocketMath Team
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US-MO treble damages rules
This source-backed guide covers US-MO treble damages authority (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 570.223.4 (identity theft — civil 3x or $5,000); Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.353 (field crops — 2x, NOT 3x); Mo. Rev. Stat. § 407.025 (MMPA — discretionary punitive, NOT statutory treble); Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.127 (mercantile civil theft — flat penalty, no multiplier)). It explains how to read the calculator's multiplier output and points to the controlling US-MO multiplier statutes.
What the output means
Run this scenario in DocketMath using the Treble Damages calculator.
When the calculator shows a multiplier result, read it as a statutory multiplier on the base damages figure, not as a separate damages category.
- Base damages stay the same until the multiplier is applied.
- The statutory multiplier changes the total by the rule-specified factor.
- Any cap, exception, or carve-out still controls if the statute says it does.
US-MO rule notes
Statutory multiplier
Mo. Rev. Stat. § 570.223.4 (identity theft — civil 3x or $5,000); Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.353 (field crops — 2x, NOT 3x); Mo. Rev. Stat. § 407.025 (MMPA — discretionary punitive, NOT statutory treble); Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.127 (mercantile civil theft — flat penalty, no multiplier) governs the treble (multiple) damages rule for US-MO.
570.223.4. Missouri Revisor of Statutes - Revised Statutes of Missouri, RSMo Section 570.223 ☰ Revisor of Missouri Constitution Committee Publications Other Links Help / FAQ Appendices and Tables Words Section None Or And Not Near Do search Help This chapter only Title XXXVIII CRIMES AND PUNISHMENT; PEACE OFFICERS AND PUBLIC DEFENDERS Chapter 570 < > • Effective - 01 Jan 2017, 3 histories , see footnote 570.223. Identity theft — penalty — restitution — other civil remedies availa
What changes the result most
- The base damages input, because the multiplier applies to that number.
- The statutory multiplier itself, because 2x, 3x, and 4x produce different totals.
- Any cap or carve-out in the statute, because it can limit the multiplied amount.
Use the calculator
DocketMath's treble-damages calculator can model multiplier outcomes once you identify the controlling statute and whether a cap or exception applies. Use the source panel for the verified primary-source rule.
Open the Treble Damages calculator
Sources
All sources are official primary law published by revisor.mo.gov.
Corroboration method: government_primary_source_direct_fetch.
