127 Ga. 599 | Ga. | 1907
(After stating the facts.)
In a later decision by the same court, in a case where a father sued for the earnings of his minor son while in the employment of the defendants on board their whaling schooner, upon an implied promise of the defendants to the plaintiff, it was held: “In an action of contract by a father for the earnings of his minor son, employed without his consent, the measure of damages is, not what the son would have earned for the father during the time, but what he in fact earned in the service of the employer. The father in such a case can recover only what the son might have recovered had he been of age and competent to contract.” Weeks v. Holmes, 12 Cush. 215. It appeared, from an agreed statement of facts in the case, that it was a well established and universal usage in the whaling business, “for seamen engaged therein, to sail upon a lay, or to receive in place of wages, for their time and services, a certain relative proportion of the proceeds of the voyage, such as their relative experience and skill may entitle them to, or such lay or proportion as they may agree upon beforehand;” that “the reasonable, usual, and only lay received by” green hands, such as the plaintiff’s son, “was a one hundredth lay, or a one hundredth part of the proceeds of the oil taken upon the voyage, after deducting the proportion of the expenses of fitting the vessel and all advances made each one on account of the voyage.” Chief Justice Shaw, delivering the opinion, said: “This is an action of contract on the implied promise by the defendants to the plaintiff, a promise implied from his relation of father entitled to the earnings of his son. Nothing can be claimed in this action for any supposed wrong in seducing the plaintiff’s son, or employing him without his consent. After the service was done, the father steps in with his legal claim,' denies the authority of his son to receive his own earnings, ‘ and in effect says to the defendants, that which you would have been bound legally and equitably to pay to him, had he been of age, or otherwise competent to contract, I require you to pay me. To this ■extent his claim is recognized, and no further. In determining
Judgment reversed.