The liability of the defendant for the wrongful injury or death of one of its employés, caused by .the wrongful act of a co-employé, results solely from statutory enactments. The cases in which a recovery may be maintained, are stated under section 2590 of the Code. When death results from such causes as fix a liability upon the employer, the statute provides that the personal representative of .the deceased may sue, and the amount recovered “ shall be distributed according to the statute of distributions.” It will be *637seen by a reference to the statute, that the right of action in such cases is given only to the personal representative.
The second, third, fourth and fifth counts of the complaint do not negative that the employment was with the father’s.' consent; and these counts are evidently founded upon the supposed liability of the defendant under the employer’s act. The father can not maintain the action to recover under the employer’s act.—Lovell v. DeBardeleben Coal Co., 90 Ala. 13; 7 So. Rep. 757; Stewart v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 83 Ala. 493. As he can not recover on these counts, under any state of the evidence, there was no error in giving the general charge in favor of the defendant, of which plaintiff can complain, so far as it denied his recovery on these counts.
The plaintiff asked the court to charge the jury, that “ although the jury should believe from the evidence that the deceased was guilty of negligence in jumping from the car to the engine, and thereby placed himself in peril; yet, if they further believe that, after he was in peril, the engineer knew, or might have known by the exercise of due care or diligence, that Williams was in such condition of peril, and could have then by the exercise of due care prevented the injury which caused Williams’ death, and failed to do so, then the defendant, if the jury believe the other evidence, is liable in this action.”
The correctness of the principle of law asserted in this charge has been too often recognized by this court to require further consideration. A principle of law, however, may be correct as an abstract proposition, and yet not applicable in all cases. The bill of exceptions states, that the evidence was in conflict as to whether decedent was over or under twenty-one years of age. The charge should have been predicated on the further finding of the jury, that decedent was a minor, for, unless the jury found that decedent wrs a minor, the father was not authorized to maintain the action, under any count in the complaint. The charge was objectionable, also, for the further reason, that it authorized a recovery upon the counts under which the facts averred showed that the personal representative alone was entitled to recover.
At the request of the defendant, the court gave the general charge, “that if the jury believe the evidence, to find for the defendant.” The correctness of this charge involves the-inquiry whether any count of the complaint, if sustained by proof, entitled plaintiff to recover; and if so, was there any evidence .before the jury, which tended tp sustain such count of the complaint.
Code, § 2588, provides as follows: “When the death of a *638minor child is caused by the wrongful act, or omission, or neg-' ligence of any person, or persons, or corporation, his or their servants, or agents, the father may sue, and recover such damages as the jury may assess.” The principle of law which subjects a defendant to damages for the death of a minor child at the suit of the father, as provided in this section, rests upon a different foundation altogether from that declared under the employer’s act. If the father, expressly, or impliedly, consents that his minor child enter the employment of another, and he is injured by the negligence of a co-employé, he thereby subjects himself to the limitations and privileges of the employer’s act, which prescribes the condition upon which a recovery may be had for an injury caused by the wrong or negligence of a co-employé. Where, however, a minor child is employed without the knowledge or consent of the father, upon whom the law devolves the duty of his care and protection, and is injured by the wrong and negligence of the defendant’s servants or agents, the right to sue and recover for the injury is not limited and conditioned by the provisions of the employer’s act.
Alter a minor has passed the age of responsible intelligence, it may be that the minor, as between himself and his employer, assumes the risk incident to his employment; but the assumption of such risk by the minor, without the knowledge, and against the consent of the father, will not furnish a defense, in all cases, to the right of action which the law gives the father against one whose wrongful act and interference has displaced and removed the rightful authority of the father., It would be against reason and every principle of justice to permit one to employ a minor in a hazardous business without the knowledge of his father, and hold the father responsible for the contributory negligence of his minor son who is fatally injured while endeavoring to execute the order of his employer. — 4 Amer. & Eng. Encyc. of LaW, p.'85, § 38. A father’s rightful control of his minor children can be interfered with only with a “trembling hand.” — 64 Ala. 309.
At common law, the father could sue for and recover damages for an injury not resulting' in death wrongfully done to' his minor son. The damage's were to compensate him for the loss of services. If death resulted, the action was not maintainable.—Stewart v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 83 Ala. 493; Louisville R. R. Co. v. Goodykoontz, 12 Am. St. Rep. 371; 119 Ind. 111. The statute, section 2588, confers the right of action on the father, although death may have resulted. Section 2589 of the Code gives the right of action to the personal representative, in cases where the decedent could have sued and recov*639ered, had the injury not resulted in death. The right of the father is not restricted, in express terms, to the limitation contained in section 2589. We hold that, under section 2588 of the Code, the father may recover in all cases whereat common law he might have recovered if the injury had not resulted in death, and the purpose of this statute was to give the father the right of action, although death resulted from the injury.
Every wrong or negligence which subjects the guilty party to damages, involves a breach of duty enjoined either by law or contract. Contributory negligence rests upon the same principle of law. An injured person, guilty of contributory negligence, is not permitted to recover, for the reason that he has been guilty also of a breach of the duty he owed to the other party, and no one ought to profit by his own wrong or neglect. The doctrine of imputable negligence, in many respects, is the same as contributory negligence. It usually arises’ from the relation of parties engaged in a common enterprise, or from that of principal and agent, master and servant, or parent and child; and where the personal injury occurred while acting under instructions of a superior, and within the line of instructions. A parent is charged with the duty of protecting his minor child, and if, by his want of care, the child is injured, the father may be guilty of contributory negligence, although the child, if suing, might not be, according to the facts. Nesbit v. Town of Garner, 75 Iowa, 314; 9 Amer. St. Rep. 486; Ib. St. Rep. 827; 116 Ind. 121; 83 Ala. 375; Ib. 525; 87 Ala. 610. Where (he plaintiff has not been guilty of any< breach of duty, and is wholly without fault, and has sustained an injury by the wrongful act of another, the principle of cnlpable, imputable negligence does not arise.—Bazil Block Coal Co. v. Gaffney, 12 Amer. St. Rep. 422; 119 Ind. 455.
If the father hires his minor son to perform a safe business, and directs him to obey his employer, and the employer, in disregard of his contract, puts the minor at a different and perilous employment, by which the child is injured, without doubt the employer is liable to the father, For the same, or a stronger reason, the employer must be liable, when he employs a minor to engage in the dangerous occupation of a brakeman on a train, without the knowledge and consent of the father, and the minor child is injured while attempting to execute the orders of his superior employé. If the proof should satisfy; the jury that such were the facts, negligence of the child will not be imputed to the father. Neither would his right recover depend upon the question as to whether the son could recover, if he were suing, or in case of his death, whether his administrator could recover, if the suit were under the employer’s act, or section 2589 of the Code.
*640Whether the father consented, either expressly or impliedly, to the employment of his son as a brakeman, is a question for the jury under all the evidence. If he did, and his son was guilty of contributory negligence, the father would be held responsible for such contributory negligence.
Under the .proof, we can not say the use of “kicking switches” is not permissible. They seem to be in general use by well regulated railroads.—Davis v. L. & N. R. R. Co., ante, p. 487; 8 So. Rep. 552; Perry v. L. & N. R. Co., 8 So. Rep. 55. It is not permissible, however, to direct all who may be employed as brakemen, without reference to skill or experience, to perform any and every act that may fall within the line of a brakeman’s dutjr. A duty devolves upon the employer to instruct his employés, and more especially if they are minors, and without experience in the duties and dangers of the business, before directing them to perform any duties attended with danger. Whether this was done, may be a question for the jury under all the evidence.—Glover v. Dwight, 148 Mass. 22; Danly v. Scanlon, 116 Ind. 8; 12 Amer. St. Rep. 512.
The first and last counts of the complaint aver that the decedent was a minor son of the plaintiff; that he was wrongfully employed by the defendant to perform the duties of a brakeman, without the knowledge and consent of plaintiff, and that while attempting to obey the orders of his superior in the performance of his duties as brakeman, he was injured and ldlled by the wrong and negligence of the defendant’s agents or servants. These two counts show a good cause of action, and there was evidence tending to sustain the averments of these two counts. It was error to give the general charge for the defendant.
The damages recoverable by the father are compensatory, and not punitive.—L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Orr, ante, p. 548; 8 So. Rep. 363, and authorities cited.
Reversed and remanded.