It is well settled that an infant can make no binding contract except for necessaries, which include such things as his meat, drink, apparel, physic, nursing while sick, schooling, &c. But we have yet to find an authority for holding, that the business of farming falls within the exception to the exemption of an infant upon his contracts. Parsons in his work on Contracts (Vol. 1, page 313) says, an infant cannot enter into con *652 tracts of business and trade, “for this,” he says, “is not necessary and might expose him to the misfortune of entering upon adult life with the burdens of bankruptcy resting upon him.”
In
Freeman
v.
Bridger,
The contract in this case then, was not for a necessary.
But it is contended that an infant may bind himself upon his contract other than for necessaries, provided he ratifies it when he comes of age; and on the other hand it is held that contracts of an infant are voidable, and such as relate to his person or personal property may be avoided at any time, even before attaining his majority, by an act clearly manifesting this purpose. Parsons, p. 322. In
Skinner
v. Maxwell,
In this case, the disposition of the mortgaged crop by the infant »in violation of the terms of the contract, was to our minds a clear and manifest purpose to disaffirm the contract, and when thus disaffirmed, the contract which before was only voidable becomes absolutely void. The case then results in this — that the state *653 seeks by this indictment to hold the defendant amenable to the criminal law for the violation of a void contract. With all due respect to the opinion of those who entertain such a proposition, we must say that it seems to us preposterous.
But it may be objected that the contract is only void by reason of the infancy of defendant, and that there is no saving in the act in favor of infants, &c. The act, it is true, is very broad in its terms and contains no saving clause, but it presents a case where there is a concurrence of two laws — the one a statutory provision making the defendant indictable for a violation of his contract, and the other a provision of the common law exempting the defendant by reason of his infancy from the contract, because as to him it was void. “ Like two statutory laws,” says Bishop, “they may stand well together up to a given point, and then they come in conflict. The rule in this case is that the prior law is not repealed, but at such point the one or the other simply gives way. For example, a statute general in its terms is always to be taken as subject to any exceptions which the common law requires. Then if it creates an offence, it includes neither infants under the age of legal capacity, nor insane persons,” c&c. Bishop on Statutory Crimes.
From this view of the case, our conclusion is that His Honor erred in refusing to give the instructions asked. This must, therefore, be certified to the superior court of Pender county, that a venire de novo may be awarded the defendant.
Error. Venire de novo.
