172 Ind. 423 | Ind. | 1909
Appellee recovered judgment against appellant on account of personal injuries sustained while in its employ. Appellant charges the trial court with error in overruling its demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint, and in overruling motions for judgment on the answers of the jury to special interrogatories notwithstanding the general verdict, and for a new trial. The complaint is in two paragraphs, the first of which alleged substantially the following facts: Appellant was, at and before the time of the happening of the grievances complained of, a corporation engaged in the manufacture of iron and steel. Appellee was a minor under the age of sixteen years, was employed by appellant in its rolling-mill, and was required to wox’k for twelve hours each night for six nights in each week. For more than a week prior to the time of receiving his injuries he had been compelled to and did work, under Ms employment, fourteen hours each night, but was not required so to wox’k for the purpose of making a shorter day’s work on the last day of the week. Under his employment appellee was required to and did open and hold open the doors of certain furnaces, while iron was being placed therein or taken therefrom, when requested so to do by appellant or by workmen whose duty it was to perform such work. Iron was so placed in said furnaces every half hour, and during the intervals appellee had no duty to perform except to wait in said mill, and be ready to open and hold such doors when so directed. Appellant furnished appellee no place in which to wait when not actively engaged, but directed him to wait in said rolling-mill. At 5 o’clock p. m. on October 5, 1903, appellee went to work, and was required to and did remain continuously at his said work until 4 o ’clock a. m. of the following day, and was then in the performance of said work under his employment. He was then but thirteen years of
The first paragraph of this complaint is founded upon
The State has said in positive terms that employers must not take children under fourteen years of age into the service of their factories and subject them to the danger of being mangled or killed by machines propelled by the powerful agencies of steam or electricity. This mandate, it is alleged, appellant disobeyed, and appellee was injured in the mill and by the agencies against which the law sought to protect him. The connection between the unlawful employment and the injury in this ease is as direct as cause and effect, and brings appellant within the operation of the statute, and a cause of action is stated, unless the statute itself is invalid. Starnes v. Albion Mfg. Co. (1908), 147 N. C. 556, 61 S. E. 525; American Car, etc., Co. v. Armentraut, supra; Morris v. Stanfield, supra; Iron, etc., Wire Co. v. Green, supra.
The doctrine thus declared had reference to the rights of adults, and may be stated even more strongly when addressed to laws regulating the rights of minors to contract. The employment of children of tender years in mills and factories not only endangers their lives and limbs, but hinders and dwarfs their growth and development physically, mentally and morally. The State is vitally interested in its own preservation, and, looking to that end, must safeguard and protect the lives, persons, health and morals of its future citizens. Acting upon this wise and humane principle, nearly all, if not all, other states of the Union and most other enlightened governments of the world have enacted laws very simlar to our own, prohibiting the employment of young children in mines, factories and other establishments imperiling their health, lives and limbs, and at the same time affording them an opportunity to attend school, and to grow and develop in safe and wholesome surroundings free from the cares which generally engross the attention of adults in this commercial age. The validity of such laws has seldom been challenged, and, so far as our research extends, never denied. The length to which the state may go in providing measures looking toward the physical, moral and intellectual well-being of its helpless and dependent wards is a question of expedience and propriety which it is the province of the
The remaining inquiry is whether the court was justified in overruling appellant’s motion for judgment upon the answers of the jury to interrogatories, and its motion for a
The doctrine of contributory negligence cannot be em
The governing rule of law should not be relaxed because in this case appellee suffered only an impairment of his earning powers, instead of total disability that would have rendered him a helpless dependent upon public charity. The pecuniary compensation for injury sustained recovered in a civil action serves to prevent the sufferer from becoming an involuntary object of charity, and thus accords with the spirit and purpose of the enactment. The cases cited and relied upon in appellant’s brief as declaring a contrary doctrine did not involve the violation of an express statutory prohibition. In the case of Norfolk, etc., R. Co. v. Bondurant’s Admr. (1907), 107 Va. 515, 59 S. E. 1091, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 443, 122 Am. St. 867, the distinction is stated in the following terms: “In the case of Kirkham v. Wheeler-Osgood Co. [1904], 39 Wash. 415, 81 Pac. 869, the railroad company had violated a positive law by employing an infant within the prohibited age, and it differs in its facts from the case before us.” In this view of the law the instructions given to the jury, so far as they related to the second paragraph of complaint, were more favorable to appellant than it had a right to ask them to be.
Other alleged errors of minor importance have been discussed, but the disposition made of the controlling question renders their consideration unnecessary, since a right result was reached. There was no error in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.
The judgment is affirmed.