106 Mo. App. 541 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
The plaintiff sues to recover for loss of services of her minor son, John Schumacher, who, it is alleged, was injured by the negligence of defendant while in its employ. There was a trial before a jury and verdict for the plaintiff.
Many interesting questions are raised by the respective counsel in the case. But as it is denied-, and we think properly, that any cause of action existed in the plaintiff, it will not be necessary to notice them.
The said John Schumacher was the son of plaintiff by a former husband, deceased, and the plaintiff bacame the wife of one Joseph Eickhoff, some eight years before the injury complained of. Both plaintiff and her son testified that after said marriage said Eickhoff took the said son into his house and treated him as a member of his family. On this point the son testified as' follows: “I couldn’t tell you how long my mother has been married to my stepfather, eight or nine years, something like that. After my mother married Mr. Eickhoff I was taken right into Mr. Eickhoff’s family; he had been married before and had children, and Mr. Eickhoff took my mother’s youngest children into his family and took the place of a father to me.” The mother’s la.ngua'u was: “ When I married Mr. Eickhoff I had six children
It seems that afterwards the said minor was permitted to hire out for wages which he generally collected himself. Of his wages he gave his mother a part and retained the residue. On one occasion the stepfather collected his wages and handed it to his wife. The mother testified that she clothed her son from the proceeds of her own labor which she earned in the way of keeping boarders. The evidence shows beyond dispute that upon the marriage of plaintiff to- Eickhoff the latter assumed towards the son the relation of a father by taking him into his family-and treating him as such, and was liable for necessaries for his support. And the subsequent acts of the son in hiring out for wages and the fact that the mother furnished him his clothes did not alter the relation that had been created. It is no unusual occurrence in the country for mothers to furnish clothes for their children and for fathers to permit sons to retain the proceeds of their own labor.
The law is stated thus: “ There is no obligation on the part of the stepfather to provide for the children by his wife by a former husband, by virtue merely of his marriage with their mother. He may refuse to provide for them, and could not be compelled to do so. The liability in such cases depends upon the relation he chooses to assume in reference to- them. If he holds them out to the world as members of his family, he stands in loco parentis and incurs the same liability with respect to them that he is under to his own children. And the presumption in such cases is, that they deal with each other as parent and child, not as master and servant. This relation being established the reciprocal rights,'duties and obligations pertaining to it arises be
The case of Hennessy v. Bavarian Brewing Co., 145 Mo. 104, cited to the contrary, recognizes the rule stated. It is true the court therein, where the minor’s death was caused by the wrongful act of the defendant, held the cause of action vested in the natural parents of the deceased because the statute so provided. The distinction is that this is not a statutory but a common law action and as such is governed by the common law.
It therefore follows that at common law the stepfather having assumed the relation of father to the minor, he, and not the mother, was entitled to the proceeds of the son’s labor.
The defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence should have been sustained. Reversed.