29 N.C. 408 | N.C. | 1847
Actions of this kind have been frequent in modern times, and we have looked into most of the reported cases; but we have been unable to find one that bears out the latter branch of the rule laid down to the jury in this case. Since Postlewait v. Parks, Bur., 187, it has been perfectly understood that the gist of the action is the relation of master and servant and the loss of service. Therefore, though very slight service is sufficient to establish that relation, de facto, between father and daughter, yet it is indispensable to show some service in order to have that effect. Where the daughter is living with the father, whether within age or of full age, she is deemed to be his servant, for the purposes of this action; in the former case absolutely, and in the latter, if she render the smallest assistance in the family, as pouring out tea, milking, or the like. So, also, if the daughter be within age, the action may be maintained by the father, to whom she returned to lie in, *285
although she was on a visit to or living with another person at (410) the time of the seduction, Harper v. Luffkin, 7 B. C., 387, unless the daughter had not the animus revertendi, in which case she could not by any fiction be considered in the father's service. Deen v.Peel, 5 East., 45. The reason why the father may have the action for seducing his infant daughter, though not living in his family, is that she is, both legally and actually, sub potestate patris. But that shows that the action will not lie when the daughter is of full age, and not living in the father's family, but in the actual employment of another person. There is no case that gives any color for the supposition that it would lie under those circumstances, except that of Johnson v. McAdams, stated in the argument of counsel in Deen v. Peel. But that was the decision of a single judge at nisi prius, and the daughter went from her father's on a short visit, merely, to a lady, and not on a contract of hiring, and, moreover, was under age when she went away, though she attained full age before the seduction. Even in that case Mr. JusticeWilson hesitated very much, saying, at first, that "where the daughter was of full age and no part of the father's family, he thought the actionnot maintainable." It is true, he afterwards told the jury that the consent of the father to the daughter's visit was to be inferred from the circumstances, and, therefore, that she might be considered as a part of the family. But the case was never carried before the Court in Bank, and, when cited by counsel, did not receive any expression of approbation. If, however, that case was right, it has no application to the present, as here the daughter was living with another person, and was his actual servant upon a contract of hiring, which comes within the rule laid down by Judge Wilson himself, above quoted. That rule was adopted by this Court in Phipps v. Garland,
PER CURIAM. Venire de novo.
Cited: Kinney v. Laughenour,