Phelps v. Culver

The opinion of the court was pronounced by

Phelps, J.

— The only serious question in this case, arises out of the charge of the court to the jury, upon the evidence *435as exhibited at the trial. The jury having determined the facts, we may to the purposes of this discussion, assume the facts as found by them, and enquire whether the law, as explained to them in the charge, appears, when applied to the facts found, to have been correctly laid down.

No question is made as to the legality or validity of the original indenture, by which the plaintiff was bound as an apprentice to Woodworth ; but it is insisted, first, that the indenture was vacated ipso facto upon the decease of Woodworth, and secondly, that the apprentice was not by law assignable. This last position is not directly pertinent to this case, inasmuch as the defendant is the legal representative of Wood-worth, and, so far as any rights or liabilities survive, they rest in or devolve on him. The question whether an apprentice is assignable to all, and if so, to whatextent and under what circumstances, is however nearly allied to the question as to the effect of the decease of the master, and serves to illustrate the nature of the original contract. In this point of view, it may be useful to discuss it, as whether- determined one way or the other-it may furnish a strong argument from analogy.

It seems agreed on all hands, that an indenture of appren, ticeship becomes voidable, at least, upon the decease of the master; and that an assignment of an apprentice, by the master while living, is subject to be avoided by the apprentice, with the concurrence of his parent or guardian. But it is insjg;ed, in behalf of the plaintiff in this case, that the indenture became void, strictly speaking, upon the decease of Wood-worth, and as to all subsequent proceedings, is to be regarded as a nullity.

The distinction between an instrument which is void and one which is.voidable merely, is well understood; the former being a nullity to every purpose, and the latter being valid and effectual, until some act of avoidance is done, by the party entitled to avoid it. And even then, it may be effectual, to many purposes ;. for even the right of avoiding a contract must be, to some extent,' controlled by established rules of law, and considerations of natural and acknowledged equity between the parties.

The reason given, why an apprentice is not assignable, and why the contract does not survive to the executor is, that the contract is, in its nature, fiduciary, implying a personal trust and confidence. To a certain extent it is so. So far as instruction *436anc] education are concerned, there is a personal confidence; and . ' . , . . , , „ an executor or assignee may not, m this particular, be equally <Iua^fied or entitled to the same confidence as tlie original master; but as to the duty of maintenance, it requires only pecu- , .. ,, niary ability, and may be discharged by one person as well as another. An executor or assignee may also possess equal or superior qualifications, in all respects, to the master. It would seem therefore, that every, consideration, growing out of the fiduciary character of the contract, is satisfied, by treating it as voidable. It is for the benefit of the apprentice that the contract is relaxed, and it may be for his interest that the contract continue. It is therefore, a very proper case for the exercise of a right of election. If he elect to serve either an assignee or an executor, and all parties consent, no good reason can be given, why the law should interpose, and determine the contract, against the will of the parties.

That this is the correct view of the subject, is very clear from the authorities.

It has been repeatedly held, that an apprentice, serving-under an assignee, by virtue of an assignment, gains a settlement by such service. And the decisions are the same, where the contract of assignment is made by the personal representatives of the master. — See Burr, sett, cases No. 9), 186. — 2 Stra. 1115. — 'Douglass R. 70. — 6 T. R. 452. — 15 East. 59. —1 Mau. and Sel. 377. Yet where an indenture is void, no settlement is gained by service under it. — See 3 T. R.£j53. —8 Do. 379. — 3 Barn, and Al. 584. — 5 Maul, and S. 257.

Again, the covenant for maintenance in the indenture is not discharged, but the executor is liable. — Salk. 66. 2 Stra. 1266. —Reeve D. Rel. 345. — Swift’s Dig. 63., — 2 Kent’s Com. 265. —In jReas vs. Peck, Salk. 66, Holt says “the covenant for instruction fails, but he remains an apprentice quoad maintenance.”

In Salk. 68, (Parishes of Castor and-,) it is said, that an apprentice is not assignable, yet the assignment is voidable merely —See also l Stra. 48.

In Barber vs. Dennis, (Salk. 68,) which was trover for apprentices’ earnings, brought by the widow of the master, it is said, “what the apprentice gains, he gains for his master, and whether legally an apprentice or not, is no ways material; it is enough, if he be so defacto.

*437Reeve (Dom. Rel. 342,) recognizes the same doctrine. He says, an apprentice may bind himself, and this entitles the master to his earnings. Again, (p. 344,) “an apprentice is not assignable ; but if he serve he gains the rights and incurs the duties of an apprentice.”

Swift puts it in on the same ground. These two writers also admit, that an executor is liable for the maintenance of an apprentice. They doubt the propriety of the rule ; but it is worthy of consideration, whether the apparent injustice or impropriety of the rule is not removed, by treating the contract as voidable merely. Upon this ground, so long as the apprentice continues to serve, it is equitable that the executor should maintain him. And if he elect to avoid the contract, and does so, it would seem that, upon common principles, the executor would thereafter be discharged.

In Rex vs. Stockland, (Doug. 70,) Ld. Mansfield says, if the apprentice continue, with the assent of all parties, and his own, it is a continuation of apprenticeship.” Kent repeats this language ; and adds, that the master is entitled to the wages and fruit of the personal labor of the apprentice, while the relationship continues, and the apprentice is in his service.

The cases relied upon by the plaintiff, are all consistent with this view of the subject. Wadsworth vs. Gay, (2 Petersd. 33) was an action on the covenant to instruct, which the court held, failed, by the decease of the master ; yet they held, that the apprenticeship continued, to the purpose of maintenance. Baxter vs. Barfield, was an action on the bond, conditional for the faithful service of the apprentice. The court held the contract voidable, on the decease of the master.

The result of the cases seems to be, that, so far as respects the covenant to instruct, it is strictly fiduciary ; and upon the decease of the master, is voidable, by either party ; the contract for service is voidable, by the apprentice ; but the contract for maintenance is still binding, and if any thing is stipulated to be paid, upon the expiration of the term, the apprentice is entitled to it, if he serve out his term. This last proposition, although not expressed in terms in any of the cases cited, seems to follow as a necessary consequence from the principles adopted. If the apprentice “ gains the right of an apprentice,” in the language of Judge Reeve, he gains those certainly which are stipulated for in his own particular case. In this case, the plaintiff is entitled by the indenture, to certain *438clothing &,c , on becoming of age. ■ Does it admit of a doubt, that she would be entitled to those perquisites, upon serving the full term, and that the defendant would be responsible for them? If so, then certainly the contract is not void.

Let us apply these general rules to this case. There is no contract for 'instruction in the case. The contract for service, we may consider for the present as voidable, and the contract for maintenance, and the payments to be made at the expiration of the apprenticeship, as binding upon the defendant. It is to be remarked, that the plaintiff’s own consent to serve the plaintiff, while she did serve him, is apparent upon the statement of the case ; and the consent of the overseer of the poor, her legal guardians, is found by the jury. This is all that is required, to bring her case within the rule laid down.

But it is argued, that the plaintiff has avoided the contract, by leaving the service of the defendant; and that, upon this avoidance, she is entitled to compensation for her services, quantum valebant. This raises another question. Supposing the contract of apprenticeship to be determined, by the avoidance of the plaintiff, does that avoidance operate prospectively only, or does it operate retrospectively, and entitle the plaintiff to disregard altogether the contract, under which the services were rendered ?

In discussing this question, we must distinguish this case from that of an infant, who enters into a contract of apprenticeship alone, and without the concurrence of parent or guardian. Whether an- infant could, in such case, avoid the contract, in the sense contended for, and discard the indenture altogether,'is a question not necessary to be determined, on the present occasion. Here was a binding, by the person standing in loco parentis, and whether the assent of the plaintiff was originally necessary or not, still if once given, it could not be revoked.

Admitting the right of the plaintiff to determine the apprenticeship, still that right, as has already been remarked-, must be in some degree controlled by established legal principles, and by considerations of acknowledged equity between the parties. Had the plaintiff served out the term, the service would be deemed to have béen rendered under the indenture, and would entitle her to the full benefit of its'stipulations. The contract for her maintenance would have still remained in force. This she could not discharge, as it was made by the overseer of *439the poor; and courts are strongly inclined against allowing the privilege of infant, unless the contract can be rescinded in tolo. The injustice of varying the terms, after the service has been rendered, is manifest; and although that injustice might be unavoidable, in a case, where the infants privilege must be yielded to, in respect to a contract made by himself, yet it ought not to be incurred, in respect to a contract, deliberately made, with the assent'and concurrence of the parent, or guardian. Nay, this is a contract made by the guardian alone. It was not voidable in the outset as the contract of an infant, nor liable to the objection of having been made by one wanting legal discretion.' The very ground, therefore, of the infant’s privilege, fails in this case. The law indeed gives her an election to serve the administrator or not; and this, not upon the ground of any original defect of obligation in the contract itself, but on account of the fiduciary character of the trust, on the part of the master. It is, therefore, a case, where, if she elect to continue the apprenticeship, it is continued in its original terms. There is no reason why she should discard these— they were settled in the outset, not by an infant, but by persons fully competent to contract. Indeed, with respect to them, she has no privilege to exercise. The fallacy in the plaintiff’s argument, consists in confounding the principles applicable to this case, with those which govern the contracts of an infant. The cases are wholly dissimilar. In one case, the contract is originally voidable, for want of a legal competency in the party to make it; in the other, an election .is given to determine the subsisting relation between the parties, in consequence of reasons arising ex post facto. The privilege of an infant apprentice, arising upon the decease of the master, or an assignment by him, is totally different, and rests upon different principles from his ordinary privilege, in respect to his contracts.

These remarks may serve to explain the language of the books already cited. Ld. Mansfield calls the relation, subsisting in a case like the present, “ a continuation of the apprenticeship.” Reeves says, the apprentice, if he consent to serve, “gains the rights and incurs the duties of an apprentice.” Kent says, that “ the master is entitled to the wages and fruits of the personal labor of the apprentice,” &tc. and in Barber vs. Dennis, the court denominate a person situated like the plaintiff, “an apprentice de facto.” All this is utterly *440inconsistent with the idea, that the contract of apprenticeship may be discarded by the apprentice, and that he may reclaim the fruits of his labors. We are therefore of opinion', that the right of the plaintiff to determine the apprenticeship, is not derived from the ordinary privilege of infants, in relation to their contracts, but grows out of reasons peculiar to the relation between master and apprentice; that it is a mere right of election, to continue the relation or dissolve it — and that she cannot, by dissolving it, avoid the terms of the original' contract, in regard to her previous service under it, and recover for such services in this action. We have, thus far, discussed this case, upon common principles, applicable generally to the relation of master and apprentice. But it is worthy of consideration, whether the case here presented, does not stand upon a peculiar footing. It is certainly true, that a binding out by overseers of the poor, depends upon different principles, in many respects, from other cases of apprenticeship. In the first place, it is done by an authority derived from statute, and does not depend upon the relation of parent and child, or guardian and ward. In the second place, the consent of the apprentice cannot be necessary ; and, in the third place, the object may be maintenance alone.

These peculiarities have certainly an important bearing upon the rules, which are to govern the subject. If instruction, in any particular trade, is not an object of the contract, it loses much of its fiduciary character; and if maintenance is the main object, we have seen already, that the obligation may well be transferred. If the overseers have authority to bind out, without the'assent of the apprentice, (and if they have not, the statute is nugatory,) they doubtless have the power to bind anew, upon the decease of the master, without such consent. It follows that they have also the right to assent to a transfer of the apprentice. If then there be a transfer, or assignment, with the assent of the overseers, it is made with the assent of all parties, whose assent is necessary to its validity. Besides, in this case, the overseers have a right to insist upon a performance of the contract by the defendant, as the representative of Woodworth ; and he has a right to insist, on his part, upon a performance of the service. Indeed, in this view of the subject,, the controversy, in a legal sense, would exist, between the defendant and the overseers, the plaintiff being merely passive. Hence it was decided, in the case cited from *441Fetersdorf, that such an apprentice is assignable, and by this we are to understand, that it may be«done, without his assent. —See Rex vs. Arnesby, 3 B. and Alderson 584.-2 Kent’s, Com. 264. .

The decease of the master, in this case, does not necessarily! defeat the purpose of the apprenticeship; and although thej trust is to some extent fiduciary, so far as the fitness of the: master to have charge of the apprentice is concerned, yet of this the overseers are to judge, and all difficulty, on this point, is removed by their assent.

In this view of the case, it is stripped of all difficulty; the contract remains in force, notwithstanding the decease of Woodworth, or, if we are to consider it as a case of assignment, we have authority for saying that the assignment is binding.

In short, the question becomes simply this, whether a pauper, put out to service by the overseers of the poor, under the statute, can annul the contract of the overseers, and recover in assumpsit for his services. If this can be done, the statute,- and all authority derived from it, is nugatory.

If we are correct in this conclusion, the offer of the plaintiff to show her unwillingness to serve the defendant, is already disposed of. In this last point of view, her unwillingness is of no importance; and even if it were a case of ordinary apprenticeship, her reluctance could not vary the effect of her actual service.

There is another exception, which requires to be noticed• and that relates to the rejection of Harrington’s out-door declarations. It is sufficient, on this point, to say, that the evidence offered did not conflict with his testimony, and did not tend to impeach him ; nor was it proper as evidence in chief.

It is not necessary to pass upon the other point made, as to the right of-the plaintiff’s parents to her services, as the case does- not require it.

On the whole, we consider that there is no error in f-hg‘ proceedings of the county court, and judgment is affirmed.