Ishmael Grant made an affidavit to foreclose a laborer’s lien, alleging a contract between himself and Albert Royal, under which he was to work for Royal for $10 a month and Ms board, and that he had worked from January 1, 1907, until December 4, 1907, when Royal agreed for the contract to be at an end, thereby completing- the contract. Royal made a counter-affidavit denying all the material allegations made in the affidavit of Grant, and setting up a different contract. When the case came on for trial it appeared that the plaintiff was a minor, sixteen years of age, under the control of his mother; and an amendment was made, adding after Ms name the words, “by his next friend,
In view of the pleadings in the case, both of these charges are error. The jury are told, in effect, that the prochein ami has, by the amendment allowed, become the real plaintiff in the case, and the charge is based upon the theory that the mother is proceeding (as she would have had the right to do if she had hired her son to Eoyal, instead of her son having made the contract himself) to foreclose a laborer’s lien for the labor of her minor child. Under the pleadings, the plaintiff was the same after the appointment of his mother as next friend as he was before .the allowance of the amendment to that effect. The charge of the court proceeded on the idea that the foreclosure had been instituted by the parent of the minor, and it fixed a rule which might apply between the parent of a minor and the employer of her minor child; but, as delivered, it must necessarily have confused the minds of the jury and prejudiced the defendant’s defense. The charge of the court that “any payment made to this boy [the plaintiff], if you believe the contract existed, would be void, as the boy is a minor,” wholly eliminated the plea of payment set up by the defendant. The action was ¡proceeding in behalf of the plaintiff himself, it assumed that he made the contract and that all payments were to be made to him; and as it proceeded with his mother as next-friend, she must be presumed to have adopted and ratified the contract made by the minor, and to have consented, not only to' the contract, but also to the suit brought by her son. In the affidavit made to foreclose the laborer’s lien it is averred that the contract was made by the minor, and it is therefore doubtful whether the case could proceed with any substitute for a plaintiff; but when the mother, vested with the minor’s control, consented to act as his prochein ami, evidence of payments made by the defendant employer to the minor were admissible and competent-to show that the debt for which the laborer’s lien was claimed bad been diminished or paid in full. Under the pleadings and the evidence, the plaintiff was estopped from asserting that any payments made him on the contract were affected by his minority.