There is one ground of objection to the plaintiff’s action which is fatal to it, and which renders it altogether unnecessary for us to consider any other. The consideration for the note sued upon was the assignment by the plaintiff’s intestate to the defendant, of the apprentice Hugh McKimble. The facts of the assignment and the consideration for the note are shown by the deposition of the apprentice himself, and being independent facts, may well be proved by that testimony, no matter what may have been the contents of the written instrument given by the intestate to the defendant.
We
hold such consideration to be against the policy of the law, and, therefore, the note given upon it void. By the statute contained in the 5th chapter of the Revised Statutes, entitled
“
An Act concerning apprentices,” theseveral County Courts in the State are empowered, and it is made their duty to bind out as apprentices, certain orphan and other children to “some tradesman, merchant, mariner or other person approved
*416
by the Court ” — every such male child to be bound until he shall attain the age of twenty-one years, and every female until her age of eighteen years.. The statute then goes on to prescribe the manner in which the binding shall be done, the reciprocal duties of the masters and apprentices, and their respective remedies for the violation of such duties. The object sought to be accomplished by the statute is manifest, and it is one of the greatest importance. It is no less than that the orphans • shall be comfortably and suitably reared and educated during their minority, and in the meantime be .taught some useful trade or employment, in order that when they become of age, they may be able to provide properly for themselves and their families, should they have any, and to perform the duties which may devolve upon them as individuals and citizens. To compensate the masters for what they are required to do for their apprentices, they are intrusted with certain powers over them, and are entitled to their services. The manner in which this relation is created, and the important objects which it has in view, show clearly that it is a personal trust. Indeed it was so decided in the case
Goodbread
v.
Wells,
2 Dev. & Bat. Rep. 476, where it was held that upon the death of the master, the relation necessarily ceased, and that, consequently, the personal representation of the deceased had no interest in the apprentice. The law then will not itself make an assignment of the apprentice : — will it permit the master to do so ? We cannot see how it can, without taking indirectly from the Justices of the County Courts the power which it expressly confers, of exercising their judgments in the selection of suitable and proper masters — such as they can
approve.
See
Davis
v. Coburn,
The plaintiff’s counsel has referred us to the case of
Nickerson
v.
Howard,
Per Curiam. Judgment affirmed.
