187 S.W. 1022 | Tex. App. | 1916
This was a suit by the appellee against appellant for the conversion of the sum of $36.95 alleged to be current wages, and for $20 attorney's fees, and $25 punitive damages. Appellant pleaded a set-off of $35.10, tendered into court $1.85, pleaded the minority of plaintiff at the time such wages were earned and that they were the property of his mother, and set up a counter-claim for $150. Appellee abandoned his claim for $25 punitive damages, and judgment was rendered in his favor for $36.95, his current wages, and $20 attorney's fees, and no disposition was made in the final judgment of appellant's counterclaim, set-off, or the money tendered into court.
At the outset we are confronted with a motion to dismiss this appeal for the following reasons: (1) Because the judgment of the trial court is not a final judgment, such as can be appealed from, in that the cross-action of the appellant was not disposed of by the judgment of the trial court. (2) Because, if it shall be held that appellant's cross-action was disposed of by judgment of the trial court, then said judgment was adverse to the appellant, and the amount in controversy, under the assignments of error as made by the appellant, is not within the jurisdiction of this court, and that this court has no jurisdiction of the matters complained of by the appellant is manifest of record.
Upon the presentation of this motion, we were very much inclined to grant same, following a long line of decisions which we believe announce the correct doctrine. Riddle v. Bearden,
But in the case of Trammell v. Rosen,
"Davies v. Thomson,
"The principle which controlled the last-mentioned two cases is, we think, applicable in great measure to this case. The rule is thus stated in Freeman on Judgments, § 279, and note 1: `There is no doubt that if a set-off is presented by defendant in his pleadings, and attempted to be supported by evidence to the jury, it will, whether allowed or disallowed, become res adjudicata. It is settled by the judgment as conclusively, when it does not appear to have been allowed, as though there were an express finding against it.' * * * Nor is it material that the evidence to support a setoff was excluded because insufficient. * * *
"We feel constrained to hold that the judgment of the trial court, although irregular and imperfect in form, is sufficient to support the appeal. However, we feel impelled to say, also, that we think that, as a matter of practice, and to avoid confusion, every final judgment should plainly, explicitly, and specifically dispose of each and every party to the cause, and of each and every issue therein presented by the pleadings."
Therefore, on the authority of the case last cited, we overrule the motion to dismiss the appeal.
Tested by the pleadings, this case was one of conversion and for damages. The testimony, which was uncontradicted, was as follows:
"My name is Ernest Conner, and I live on Mr. Platt's place four miles from Groveton, in Trinity county, Tex. I was in the employ of the Trinity County Lumber Company and quit work on February 14, 1914. I had been working for it during January, and until the 14th day of February of that year. They agreed to pay me, and at the time I quit owed me $36.95, which they refused to pay me. I made demand for my money upon Mr. Chandler, the timekeeper, Mr. Hughes, the cashier of the Trinity County Lumber Company, and Mr. Cox, who works for the company in the woods, but they refused to pay me. I then went to see Mr. Campbell. I remember the 14th day of February, because it was pay day. They did not pay me off in January. They had no pay day for me in January. I went to them and demanded my pay on the first pay day for me after I went to work in January. They had their pay days on the closest Saturday to the 15th of each month at that time. I made no demand for pay during January, except for coupons, which I drew. I drew coupons during February, also. I did not draw any money during January or February. I am 22 years old. I was 21 years old on May 2. 1914. I lived out at the Springs until the sheriff put me off; I don't remember the day. I never did own any property, and my mother has nothing subject to execution."
That is practically all the testimony of the plaintiff. The judgment of the court found that the plaintiff labored during the month of January and up to and including the 13th day of February, and that, for the *1024 services rendered by plaintiff, the defendant was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $36.95. Judgment was entered, upon said testimony, that the plaintiff recover of defendant $36.95, the amount of his current wages sued for.
By the first assignment of error, the appellant calls in question the action of the court in rendering judgment for plaintiff, because the undisputed evidence shows that the sum sued for was earned during plaintiff's minority; that his mother is living; and that there is neither pleading nor proof that the plaintiff was emancipated at the time he performed such labor. This assignment must be sustained.
The record shows that the plaintiff was a minor living with his mother, and there is not a line of testimony even intimating that he had been emancipated, or that there was any relinquishment or gift by plaintiff's mother. It has been held that a parent is only entitled to the services and earnings of the child while the child is supported by him. Although the general principle is clear and unquestioned that the father is entitled to the services of his minor child, and to all that such child earns by his labor, yet it seems to be equally clear that, as the right of the father to the services of the child is founded upon his duty to support and maintain his child, if he should fail, neglect, or refuse to observe and perform this duty, his right to the services of his child should cease to exist; and such is held to be the law. As the father may forfeit his right to the custody and control of his child's person by abusing his power, so, by neglecting to fulfill the obligations of a father, he may forfeit his right to the fruit of his child's labor. If he provides no home for his protection, if he neither feeds nor clothes him, nor ministers to his wants in sickness or health, it would be a most harsh and unnatural law which authorized the father to appropriate to himself all the child's earnings. It would he recognizing in fathers something like that pre-eminent and sovereign authority which has never been admitted by the jurisprudence of any civilized people, except that of ancient Rome, whose law held children to be the property of the father, and placed them in relation to him, in the category of things, instead of that of persons. Tiffany on Persons Domestic Relations, pp. 261, 262.
The same authority, continuing, says: "There is some authority to the effect that the right to a child's services and earnings does not vest in the mother, even where the father has deserted her and the child, or is dead; that the mother, even under such circumstances as these, is entitled only to reverence and respect, and has no authority over the child, or right to its services. This, however, is a mistake, due perhaps, to some extent, to following without reason or other authority the dictum of Blackstone and other old writers and judges to that effect, and to a failure to recognize the fact that there is no longer any such principle or doctrine as the old feudal doctrine, which, requiring, as it did the abject subjection and servitude of the wife, was unable to recognize the supremacy of the mother. By the overwhelming weight of modern authority, a widowed mother is entitled to the services and earnings of a minor child to the same extent as the father would be if living. The same rule applies where a wife is deserted by her husband, or he is imprisoned, and she is left to maintain her children, for the same reason for the rule applies in both cases." Tiffany on Persons Domestic Relations, p. 256: 29 Cyc. 1624-25; Barrett v. Riley,
The record in this case with reference to maintenance is silent. The defendant pleaded and proved the minority of the plaintiff, and while we might infer from the fact that he was living with his mother, that she was maintaining him, still there is no proof directly with reference to his maintenance.
Believing that the above is sound doctrine, and from the authorities, we are constrained to hold that the assignment is well taken, and the case, therefore, will be reversed: and rendered in favor of the appellant. It is so ordered. *1025