53 S.E. 891 | N.C. | 1906
Action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff while in defendant's employment. Plaintiff testified: "I commenced work for the defendant about a year ago, May, 1904. I went in there one Monday morning. Mr. Nichols, boss man in the room, spoke to me and asked me if I wanted to weigh fillers. I told him `yes.' He took me over and put me to weighing; then he put me to cutting lumps on a table. They were making 3-inch work. I worked at that place three days in one fortnight, and in the second fortnight six days. After cutting lumps I then was a sweeper on the floor. I cleaned up about machines and around on the floor. That evening at 4 o'clock we got out of the factory. The weigh-boy went down the house to wash his hands. The man that run that machine went down the house to clean up another machine. I was cleaning up that one I worked at. The weigh-boy ran up and threw a piece of cut tobacco in the machine. I reached my hand *249 in there to take it out. He pulled the lever and run and the machine caught my hand and tore it off. I don't know the fellow who took me out of the machine. Mr. Nichols took me up in the house above, and said, `Did you not tell me you were 12 years old?' I said, `No.' I was 11 years old in June, 1903. When cutting off lumps I was 12 inches away from the machine. No one explained to me the dangerous (302) character of the machine, nor told me anything about it. I was born 4 June, 1892. I would not have been hurt if the boy had not pulled the lever. The machine was set, and you had to pull the lever that made it work and set it. At the time I was hurt I worked by the side of John Dillon all that day. Table and truck between me and the machine. The lever is in front of the machine. I did not get a lump and try to press it in the machine. He, Dillon, had pressed a lump that day for me. It was not after quitting time when I was hurt. If it was, all hands had not gotten out of the factory. No one told me to clean up the machine. I saw others cleaning up the machine and I did so. No one ever asked me to clean up the machine or do anything about it. It was a part of my duty to clean up around the machine. Will Hairston is the name of the boy that pulled the lever of machine on me. He is working down there in the factory now. There was a belt attached to the machine running at the time. No one told me to clean up around the machines. Other boys were at work cleaning up." There was other evidence in regard to plaintiff's age, extent of injury, etc. At the conclusion of the evidence defendant demurred and moved for judgment as of nonsuit. Motion allowed. Plaintiff excepted. Judgment. Appeal by plaintiff. The plaintiff bases his right to recover on the facts admitted by the demurrer upon two propositions: That his employment by the defendant, he being under 12 years of age, was in violation of the provisions of chapter 473, section 1, Laws of 1903, prohibiting employment of children under 12 years of age, was per se negligence, or at least evidence of negligence, and that such (303) negligence was the proximate cause of the injury sustained by him.
The appeal, for the first time, presents to us for construction and application the act passed by the Legislature for the protection of young children by expressly prohibiting their employment in mills and factories. The first section is plain, and calls for no construction by the Court. It provides: "That no child under 12 years of age shall be employed *250 in any factory or manufacturing establishment in this State." The provision in regard to oyster-canning factories is not material to any question presented by this appeal. The second section prescribes the hours during which persons under 18 years of age shall work. The third section provides that parents of children seeking employment shall give certificates in regard to their age, and makes any person knowingly and willfully violating the provisions of the act indictable, etc. The act is the result of the well-considered, and, we think, wise conclusion of the General Assembly, reflecting and crystallizing into law the will of the people of the State. It is, therefore, not only your duty, but in entire harmony with our judgment to give to the statute such a construction and application as will effectuate the intention of the General Assembly, remedy and prevent the continuation of an evil which threatens the welfare of the young children, and, thereby, the best and highest interest of the State.
Referring to and applying the provisions of an act in almost the same language as ours, the Court of Appeals in New York, in Marino v. Lehmaier,
We have, in accordance with the uniform current of authority, held that the violation of a town ordinance regulating the speed of trains and street cars is at least evidence of negligence. Norton v. R. R.,
We do not entertain any doubt that, upon the evidence before the court, the question of defendant's negligence should have been submitted to the jury. Defendant says that, notwithstanding its negligence, no cause of action accrued to plaintiff, because the injury was not the proximate cause of such negligence, but of an entirely unforseen and unavoidable agency — the other boy pulled the lever. It does not appear whether this boy was under 12 years of age. It has been frequently held that when persons negligently left dangerous machines or other instrumentalities exposed to the interference of children, and by reason thereof they have sustained injury, such result should have been contemplated as reasonably probable, fixing liability on the original negligent act. In this connection it is said in Marquette Coal Co. v. Dielie,
The Court of Appeals of New York, in Hickey v. Taaffe,
Morris v. Stanfield,
The principal was applied in Nagel v. R. R.,
In Lynch v. Nurdin, 41 E. C. L., 422, it appeared that the defendant's servant left a horse and cart unhitched on the street. The plaintiff with other children was playing with the horse and climbing onto the buggy when the plaintiff was hurt by the horse moving away. To an action for damages the defendant said that the plaintiff brought the injury upon himself.Denman, C. J., after discussing the conduct of the defendant's servant in leaving the horse unhitched, said: "But the question remains, Can the plaintiff, then, consistently with the authorities, maintain his action, having been at least equally in fault? The answer is that, supposing that fact ascertained by the jury, but to this extent, that he merely indulged the instinct of a child in amusing himself with the empty cart and deserted horse, then we think that the defendant cannot avail himself of that fact. The most blamable carelessness of his servant having tempted the child, he ought not to reproach the child with yielding to that temptation. He has been the real and only cause of the mischief. He has been deficient in ordinary care; the child acting without prudence or thought has, however, shown these qualities in as great degree as he could be expected to possess them."
In Iron Co. v. Green, 65 Southwestern (Tenn.), 399, the same defense was made, that the plaintiff's wrongful employment of the child was not the proximate cause of the injury. Beard, J., said: "Defendant had no right to employ this minor. While in its employment on its premises and foolishly playing with panels, the property of the company, too heavy for his strength to hold, yet with boyish heedlessness (310) disregarding this fact, this injury is inflicted upon him. Had he not been employed by this defendant there is no reason to suppose that he would have been on its premises when the temptation occurred to him to prank with these panels to his serious hurt. In each of the propositions presented by the respective parties to the suit we think there is causal connection between the employment and the injury."
The doctrine is thus stated by Bailey in his work on Personal Injuries, *255
1291: "When the negligent act of the defendant naturally induced or offered opportunity for the subsequent act of a child, being of a character common to youthful indiscretion, and which, concurring with the defendant's earlier wrongful act, produced the injuries complained of, the defendant will in general be held liable. Children wherever they go must be expected to act upon childish instincts and impulses, a fact which all persons who are sui juris must consider, and take precautions accordingly. A person who places in the hands of a child an article of a dangerous character and one likely to do an injury to the child itself or to others, is liable in damages for injury resulting, which is a natural result of the original wrong, though there may be an intervening agency between the defendant's act and the injury." For this statement of the law the author cites a number of cases, among others Lynch v. Nurdin, supra, which Mr. Beach says is the leading English case on the subject and has been generally followed in this country, both in the Federal and many of the State courts. Cont. Neg., secs. 137-140; R. R. v. Stout, 2 Dill., 294; Fed. Cas. No. 13504,
In Queen v. Dayton Coal Co., supra, it is said: "Of course, (311) we do not hold that if the boy had died of organic disease of the heart, or from a stroke of paralysis, or from some cause wholly disconnected with his employment, the company would have been liable, simply on account of the employment in violation of the statute."
The learned counsel for defendant cite us to a number of cases more or less in conflict with the line of authorities which we have noted. In a few cases it is held that the statute prohibiting the employment of young children does not change the rule in respect to negligence, and that in such actions the rules and principles governing prior to the passage of the statute prevail. They are clearly out of harmony with the best considered and, we think, sound view. Several of them, upon the peculiar facts in the record, hold as a matter of law that the violation of the statute was not the proximate cause of the injury. In other cases the alleged negligence was in the failure of defendant to box or otherwise protect machinery in the manner required by statutes, wherein it is held that plaintiff's recovery for injury sustained is barred by working with such machines in the presence of obvious danger, etc. The distinction between such cases and ours is pointed out in Am. C. and F. Co. v. Armentraut,
Defendant relies upon the decision of this Court in Hendrix v. CottonMills,
There is much in this testimony from which a jury may reasonably have drawn the inference that the child was acting in the line of his employment. It may be that we do not correctly interpret his testimony, but it impresses us, with our knowledge of the alertness and desire of children to be useful, as this child, by seeking employment, showed himself to be, that he thought it was his duty to take the piece of tobacco out of the machine. Certainly, it is not a necessary or even a fair interpretation of his conduct that he was wanton and reckless. Is it not rather the conduct of a boy seeking to discharge his duty to his employer? It was for the jury to draw such inferences from his testimony as are reasonable. R. R. v.Stout, supra.
We think a reasonable construction of his conduct in taking the tobacco out of the machine is that he was, or reasonably supposed that he was, discharging his duty. He was, it seems, required to clean up the machine. We should hesitate to conclude that the other boy willfully and, therefore, wickedly threw the lever, deliberately intending to crush the plaintiff's hand. It is more in accordance with childish impulse that he did it to frighten the plaintiff and see him jerk his hand back. While it was a reckless and wanton act, it was one of the freaks and (313) pranks which might not unreasonably be anticipated from leaving *257 boys together in a mill, surrounded by dangerous machinery. It was for that reason, among others, that the Legislature prohibited the employment of children in such places. The fact that the statute was enacted, as we know, after several ineffectual efforts, puts an employer upon notice that in the eye of the law, based upon experience, it was dangerous to life and limb of children to be so employed and exposed to the very kind of danger by which the plaintiff was injured. To permit the defendant to escape liability for violating the statute by saying that it did not anticipate this particular condition, with its disastrous results, would be to nullify the law. Of course, it did not anticipate this particular condition or result; if it had done so, the employment would have been not negligent, but criminal. Neither did the servant who left the horse unhitched in Lynch v. Nurdin, 41 E. C. L., 422, anticipate that children would play with and frighten the horse and cause the plaintiff to suffer injury; but the Court held that he ought to have done so — so in the Turntable cases the same defense was made.
If the plaintiff be required to show that, in every negligent act, the particular result was in fact anticipated, it would be difficult to maintain any action for injury sustained by the negligence of another. Drumv. Miller,
The State says to employers that they must not take the children under 12 years of age into their mills and factories; that to do so endangers their lives and limbs, dwarfs them mentally, morally, and physically; that it is upon the children that the permanent power and welfare of the State depend. They must not, below the tender and immature age fixed by the statute, be brought into contact with iron and steel machinery propelled by the powerful agencies of steam or electricity. Considered from any point of view, the right of (314) the child to have the opportunity to grow to at least the age named in the statute in a pure atmosphere, without danger of mutilation of body, dwarfing of mind, and to attend the schools provided by the State, the legislation is founded upon a wise and humane policy.
Its violation, followed by injury, gives a cause of action to the child upon the elementary principle that "whenever the common law or a statute imposes on one a duty, if of a sort affecting the public within the principle of the criminal law, a breach of it is indictable, and a civil action will lie in favor of any person who has suffered especially therefrom; or, if the matter of the law involves only the interest of individuals, any one who has received harm from another's disobedience *258
may have his suit against him for damage." Bishop Noncontract Law, sec. 132; Comyn's Dig., 453; Greenlee v. R. R.,
The defendant says, whatever its breach of duty may have been, the plaintiff was negligent and by such negligence contributed to his injury. The authorities cited by the learned counsel, applied to the conduct of an adult or one not within the protection of the statute, fully sustain their contention. But when we come to measure the duty of the child in regard to the exercise of care for his safety, an entirely different principle controls. Within certain ages, courts hold children incapable of contributory negligence. We do not find any case, nor do we think it sound doctrine, to say that a child of 12 years comes within that class. Adopting the standard of the law in respect to criminal liability, we think that a child under 12 years of age is presumed to be incapable of so understanding and appreciating danger from the negligent act, or conditions produced by others, as to make him guilty of contributory negligence. Mr. Labatt says: "The essential and controlling conception by which a minor's right of action is determined with reference (315) to the existence or absence of contributing fault is the measure of his responsibility. If he has not the ability to foresee and avoid the danger to which he may be exposed, negligence will not be imputed to him if he unwittingly exposes himself to danger. For the exercise of such measure of capacity and discretion as he possesses, he is responsible." Master and Servant, sec. 348. It is in such cases a question for the jury. 4 Thompson Neg., sec. 4587; Beach Cont. Neg., sec. 136. "Whether he could be guilty of contributory negligence or not was a question of fact to be determined by the jury, dependent upon the other fact whether it had been shown that the deceased had capacity to be guilty of contributory negligence. Between 7 and 14 a child is prima facie
incapable of exercising judgment and discretion, but evidence may be received to show capacity." T. C. and C. Co. v. Enslen,
In several cases it is held that when a statute is violated and results in the injury of the child, the defense of contributory negligence is not open to the defendant. Am. C. and F. Co. v. Armentrout, supra. The better view seems to be otherwise. The Tennessee Court, after discussing the question, concludes: "It is hardly necessary to add that contributory negligence on the part of the minor is to be measured by his age and his ability to discern and appreciate the circumstances of danger. He is not chargeable with the same degree of care as an experienced adult, but is only required to exercise such prudence as one of his years may be expected to possess. "As the standard of care thus varies with the age, *259
capacity, and experience of the child, it is usually, if not always, when the child is not wholly irresponsible, a question of fact for the jury whether a child exercised the ordinary care and prudence of a child similarly situated; and if such care was exercised, a recovery can be had for an injury negligently inflicted, no matter how far the care used by the child falls short of the standard which the law exacts for determining what is ordinary care in a person of full age and (316) capacity." 7 A. E., 409; Plumly v. Birge,
His Honor erroneously sustained the demurrer to the evidence. In the light of the testimony he should have submitted the case to the jury, instructing them that if they found the facts as testified to, the defendant was guilty of negligence in employing the plaintiff, either knowing his age, or failing to have the certificate of his parents as provided by the statute; that if they found that such negligence was the proximate cause of the injury, they should answer the first issue "Yes." In regard to the alleged contributory negligence of the plaintiff, he should have instructed the jury in accordance with the principles announced by the authorities herein cited. The jury could take into consideration the age, intelligence, and knowledge of the plaintiff in regard to the machine, and his capacity to know and appreciate the danger.
We have given to the questions presented upon this appeal a careful examination. It is the first time that we have had occasion to construe the statute, and it is conceded that the courts of other states are not uniform in the construction given similar statutes. It is a matter of importance to employers of labor in mills and factories to know the standard of their rights and liabilities. The industrial life and development of the State are not only consistent with, but promoted by, the exclusion of young children from mills and factories. The child, educated and developed before beginning work of this kind, becomes not only more useful and efficient, but in all respects a better citizen.
While not necessary to the decision of this appeal, we note that the first section of chapter 473, Laws 1903, is omitted from the Revisal. The statute, as incorporated in sections 3362-63-64, Revisal, makes the prohibition dependent upon "knowingly and willfully" employing a child. The original act, in declaring the prohibition, did not contain these words. Section 3, making the employment of the child a misdemeanor, properly required the act to be done "knowingly (317) and willfully." The omission of section 1 was doubtless an oversight. It may be of importance in the trial of actions, such as this, for injuries sustained, in regard to the burden of proof. We simply note this change to the end that if the General Assembly should desire, they *260 may restore section 1, which, under the language of the enacting and repealing clauses of the Revisal, would seem to be repealed.
Error.
Cited: Leathers v. Tobacco Co.,