139 S.E. 642 | W. Va. | 1927
This action was instituted by the administrator of James Early Bartee in the circuit court of Mercer county to recover damages sustained by reason of injuries to the latter while in the alleged unlawful employment of the Turkey Gap Coal Company. A verdict was returned for plaintiff, and judgment entered thereon. From this judgment the coal company prosecutes error to this Court.
The declaration, after setting up the injury, resulting in the death of James Early Bartee, alleges that said Bartee was under the age of 16 years at the time of his employment *135 and also at the time of the accident; that he was unlawfully employed and unlawfully continued in said employment up to and including the time of said accident; that he was employed at the time of the accident and prior thereto, in the capacity of trapper, in said mine, charged with the duty, among other things, of opening and shutting doors and gates therein, to permit cars, trucks and motors to pass in and out of the mines, and that the plaintiff had sustained damages to the amount of $10,000 on account of the unlawful employment and death of decedent.
The main issues raised on the trial were whether the deceased was under sixteen years of age, and if so, whether he had the intelligence, knowledge and appreciation of dangers, and how to avoid them, of a boy over sixteen years of age. The statute (Chapter 15H, Sec. 72, Code) provides: "No child under the age of sixteen years shall be employed, permitted, or suffered, to work in any mine, quarry, tunnel or excavation." This action is based upon such unlawful employment, and such employment being the proximate cause of the minor's death, under our authorities. Norman v. Coal Company,
Deceased's age was the pivotal question. During the course of plaintiff's evidence the mother testified concerning the birth of the child, and in support of her evidence introduced a family Bible, containing a list of her children and the date of birth. Error is claimed in permitting the introduction of the Bible record. As a general rule entries in a family record or Bible are admissible as evidence in the matter of pedigree in order to prove relationship and the date and fact of birth of a party. Union Central Life Ins. Co. v. Pollard,
We have carefully examined the instructions offered by both parties, and given by the court, and find no error in them. They conform to the principles announced in the cases cited in the foreground of this opinion. The defendant complains of the court's refusal to give its instruction No. 5, which told the jury in effect that although they should find the decedent to have been under sixteen years of age, yet if they believed that the accident which resulted in his death was not the proximate cause of such employment, no recovery could be had. In view of its instruction No. 4, which was given to the jury, we do not believe it was error to refuse the offered instruction. The given instruction told the jury that to entitle the plaintiff to recover in the case, the burden was upon him to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the deceased was less than 16 years of age at the time of the accident which caused his death, and that his employment was the proximate cause of the accident. The instructions very fairly submitted the case to the jury, and their verdict would not have been disturbed, except for the error in the introduction of evidence already adverted to.
Judgment reversed, verdict set aside, and a new trial awarded defendant.
*138Reversed and remanded.