Dowd v. . Davis

PLEA — Not guilty.

On the trial before Martin, J., on the last Spring (62) Circuit, the plaintiff, to prove the relation of master and servant between him and the apprentice, produced the order of the County Court for binding the apprentice to him, and the following indenture:

"This indenture made, etc., between Thomas Gilmore, Esq., Chairman, etc., on behalf of the justices of said county and their successors in office, of the one part, and Cornelius Dowd, of the other part, witnesseth, that the said Thomas Gilmore in pursuance of an order of the said County Court made, etc., and according to the directions of the act of Assembly in that case, made and provided, doth put, place and bind unto the said C. D., five certain, etc., with the said C. D., to live after the manner of servants until they shall attain the age of twenty-one years, they being born of a free woman and begot by a negro slave, during all which time, the said children, their master or his heirs, faithfully shall serve, his lawful command everywhere readily obey, they shall not at any time absent themselves from their said master's service without leave, but in all things as good and faithful servants, shall behave towards their said master. And the said C. D. doth covenant, promise and agree to, and with the said T. G., that he will constantly find and provide for the said servants during the time aforesaid, sufficient diet, washing, lodging and apparel fitting for servants of color, and also all other things necessary, both in sickness and in health. In witness, etc." Upon an objection taken for the defendant, the presiding Judge held the indenture to be so defective as not to create the relation of master and servant between the plaintiff and the apprentice, and that if the latter upon arriving at the years of discretion, chose to leave the service of the former, no action could be maintained against any person for harboring her.

In submission to this opinion, the plaintiff suffered a nonsuit and appealed. This case involves several questions of an interesting character. There is a numerous and helpless portion of the community subject to the operation of those laws which create an involuntary obligation of service, and it is of high *Page 52 importance that these laws should receive such a construction as will protect them from oppression and injury, while at the same time it secures the rights of their temporary masters. Sections 19 and 20 of the act of 1762 (Rev., ch. 69), contain the principal enactments which authorize and direct the County Courts to bind out apprentices, and regulate the mode in which this power shall be exercised. They direct that when the estate of an orphan shall be of so small value that no one will educate and maintain him or her for the profits thereof, such orphan shall by the direction of the Court, be bound apprentice, every male tradesman, merchant, mariner, or other person approved by the Court, until he shall arrive at the age of twenty-one years, and every female to some suitable employment till her age of eighteen years. They also declare that such Court may in like manner bind, apprentice all free baseborn children, the female child of a mulatto or mustee until she shall attain the age of twenty-one years; that the master or mistress of such apprentice shall find and provide for him or her, diet, clothes, lodging, and accomodations [accommodations] fit and necessary, shall teach, or cause him or her to be taught to read and write, and at the expiration of the apprenticeship, shall pay every such apprentice the like allowance as is by law appointed for servants by indenture or custom. The act then enacts that the binding of such apprentice by order of the Court shall be by indenture, to be made in the name of the presiding acting justice and his successors, of the one part, and the master and mistress of the other; that this indenture shall be acknowledged or proved in Court and recorded, and a counterpart to be kept in the clerk's office for the benefit of the apprentice; and that the person (64) injured, may prosecute a suit thereon in the name of such justice or his successors, and recover all damages sustained by reason of the breach of the covenant therein contained. The Court entertains no doubt but that it is indispensable that every binding of an apprentice, by order of the Court, must be by indenture. This is demanded by the plain words of the act, is consistent with the adjudications in our country, and in conformity with the law and usages which obtained in England respecting the binding of apprentices generally, and probably prevailed here before the passing of the act of 1762. An order of Court therefore, not carried into execution by an indenture must be regarded as absolutely null. It is very clear too that in order to execute the requisitions of this act, the indenture ought to contain covenants for the performance of each and every of the duties which the law enjoins, and for the non-performance of which it gives a remedy by suit on the indenture. It may be *Page 53 unnecessary to insert on the indenture a covenant for the payment to the apprentice at the expiration of the term of apprenticeship "of the like allowance as is by law appointed for servants by indenture or custom," because the very section which imposes this obligation on the master adds immediately thereafter, "that on refusal he shall be compelled thereto in like manner," and upon looking into the act of 1741 in relation to servants, we find that all their complaints may be received on petition in the court of the county wherein they reside without the formal process of an action. But for a violation of the other duties enjoined, the remedy contemplated by the act, is by an action in the name of the presiding justice or his successors on the indenture, in which actions damages are to be recovered for the breach of the covenants contained in that indenture. But what discrepancies between the indenture required, and that given, shall make the instrumentipso facto null, or prevent the relation of master and servant from being created; what shall render the indenture voidable, or authorize a dissolution of the relation — and when such indenture is voidable by whom, and in what manner it shall be avoided, are inquiries of much moment, and perhaps (65) of some difficulty.

The indenture which was executed in this case is set forth, and many objections have been urged against its validity. In the first place, it is objected that the Act of 1762 requires that the indenture shall be made "in the name of the presiding Justice and his successors of the one part, and the master of the apprentice, of the other part," and that this instrument purports to have been made between "the chairman of the County Court of Moore on behalf of the justices of said county and their successors in office of the one part and Cornelius Dowd, of the other part." It is certainly always to be desired that office bonds should correspond precisely with the forms prescribed; and immense and unexpected inconveniences have frequently resulted from carelessness in this respect. Here is a double deviation from the act. The indenture does not name as it ought the successors of the justices. The word "their" immediately preceding the word "successors" has been improperly inserted instead of the word "his." But this objection is not as formidable as it appears. The words "their successors in office" as here used, have no operation and no meaning. The chairman acting in behalf of the justices of the County Court can act only in behalf of the then justices. Those who may thereafter succeed or be appointed, may indeed be bound by this act; not, however, because it is their act but because it was a legitimate act, *Page 54 authorized by their predecessors, and conferring rights which all are bound to acknowledge. These words therefore may be rejected altogether as nugatory and without object or meaning. This objection, then, to the indenture becomes restricted to the omission of the words "his successors." But it was decided many years since, and so far as we can find precedents on this subject, we are solicitous to follow them, that in bonds taken under this act, the insertion of these words is unnecessary, for that wherever an engagement is entered into by a public officer (66) for the benefit of others in his official character, and by the appointment of law such contract attaches to him in that character only, and when he is divested of that character, it belongs to his successor. (Anonymous, 2 N.C. 146.) According to this construction, then, the indenture is made with the chairman and his successors, although the successors be not named.

But it is further objected that this indenture does not specify "the suitable employment" to which this female should be bound, nor does it contain any covenant on the part of the master for teaching, or causing her to be taught to read and write. These matters ought to have been inserted in the indenture, and the omission of them constitutes a very serious objection to the instrument. We have no adjudications in our State to guide us in deciding what is the effect of such omissions. Thus circumstanced we have deemed it our duty to inquire into the decisions which have taken place in analogous cases in England, upon the statutes which existed there before our ancestors left that country, and which have been kept in view by our Legislature in the provisions of their Act of 1762. By the Statute, 5 Eliz., c. 4, divers rules and regulations are enacted respecting the qualifications of persons entitled to take, and to become apprentices; respecting also the length of time for which the apprentice shall be bound, and the mode of binding such apprentice; and in the 41st section it is expressly declared "that all indentures for taking any apprentices otherwise to be made than by that statute is appointed, shall be clearly void in the law, to all intents and purposes." Under this statute several cases have occurred, as well between the parties to the indentures as between one of them and third persons, or as between third persons altogether, where the indentures have departed from the statute quite as widely as this departs from the Act of 1762, and where it was held that the indentures were not absolutely void, but liable to be made void. A leading case is that of Rex v. Inhabitants of St. Nicholas, in Ipswich, which was decided in 1736 by the Court of King's Bench, when Lord Hardwick presided there, and which *Page 55 is referred to in the later cases as of undoubted authority. We find a report of it in Petersdoff's Abridgment (Title Apprentice, B, c. 3). A dispute had arisen between two parishes in (67) regard to the alleged settlement of James Blythe, a pauper. By the statute 3 and 4 William and Mary, it is ordained that if any person be bound an apprentice by indenture, and inhabit in any town or parish, such binding and inhabitation shall be adjudged a good settlement therein. Among the requisitions of the statute 5 Eliz., there is one that in a city or a town corporate, the binding shall be for seven years atleast. Blythe had entered into indenture to a master in the incorporated town of Ipswich for four years only, and it was insisted that the indentures were clearly void to all intents and purposes, that Blythe had not been bound an apprentice, by indenture, and that no settlement could be acquired by an inhabitation under such pretended binding. The Court felt and acknowledged that the words of the 41st section were very strong, but nevertheless, held that the indentures were not absolutely void, but voidable only by the parties, if they choose to raise this objection against them. In coming to this conclusion, the judges declared themselves not a little influenced by the consideration that if a want of any single qualification required by the statute, made the indenture absolutely void, there probably was not a valid settlement acquired under an indenture for fifty years past. This decision has since been followed by many of a like kind in England, and has been sanctioned in the Supreme Court of New York in Overseers of Hudson v. Overseers of Tughkunac (13 Johns., 245). Upon the authority of these decisions, we feel ourselves justified in holding, that the variance between the stipulations contained, and those which ought to have been contained in the indenture before us, do not annul the instrument so as to prevent the relation of master and servant from having been created by it; and we rejoice that we can thus decide, as we perceive that this defective instrument is copied from a form which is found in Haywood's (68) Justice, a book of general use in this State, and there is great reason to fear that most of the indentures recently taken are equally faulty. The consequences which would result from considering all of them as nullities might be extensively mischievous.

The next question that recurs is, if this indenture be voidable, had not Lydia Burnett a right to avoid it, and has she not exercised that right, and vacated the indenture by withdrawing herself from the service of the plaintiff? This directs our attention more directly to the point on which the Court ordered *Page 56 a nonsuit. The Judge held that the voluntary abandonment of the plaintiff's service by Lydia after her arrival at years of discretion, put an end to this voidable relation of master and apprentice. It is plain that the Judge did not mean by the phrase "arrival at years of discretion," the arrival at the full age of twenty-one years. The indenture would expire by its own limitations at that time. He meant her obtaining an age in which she could be supposed to have the capacity to discern what was for her own good.

Now, it is to be remarked that Lydia Burnett was not a party to this indenture. There is an important difference between the parties to an indenture under the statute of 5 Elizabeth, and the parties to an indenture of apprenticeship under our act of 1762. To an indenture under that statute, the infant and the master are the parties; but to an indenture with us, the chairman of the Court and the master are the parties. In this respect our indentures much more nearly resemble those which are taken in England on the binding of parish apprentices by church wardens, under the Stat. 43 Eliz., ch. 2, and subsequent statutes, than those we have been considering. If the indenture in question be voidable at the election of the parties thereto, or of that party who can object to it as defective or irregular, it seems to us that the act of avoiding it must be done not by the apprentice, but by the County Court or its Chairman. Nor is this to be (69) regarded as a technical distinction. In its principle and its consequences, it seems necessary for following out the scheme of the Legislature, and for taking proper care of the interests of the apprentice. Were the power of vacating the indentures to rest with him during his minority, he might be seduced into an unfit service, and lured away to vice and idleness and ruin. The power of dissolving the connection would seem more appropriately to belong to those who had been entrusted with the power of forming it. In the case of orphans whom death has deprived of their natural protectors, and of illegitimate children who never had any, the law regards the Court of the county as charged with their care and protection.

But if the infant apprentice were to be regarded as in truth, one of the parties to this indenture, yet it does not follow that an abandonment of the master's service avoids the indenture. It is, we think, fully settled, and wisely settled, that where an apprentice can himself avoid a voidable indenture, he must do so by some formal and authentic notice of his intention to dissolve the contract, and that it will not do when he is called on to answer for misconduct, such as quitting his master's *Page 57 employment, to allege his very offense as an apology, on the ground that it was done with intent thereby to avoid the indenture; nor can the third person who has harbored or maintained him, set up the misconduct of the apprentice as a justification for his invasion of the rights of the masterde facto. The cases which we think conclusively establish this doctrine are those of Rex. v. Evered, cited in 16 East., 27; Archcroft v. Bertles, 6 Term, 652; Grey v. Cookson, 16 East., 13; Smedley v. Gooden, 3 M. Sel., 189; and Barber v. Dennis, 6 Mod., 69.

Upon the whole, the Court is of the opinion that the nonsuit was improperly ordered, and will therefore direct it to be set aside and a new trial awarded. At the same time it feels it a duty to call the attention of the Justices, not only of Moore County, but of all the counties in the State, to the indentures which have been taken from the masters of apprentices, so that wherever they are defective, new ones may be required, stipulating for all the obligations which ought to be found in them, and on failure of the masters to comply with such (70) requisition, to cause the indentures to be vacated, and the apprentices placed with new masters under regular indentures. They will remember, also, that with respect to colored apprentices, the law requires a bond to be given not to remove them out of the county, and to produce them before the Court at the expiration of their term of service.