DEWEY ROBISON, By Nеxt Friend, v. FLOESCH CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, Appellant.
SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
December 19, 1921
291 Mo. 34 | 236 S.W. 332
Division One
- JUDGMENT: Against Infant: Fraud. An infant cannot avoid a judgment or decree against him merely on the ground of infancy, nor can he impeach such a judgment or decree by an original bill except upon grounds that would be available to an adult, such as fraud.
- —————: —————: Fraudulent Representations. A fraudulent representation is a false statement relating to a matter of fact made with intent to deceive; and where the petition charges only fraudulent representations, and the evidence wholly fails to show that any untrue statement of fact was made by defendant, either in negotiating the settlement with the infant plaintiff or in procuring the entry of a formal judgment against him by the justice of the peace, said judgment cannot be set aside on such ground. But a petition charging fraudulent representations may contain other allegations of fact which in law amount to fraud, and if they are supported by the proof the judgment will be set aside.
- —————: —————: By Consent of Minor and Next Friend: Duty of Court: Perfunctory Hearing. In a suit instituted by a minor by his next friend a judgment may be rendered that will be valid and binding. But such a judgment cannot be based merely on the consent of the minor, for he is without discretion, nor on that of a next friend, for he is not invested with either the power or the duty so to consent. The court in such case is charged with the duty of protecting the minor‘s interest, and it is only when its judgment is based upon facts judicially ascertained, that is, upon a real and not a perfunctory hearing, that its judgment is binding upon the minor.
- —————: —————: Contract of Settlement: Colorable Hearing: Screen to Avoid Incapacity to Settle. A contract of settlement of a claim for damages for personal injuries, even after it becomes executed, a minor has the right to disaffirm and repudiate at any time within his minority and within a reasonable time after coming of legal age; and this right the tortfeasor cannot cut off, or make the contract absolute and final, by cloaking the settlement in the guise of a legal proceeding and a judgment which amount to a mere con
trivance to foreclose the minor‘s right to disaffirm the settlement. Where the agent of the tortfeasor agreed with the minor to pay him $250 in settlement of his claim, suggested a suit by his next friend and a judgment as the means of bringing it about, suggested as a next friend a gentleman unknown to the minor, drew up the petition for the appointmеnt of a next friend, a statement of the minor‘s cause of action, a waiver of service of process and entry of appearance by defendant, a stipulation that the cause be set down for trial and tried the same day and for a judgment entry, and the suggested next friend signed such papers as he was requested to sign, and then the agent presented the papers to a justice of the peace, who entered a judgment reciting the appearance of the parties, a waiver, a hearing and submission on the evidence, a finding for plaintiff in the sum of $250, and an acknowledgment and satisfaction of the judgment in open court, all in the absence of counsel or relatives or friends of the minor, there was no judicial ascertainment of the facts, the hearing was perfunctory, the whole proceeding was colorable from beginning to end, and was a mere screen contrived to conceal the real transaction, namely, the contract of settlement and release between the minor and defendant, and the judgment was fraudulent; and these facts being alleged and amply proven, the judgment was properly set aside. - —————: —————: Taking Advantage. It is considered fraudulent for a tortfeasor to take advantage of the incompetency of an infant to protect his own interest, and a judgment of settlement so obtained should be treated as fraudulent.
- NEGLIGENCE: Contributory: Matter of Law: Mistake: Failure to Use Implement. Where plaintiff testified that when he saw the boom of the dragline excavator, used in constructing a drainage ditch and levee, returning towards the cabin of the machine, he tried, being instructed by the operator to descend to the ground, to go down by the movable ladder provided for that purpose and could not find it, the time being dark night, without lights, he cannot as a matter of law be held to be guilty of contributory negligence because he attempted to climb down by the frame work instead of by the ladder; and being unfamiliar with his surroundings and the movements of the machine, he cannot as a matter of law be held to be negligent because he was mistaken as to which corner of the machine the ladder was suspended.
- —————: —————: —————: Warning: Unwillingly Disregarded. Even if the statement of an experienced pit foreman to the inexperienced plaintiff that he always descended from the cabin of the dragline machine, used in digging a drainage ditch, on the outside of the framework, could be construed as a warning not to go down on
the inside, plaintiff could not be held guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law where he did not willingly disregard the warning, but at first was not attempting to go down on the frame at all, but was hunting for the movable ladder, but being unable to find it and the time being dark night he suddenly realized that he was in peril from the returning boom, and went inside the frame work to avoid being crushed, and there came in contact with a pulley. - —————: —————: —————: Imminent Peril. An inexperienced employee about dangerous machinery who, without fault on his own part, finds himself in a position of peril, is not required to reason calmly, and if in an attempt to preserve his life he takes the wrong course and is injured, he is not chargeable as a matter of law with contributory negligence; but whether, in so doing, he failed to exercise that degree of care that an ordinarily prudent man of his experience would have exercised under the circumstances is a question for the jury.
Appeal from Cape Girardeau Court of Common Pleas.—Hon. John A. Snider, Judge.
AFFIRMED.
Oliver & Oliver for appellant.
(1) The judgment of the justice court, having been made in open court in the presence of both parties, will not be vacated nor declared void except upon the most positive, clear and satisfactory proof of fraud in its procurement, and that it was a fraud upon the court as well as upon the other party to the suit. No such proof was made in this case. Leiber v. Leiber, 239 Mo. 31, 45; McDonald v. McDonald, 242 Mo. 172; Payne v. O‘Shea, 84 Mo. 129; 23 Cyc. 726, 920, 1049; Obermeyer v. Einstein, 62 Mo. 341; Oxley Stave Co. v. Butler Co., 121 Mo. 630; Murphy v. DeFrance, 101 Mo. 151; Hancock v. Blackwell, 139 Mo. 453; Cantrell v. Johnson, 236 Mo. 575, 600; Wolf v. Brooks, 177 S. W. 337. In this case plaintiff nеither pleaded nor proved any material facts represented to plaintiff by defendant, false or otherwise. Coal Co. v. Holterman, 254 Mo. 639; Southern Dev. Co. v. Silva, 125 S. W. 250. (2) “Judgment are impeachable only for
Hardesty & Limbaugh for respondent.
(1) The judgment of the justice having been rendered without a hearing, without any inquiry as to what was for the best interest of the plaintiff and without any judicial determination of the rights of the parties, and being for a sum grossly inadequate, was properly set aside on those grounds. (a) Equity will set aside judgments rendered in violation of the law of procedure by or against infants. Thornton v. Thornton, 27 Mo. 302;
RAGLAND, C.—Plaintiff, a minor, brought this suit by his next friend, November 4, 1914, to recover for personal injuries. He recovered judgment for $10,000 and defendant appeals.
There is but little conflict in the evidence. Where, however, it is not in accord, the facts will be stated from the standpoint of plaintiff‘s evidence, because appellant‘s only contention with respect to the trial on the merits is that the evidence discloses that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as а matter of law.
In September, 1918, the defendant, a New York corporation, was engaged in the construction of ditches and levees in Southeast Missouri, and maintained offices for the management of its business in Cape Girardeau. It used in this work large machines called dragline excavators. At the time just mentioned one of these machines was operating day and night near Greenbrier, in Bollinger County. This machine consisted of two parts, the base and the cabin. The base was a steel frame work 24 feet square and 10 feet high, which stood on wheels similar to those of a railroad box car and which ran on a steel track. On the top of the frame work was a circular track upon which rested the cabin. This cabin was of rectangular shape and looked vеry much like a railroad freight car. It housed the principal part of the machine used to operate the excavator. A steel boom 100 feet in length extended from one end of the cabin, and from the extreme end of the boom there swung a bucket or dipper. When the machine was in operation the dipper was lowered to the ground where it scooped up a dipper of earth. The loaded dipper was then raised from the ground and the upper part or the cabin of the machine, together with
The machine was lighted with some thirty-odd incandescent electric lights; four clusters of four each on the boom; some six or eight in the cabin; and eight underneath, two at each corner of the frame work. The clusters of lights on the boom had reflectors behind them
On the night of September 9, 1918, the machine in question was being run by a crew of five men: the operator, the oiler and three pit men. The operator manipulated the levers in operating the machine; the oiler kept the machinery in the cabin oiled and greased; and the three pit men, a foreman and two laborers, took up the track in the rear of the machine and put it down in front when necessary for the machine to move forward. These latter also oiled the bucket, removed obstacles in the way of the advance of the machine and performed such other work as was required to be done on the ground. All the oil and grease were kept in the cabin, and the pit men working on a night shift customarily ate their midnight lunch there. The operator was the foreman in charge of both machine and crew.
On the night just mentioned, plaintiff was one of defendant‘s crew working as pit man. He was nineteen years of age and had worked on a farm all of his life. Between cropping seasons he had done other kinds of work, such as cutting logs and clearing land. On one occasion he worked a month and a half at a saw mill. He had had no experience whatever in working around or about defendant‘s excavator and had no previous knowledge of the manner of its operation, except such as he gained from passing it occasionally during the time it had been operating in the vicinity of his home. He had worked but one night previously, and then the machine was not run at all because out of order. The workmen spent the entire night repairing it. Plaintiff began at seven o‘clock in the evening. At midnight the machine was stopped for a few minutes while the operator ate his lunch. During this interval thе pit men oiled the bucket bearings. When they had finished, the pit foreman directed the plaintiff to take the oil back to the cabin where it was regularly kept. Plaintiff took the oil to the cabin and stayed to eat his lunch. After
In getting up and down from the cabin, the workmen sometimes used the ladder; at other times they climbed the frame work or let themselves down by the same means. Plaintiff had been up and down twice before he ate his lunch that night, but not when the machine was running. The first time he went up on a ladder and the next time he “went up on a corner.” On one of these occasions, in getting down, he got down on the inside of the frame work, and the pit foreman said to him: “I always get down on the outside.” Prior to his injury plaintiff had never received any other instruction or warning with respect to getting down from the cabin, except that he had been cautioned in a general way not to come into contact with the electric cables on the ground and up in the machine. The top of the frame work was about twelve feet above the general level of the ground.
When plaintiff started down from the cabin to tighten the jacks, he stepped out of the door down on to the apron or porch. It was a dark night and there was not sufficient light thrown from the cabin or from the lights on the other parts of the maсhine to enable him to discover the location of the ladder. He waited until the dipper picked up its load of earth and started with it, then stepped down on the frame and walked toward the corner where he thought the ladder was. The boom was then moving away from him. When he got to the corner of the frame he let himself down and felt along the side with his feet for the ladder. Not finding it, he got around on the other side of the corner and felt there, but there was no ladder. He then looked around and saw the boom coming toward him; he climed back upon the frame work, intending to get back on the apron. While still on his knees and before he could get in a
On cross-examination he said in part: “When I started down in there I went head first. I was on top of these girders. If I had slid down on the outside of the frame work instead of trying to conceal myself on the inside of this prong, I would have had to have dropped about twelve feet to the ground, and besides there were some live wires there at that time. The wires were insulated but worn. . . . I chose that side of the machine to climb down. I don‘t remember whether that was the same side I climbed up or not. The ladder was not at the corner. I had gone up the ladder that same night; I didn‘t have time to chose any other corner only that one. . . . When the dipper got its load and started I stepped off there where I thought the ladder was. . . . The boom was not coming toward me when I stepped off, it was going the other way. When it came back it hit my leg. It takes a minute for it to do that. I was on that girder during that time, right there at the corner. I got down and felt for the ladder, but it was not there, and I went to the other corner, and by that time it was coming back. I did not wait for it to come back, it just came back. I was still there.” Asked why he did not look for the ladder instead of getting dоwn and feeling for it with his feet, he said: “No use to look; you couldn‘t see it.” In reply to a further question, he said: “I tried to go down on the ladder. I was not trying to go down off the machine by going down on the inside when I was injured.” As a matter of fact, the ladder was at the same place when plaintiff was hurt that it was when he went up on it that same night.
On October 7, 1918, while plaintiff was still in the hospital and before there was any indication that he was not making a normal recovery from his injury, he was visited by Mr. L. W. Mees, an attorney representing the defendant. Mees introduced himself and stated that he had come to make a settlement. Plaintiff told him that he was not of age and that a settlement would have to be made with his father. Mees said that it was not necessary to have his father; that as he was over fourteen years of age he could have a next friend appointed and through him a settlement could be effected by means of a friendly suit. He then asked plaintiff how much he wanted and the latter said he thought he ought to have $350. Mees, after questioning the plaintiff at some length as to how the accident occurred, told him that he did not think the company at fault, but that he would pay him $250 and his hospital fees and doctor bills anyway. Plaintiff made no immediate response and Mees started to go, when plaintiff said: “Well mister, I will take that $250.” He was then asked whom he wanted appointed next friend, but plaintiff knew no one in Cape Girardeau. Mees suggested Mr. S. M. Carter, secretary of a trust company there, and plaintiff made no objection, in fact said nothing. Mees then went away and prepared what he deemed the necessary papers: a petition for the appointment of a next friend; a statement of the cause of action laying plaintiff‘s damages at the sum of $250; the consent of Carter to act as next friend; a waiver of service of рrocess and entry of appearance by defendant; a stipulation that the cause be set down
Mees next went to a justice of the peace and told him that he wanted him to go the hospital and take up a friendly suit. The justice consented and they went at once to the hospital. On arriving there the justice was introduced to the plaintiff. He asked plaintiff where he came from and how he got hurt. In answer to the latter question plaintiff told him that he got hurt on a dragline machine. Mees asked plaintiff if he still wanted the $250 in compromise and he replied that he did. Mees then said you must sign these papers. After plaintiff had signed the paper or papers presented to him, the justice asked: “Is this your free act?” and plaintiff said, “Yes.” Mees then handed plaintiff a check for $250 and told him that the company would pay all of his expenses at the hospital and that he need not leave until he got well. He and the justice then left.
The judgment entry written in the justice‘s docket recited the appearance of the parties; the waiver of a jury; a hearing and submission on the evidence and “the receipt and releases of the parties;” a finding and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $250; and an acknowledgment of satisfaction thereof in open court. Immediately under the judgment entry are the words, “Approved by,” followed by the purported signatures of plaintiff and Carter as his next friend.
The petition is in two counts. The first is in equity and seeks to have the judgment of the justice of the peace set aside. The grounds on which the right to such relief is predicated is set forth in the petition as follows:
“On October 7, 1918, the defendant, by fraudulent representations made to plaintiff, induced him to acquiesce in the defendant‘s proposal to settle his claim for $250; that the defendant, through its own initiative and without the consent or approval of the plaintiff, secured the appointment of a next friend and caused to be instituted a suit by such next friend against the defendant and in behalf of the plaintiff for damages for the aforesaid injury; that said next friend was unknown to plaintiff and plaintiff never had an opportunity to see him or consult with him about said suit; that defendant prepared all the papers, pleadings and orders in said proceeding and filed the same with F. A. Kage, a justice of the peace within and for Cape Girardeau Township and County, Missouri, and fraudulently represented to the said F. A. Kage that plaintiff had agreed that judgment in said case be rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant in the sum of $250 and requested that such judgment be entered; that by reason of said fraudulent representations of the defendant, the said F. A. Kage did enter judgment in said case in favor of plaintiff for $250 and the defendant thereupon issued and delivered to plaintiff a check for $250.
“Plaintiff states that the judgment aforesaid was rendered without a trial upon the pleadings or statement before the court; that there was no evidence offered nor proofs made before the court upon the merits of the case, the extent of the plaintiff‘s injury or on the question as to whether such judgment was fоr the best interest of the plaintiff; that such proceeding was made without the knowledge or consent of J. C. Robison, father of Dewey
“Plaintiff states that the amount of said judgment is entirely inadequate to compensate the plaintiff for his injuries, and that if said judgment is allowed to stand it will bar further attempts оf the plaintiff to prosecute his claim for damages for said injuries.
“Wherefore, the plaintiff brings herewith the check given him by the defendant in payment of said judgment and files the same with the clerk of this court and prays the court to declare the judgment as aforesaid void and order it to be set aside and said check returned to the defendant.”
The second count is an ordinary suit for personal injuries. Its allegations are sufficiently broad to include the acts and omissions submitted to the jury for their determination as to whether they constituted negligence, viz.: the continued operation of the machine after plaintiff was directed to go from the cabin to the ground, failure to have a regular place for the ladder, failure to have a guide light for indicating the location of the ladder, failure to furnish sufficient light, and failure to instruct plaintiff as to the manner of descending from the upper part of the machine to the ground and to warn him of the danger incident thereto.
As to the first count the answer admits the rendition of the judgment by the justice of the peace and pleads the judgment in bar. With respect to the second count it is a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence.
A trial of the issues under the count in equity was first had, resulting in a finding for plaintiff. The second count was then tried to a jury.
I. It is the generally accepted doctrine that an infant cannot avoid a judgment or decree against him merely on the ground of infancy, and that he cannot impeach such a judgment or decree by an original bill, except upon grounds that would be available to an adult, such as fraud. In this case the bill alleges, among other things, that the judgment entered by the justice of the peace was caused to be so entered through and by means of fraudulent representations. As ordinarily understood, a fraudulent representation is a false statement relating to a matter of fact made with intent to deceive. The evidence wholly fails to show that any untrue statement of fact was made by defendant‘s agent, either in negotiating the settlement with plaintiff, or in procuring the entry of a formal judgment by the justice of the peace. And for that reason appellant insists that plaintiff failed to make a case entitling him to the relief prayed under the first count of his petition. But plaintiff does not predicate his right to such relief solely on the ground of fraudulent representation. There are other allegations of fact in the petition and they are amply supported by the proof. It is to be determined whether these constitute such fraud as warranted the court below in cancelling the so-called judgment.
There is no question but that plaintiff and defendant‘s agent, Mees, agreed upon a settlement whereby in consideration of the payment оf $250, together with his hospital fees and doctor bills, plaintiff was to release defendant from further liability for the injuries he had sustained on account of its negligence. Such contract of settlement, even after it became executed, the plaintiff, being a minor, would have had the right to disaffirm and
There can be no doubt of course but that in a suit instituted by a minor by his next friend a judgment may be rendered that will be valid and binding upon him. Such judgment, however, cannot be basеd merely on the consent of the minor, for he is without discretion, nor on that of the next friend, because he is not invested with either the power or the duty so to do. [Ewing v. Ferguson, 33 Gratt. (Va.) 563; Tennessee Ry. Co. v. Hayes, 97 Ala. 201; Kingsbury v. Buckner, 134 U. S. 650.] The court in such case is charged with the duty of protecting the minor‘s interest, and it is only when its judgment is based upon facts judicially ascertained, upon a real and not a perfunctory hearing, that its judgment is binding upon him. [Missouri Pac. Ry. Co. v. Lasca, 72 Kan. 311; Ferrell v. Broadway, 126 N. C. 258, 261; Tripp v. Gifford, 155 Mass. 108.] The judgment under consideration had no such basis. The proceeding, if it may be so called, was colorable merely from beginning to end; it did not possess a single element of a judicial hearing and determination. Its entire record was the handiwork of Mees; he prepared all of the papers and the next friend and the justice did nothing but complaisantly sign their names “on the dotted lines” pointed out by him. It should be said, however, that the two gentlemen who so obligingly signed the papers for Mees were given to understand, and they considered, that their acts in the matter were purely formal. And so they were. The “friendly suit” was not a suit in fact; it was merely a screen contrived to conceal the real transaction, the contract of settlement and release between plaintiff and defendant, and having for its purpose the foreclosure of plaintiff‘s right to disaffirm and repudiate his folly, upon reaching the age of discretion, or upon the receipt of mature counsel. It is considered fraudulent to take ad
II. Appellant makes the further contention that plaintiff was not entitled to recover under the first count of his petition, because it was neither alleged nor shown that before instituting the suit he had offered to restore to defendant what he had received under the settlement. Plaintiff brought the check, the only thing that he had received from defendant, into court, filed it with his petition and asked the court to direct its return to the defendant. In an equitable action to rescind a compromise, where a tender back of moneys received is proper, it is sufficient for the plaintiff to offer, in his petitiоn, to restore what he has received. After such offer the rights of the parties will be regulated and protected in the final judgment. Such is the rule in this State and the one that prevails generally. [Whelan v. Reilly, 61 Mo. 565; Paquin v. Milliken, 163 Mo. 79, 105; Carroll v. United Rys. Co., 57 Mo. App. 247, 293; 18 Ency. Plead. & Pr. 836.]
III. Appellant strenuously insists that the evidence convicts plaintiff of contributory negligence as a matter of law. The facts having a bearing on this phase of the case have been very fully set out in the preceding statement and need not be repeated here. The particulars in which it is claimed that plaintiff was negligent are: (1) in going down on the frame work of the machine instead of on the ladder provided for that purpose; and (2) in going down on the inside of the frame after he had been warned not to do so and when the outside was obviously the safer way. As to the first, plaintiff testified directly and positively that he was trying to go down on the ladder and not the frame. He says that when he stepped
Even if the statement of the pit foreman tо the plaintiff, that he, the foreman, always went down on the outside of the frame, could be construed as a warning to plaintiff not to go down on the inside, the warning was not wilfully disregarded. Plaintiff was not attempting in the first instance to go down on the frame, either on the inside, or the outside. He was hunting the ladder. He suddenly became aware that he was in a position of peril. It now seems true, as appellant contends, that plaintiff could, in all probability, while holding to the upper plate of the frame work, have let himself down on the outside and then dropped two or three feet to the ground without injury. But plaintiff was not in a condition to reason calmly about his situation. He was controlled by the instinct of preservation and not by the dictates of care and reason. He рictured himself coming into contact with highly charged electric wires with broken insulation, if he dropped down on the outside; to him that was not an obviously safe way. On the other hand he had once before gone down between the prongs of one of the I-beams safely and easily and he thought that he had the time to do so again. It seems clear that whether in so doing he failed to exercise that degree of care that an ordinarily prudent man of his experience would have exercised under the same circumstances was a question for the jury.
Appellant‘s counsel carnestly insist that the cases of Boesel v. Wells Fargo Co., 260 Mo. 463, and Henry v. Railroad, 141 Mo. App. 351, are controlling on the facts of this with respect to the question of contributory negligence. But those cases are wholly unlike the one at bar on the facts, unless one isolated bit of evidence in the lаtter, inconsistent with the other evidence in the case, be held to portray the real facts. One of defendant‘s witnesses testified that plaintiff stated that he believed the pulley on the lower end of the boom would clear his leg—pass over it—and that he would, therefore, be safe with one leg over the I-beam, and plaintiff did not, in rebuttal, expressly deny having made the statement. But the substance of the statement was in effect contradicted by all of plaintiff‘s testimony touching that phase of the case and it was for the jury to say, from all the evidence what the true facts were.
We concur in the trial court‘s finding under the first count, and as no reversible error in connection with the trial to the jury under the second count has been pointed out, the judgment should be affirmed.
It is so ordered. Small, C., concurs; Brown, C., absent.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion of RAGLAND, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
