DeSoto Coal M. & Dev. Co. v. Hill

MAYFIELD, J.

(dissenting.) — It is decided in this case that if a boy 13 years of age, and his parents, together, by misrepresenting his age, thereby induce a coal mine operator to employ the boy, and the boy while so engaged in that business, is injured in consequence of his own negligence or wrong, the coal mine operator is liable to the boy in damages for his self-inflicted injuries, and for no other reason than that the operator alloAved himself to be deceived and thus defrauded, by the deceitful and fraudulent representations of the *198minor and his parents, that he was 14 years of age, when in fact he was only 13. The majority opinion in this case holds that such is the meaning and effect of section 1035 of the Code, which is set out in full in the opinion. If such is the true meaning and effect of the section, the title or catch lines of the sections should be changed so as to indicate the true meaning, and should read as follows: “To enable boys and their parents to defraud and bankrupt coal mine operators.”

If the decision of the majority is correct in this case, then, if the self-inflicted injuries of the boy had resulted in his death, his administrator, for the benefit of his parents, would recover damages of the operator, who was so deceived by the boy and his parents by misrepresentations as to a fact which was peculiarly, if not exclusively, within their knowledge. This necessarily follows, because the statute says in terms that the administrator may recover in all cases in which the injured person could have recovered had death not resulted, which statute, in connection with those of descent and distribution, makes the parents the distributees in such cases.

The writer feels impelled to say that he did not so read or interpret the statute when he twice assisted in the codification of the statute of which this section forms a part, or he would have placed the appropriate headlines to this section 1035 of the Code, instead of those now appearing, and which also appeared in the Code of 1896. I also feel impelled, in justification of my Brothers, as to their construction of this statute, to say that I am surprised that they have found and cited some decisions which seem to support their conclusion. Yet I feel perfectly safe in saying that both in number and in weight the authorities are against them in their construction of this statute. It seems *199that the decisions of the Illinois court support the decision in this case fully, and that the decisions of the Indiana court do likewise, to some extent, but not in toto. The Indiana decisions may be distinguishable from those of Illinois and from this for the reason that the statutes of that state were materially different from the statute of this state under consideration, and the master may have been at fault, and it is not certain that he is there held to be an absolute insurer of the child’s safety. The child in the Indiana case, cited in the opinion, was not only under the age limit prescribed by the statute, but was also engaged in performing duties specifically prohibited by the statute, and with the knowledge and acquiescence of the master, and the injury ivas in consequence of the negligence of the child due to childish traits, of imprudence, within the protection of the statute, though I am free to confess that I think the Indiana cases cited in the majority opinion go too far in fixing absolute liability on the master. In the Indiana case it was both alleged and proven that the child was not only wrongfully employed, because under the age limit fixed by the statute, but was also “carelessly and negligently continued in said employment until he was injured,” and that he was “required to work at night for 12 hours each day for six days in each week, and that for more than a week prior to the time of receiving his injuries he had been compelled to and did work under his employment 14 hours each day,” and that on account of physical exhaustion was caused to fall asleep, and that while so asleep the master caused a car to be rolled across plaintiff’s foot.

These specified acts as to the number of hours in which servants should be employed in one week were expressly prohibited, and the statute was knowingly *200violated by the employer. If the allegations and the facts in that case had been as they are in this case, the decision would no doubt have been different. In this case, as to the counts of which I am speaking, it is shown that the master was guilty of no Avrong or negligence in fact. He attempted to obey the statute both in letter and in spirit. He inquired as to the age of the minor, refused to employ him if he was under 14 years of age, and was informed by the boy, by his stepmother (his mother being dead), and by his father that he was 14 years of age. There was nothing to show or indicate the contrary; he did not voluntarily desire or seek to employ the boy, but did so only at the repeated and earnest request of the boy, his friends, and his parents, the only persons presumed to know his age; and, after being thus assured that he was not violating the statute, he yielded to the solicitations of those who noAV profit by the fact, and the fact alone, that the master suffered himself to be deceived by them. I do not believe this is noAV, ever was, or ever ought to be, the law of this state.

As before stated, the Illinois court seems to be the only court that has gone to the full length to which the decision in this state has gone. I am not sure of this, but from my limited examination of the question this is the result. That the rule of construction as to similar statutes, as for the sale of intoxicating liquors to minors and inebriates, the rule in Illinois is shown to be different from that in this state in the particular respect as to which I complain. This is in terms pointed out in the Illinois decision cited and relied upon in the majority opinion. It is there said: “The dramshop act forbids the sale of intoxicating liquors to minors. This court has held, under that statute, that it is immaterial whether the dramshop keeper knew the purcha*201ser to be a minor, and that it is no answer to say that the seller may be imposed upon and made to suffer the penalties of the law when he had no intention to violate its provisions. — McCutcheon v. People, 69 Ill. 601. The reasoning which led to that conclusion obtains here.” I concede, of course, that a given act or deed, if wrongful, whether so at common law or made so only by statute, may impose civil liability, though no penalty is prescribed, and it is not a crime. I also concede that an intent to commit a crime is usually, if not always, of the essence of the crime, and that intent is not so nearly universally a necessary element of civil liability; but a scienter or negligence in failing to have the scienter of doing a Avrongful act, whether wrongful at common law or made so by statute, is necessary to make the doing of the given act wrongful, and to impose liability as for a-tort. This doctrine is announced in many decisions of this court.

It is said in Duncan v. State, 7 Humph. (Tenn.) 150: “It is a sacred principle of criminal jurisprudence that the intention to commit the crime is of the essence of the crime, and to hold that a man shall be held criminally responsible for an offense, of the commission of which he was ignorant at the time, would be intolerably tyranny. It is right and proper that the commander of a steamboat, who receives and carries off the slave of another, should be severely punished. But to-hold that he shall be so punished, when the boat has received him and carried him off without his knowledge or consent, would be shocking to common sense. The statute does not punish for the mere act of carrying off, but punishes for the receiving and carrying off. This makes the punishment consistent with justice,- for the word ‘receiving’ necessarily implies an act knowingly done, for no man can receive without his knowledge *202and consent. A man receives a bribe; placing money in his pocket, without his knowledge, is not such a reception.”

Brickell, C. J.,

in this case of Gordon v. State, 52 Ala. 308, 309, 310 (23 Am. Rep. 575), wherein he cites the Tennessee case above quoted from, said: “Ignorance of law is never an excuse, whether a party is charged civilly or criminally. Ignorance of fact may often be received to absolve a party from civil or criminal responsibility. On the presumption that every one capable of acting for himself knows the law, courts are compelled to proceed. The precise time when a man arrives at the age of 21 years is a fact, knowledge of what he derives necessarily from his parents or other relatives or acquaintances having knowledge of the time of his birth. If acting in good faith, on information fairly obtained from them under an honest belief that he had reached the age, he votes, having the other necessary qualifications, illegal voting should not be imputed to him.”

We have statutes prohibiting the gift or sale of intoxicating liquors to minors and also to inebriates except upon certain conditions, but it has always been held that knowledge of the minority or the inebriety, or negligence in not ascertaining the fact, was a necessary element of the offense declared or denounced by the statute. In Tatum’s Case, 63 Ala. 151, Stone, J., said: “Three essential facts must have.been established to the satisfaction of the jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, to authorize a conviction: First, that there was a sale or gift of spirituous, vinous, or malt liquor; second, that the sale or gift was to a person of intemperate habits; third, that at the time the seller or giver knew the person to whom he furnished the liquor was of intemperate habits.”

*203The majority opinion in the case under consideration attempts to distinguish the case at bar from the cases involving the liquor statutes, above referred to, on the ground that an intent is a necessary element of the crime denounced, and that the intent cannot exist without knowledge or scienter of facts which constitute the crime. I insist the master does not violate the statute under consideration, unless he knows, or is chargeable with notice of, the fact that the boy is under lá years of age. No specific intent to violate the criminal statute, is required to support a conviction; but an intent to commit the act prohibited is required, and that is all that is required, and that much must be required to fix civil liability for doing an act which is legally wrong, whether it be wrong by virtue of the common law, or because prohibited by the statute, unless the statute expressly otherwise provides. BkickelL, C. J., makes the question of intent exceedingly plain in the case of Bain v. State, 61 Ala. 75, 80, and shows that it is nothing different from the intention to do the wrongful act, and that it is the same whether the liability be criminal or civil. He says: “Whenever one does- an act in itself legally wrong, the iaw presumes the intent to do that act, and the act of itself is evidence of the illegal intent.” But the same learned justice has said that ignorance of the law never excuses one from civil or criminal liability, but ignorance of the facts will excuse one from both. — Gordon v. State, 52 Ala. 309, 310, 23 Am. Rep. 575. Surely a statute is not relieved of severity or strictness because a penalty is imposed for its violation or because its violation is denounced as a crime. Can it be said that these liquor statutes would be more strict or exacting if they carried no penalty, and their violation was not a crime, hut the prohibited acts were merely condemn-*204eel without more? Surely section 1035 of the Code is not more strict or binding because no penalty is imposed and its violation is not made a crime. The truth is the section in question is partly declaratory of the common law, and is merely a police regulation, fixing a sex and age limit as to who shall be employed in coal mines.

Why a plain, simple, statutory regulation like this must be so construed as to make a man civilly liable for an injury which he did not proximately cause and did not know that he indirectly caused, and one which he could not, with all proper caution, have prevented, I am unable to understand. A law which will make a citizen liable for an injury or death which he did not cause and could not have prevented is intolerable and wicked, and the mere fact that it will chiefly hurt corporations is no just excuse for its existence or continuance.

It is an ancient, wise, and righteous maxim of the law that no one shall take advantage of, or profit by, his own wrong. The record in this case conclusively shows that the only persons who have committed any wrong — the plaintiff and his parents — will profit by their Avrong, and that at the expense of the person Avho Avas so Avronged by them. A decision or construction of a statute which produces such results must be Avrong. Another ancient, sound, and sacred maxim of the laAv is, “So use your oavu property as not to injure that of your neighbor”; but this does not mean that if your neighbor, by fraud or deceit practiced upon you, uses your property and therewith injures himself by his oavu wrong, you must be mulcted in damages to compensate him for his self-inflicted injuries. Yet it seems to me that, by the construction placed upon the statute in question, the opposite meaning is made to appear; *205and, if this is so, it is certainly a wrong construction. I cannot agree that the violation of this statute was the proximate cause of the injury. It may be said to be the indirect, but not the direct, cause. It is possible that it was the causa sine qua non of his injury, but it was not the causa causans thereof, which is necessary to support an action for the violation of a public ordinance or statute. It is nothing like as strong a case to show that the violation of the statute was the proximate cause of the injury, as was Mutch’s Case, 97 Ala. 194, 11 South. 894, 21 L. R. A. 316, 38 Am. St. Rep.. 179, or King v. Henkie, 80 Ala. 505, 60 Am. Rep. 119.

In Mutch’s Case the railroad company was knowingly violating an ordinance of Opelika regulating the speed of its trains, and a boy 9% years old attempted to grasp and climb a ladder attached to one of the cars of the passing train and was injured. The jury, as in this case, returned a verdict against the corporation for violating the law. The trial court refused to set the verdict aside, and the railroad company appealed to this court, and this court, notwithstanding the finding of the jury and the action of the trial court in refusing to disturb it, set the verdict aside on the sole ground that the conscious violation of the ordinance in running the train at an excessive rate of speed was not the proximate cause of the injury. This was one of the great opinions of that great Chief Justice, Stone, and therein he used language which ought to be remembered by this court when called upon to set aside unrighteous verdicts and judgments against corporations. In that opinion, among many other truths, he said: “We hold, as matter of law, that there was no proof whatever in this case tending to show a causal connection between the negligence charged and the injury suffered. ' In the jury box, and under the oath, the *206jurors have solemnly sworn on the holy Evangelists of Almighty God there is no room for friendship, partiality, or prejudice, no permissible discrimination between friends and enemies, between the rich and the poor, between corporations and natural persons. The ancients painted the goddess of justice as blindfolded, and jurors must be blind to the personal consequences, of the verdicts they render. If the testimony convinces their judgments of the existence of certain facts, they must be blind to the consequences which result from those facts. A wish that it were otherwise furnishes no excuse for deciding against their convictions. Justice thus administered commands the approbation of heaven and earth alike, and a verdict thus rendered meets all the requirements of the juror’s oath, in the fullest sense of the word — a true expression of the convictions fixed on the minds of the jury by the testimony. Independent of the legal question considered above, and which we have declared to be determinative of this case, the verdict of the jury was so palpably against the evidence that a new trial ought to have been granted on that account.”

In the case of King v. Henkie, 80 Ala. 505, 60 Am. Rep. 119, the defendants were sued civilly for knowingly violating a statute in giving intoxicating liquor to an inebriate. It was alleged in the complaint that one King, plaintiff’s intestate, was “in a helpless state of intoxication, destitute of sense and reason, his sense and reason being overthrown by the use of intoxicating liquors, and his mental faculties thereby so impaired that he did not know what he was doing, and incapable of knowing what he did, and incapable of consenting to anything; and in this condition of helplessness and mental darkness the defendants, then and there knowing his mental condition, his want of mental power to *207consent to anything, or to know what he was doing, furnished him with intoxicating liquors, which he drank, and which caused the death of plaintiff’s intestate before he left said saloon, in less than an hour.” In that case the court held that the complaint showed that the injury was not the proximate result of the violation of the statute, but was only the remote one. The court in that case, speaking through Somerville, J., said (80 Ala. 510, 60 Am: Rep. 119) : “The only wrongful act imputed to the defendants was the selling or giving, as the case may be, of intoxicating liquors to the deceased while, he was in a stupidly drunken condition, knowing that he was a man of intemperate habits. It is not shown that the defendants used any duress, deception, or arts of persuasion to induce the drinking of the liquor. The act, however, as we have said, was a statutory misdemeanor. But this was only the remote, not the proximate or intermediate, cause of the death of the plaintiff’s intestate. The rule is ful.ly settled to be that ‘if an injury has resulted in consequence of a certain wrongful act or omission, but only through or by means of some intervening cause, from which last cause the injury followed as a direct and immediate consequence, the law will refer the damage to the last or proximate cause and refuse to trace it to that which was more remote.’ — Cooley on Torts, 68, 69; 1 Anderson on Torts, 12, 13, §§ 10, 11. The statute under consideration was not intended to annul, but rather to preserve, this rule of the common law, so necessary to the certainty and justice of its administration, that there must be some proximate connection between the wrong done and the damage claimed to result from it that the two must be sufficiently conjoined so as to be ‘concatented as cause and effect.’ ”

*208I must say, however, that I have always thought that the court was wrong in its conclusion reached in King’s Gase, supra. If the averments of that complaint were true, and on demurrer they should have been so treated, the death of King was the result, both proximately and solely, of a violation of the statute. It was alleged that King, to thé knowledge of the defendants, had no mind and could not consent or contribute to his injury. The fact that he had previously gotten drunk was the remote, and not the proximate, cause. The point I am trying to make is that, if the above case is right, the one under consideration must be wrong. The correct rule, however, in such cases of employing minors in violation of statutes is, I think, that stated in the text-books on the subject, and adhered to by the courts of New York, Louisiana, West Virginia, and the great majority of the courts to be found in notes to these texts, and in notes to 31 L. R. A. (N. S.) 504; 7 L. R. A. (N. S.) 335; 20 L. R. A. (N. S.) 876. It will be found that no text-writer or annotator on this subject supports the majority opinion in this case as to the points of which I complain, and that only the courts of Illinois, and possibly those of Indiana and Pennsylvania, support the decision in this case. If the Indiana and Pennsylvania cases support it, they do so only through dicta; the cases reported did not call for nor authorize such a decision.

Two well and fully considered cases, on very similar lines, which hold contrary to the decision in this case, are those of Norman v. V. P. C. Co., 68 W. Va. 405, 69 S. E. 857, 31 L. R. A. (N. S.) 504, and Darsam v. Kohlmann. 123 La. 164, 48 South. 781, 20 L. R. A. (N. S.) 881- Many courts in cases of this kind, as well as in others of a servant against the master, have confused the doctrine of assumption of risk with that of *209contributory negligence. I confess that the great number and- weight of the authorities hold that the doctrine of assumption of risk does not apply where the minor is employed in violation of an express statute; but the rule is exactly different as to contributory negligence, and even the courts which hold that contributory negligence does not apply in these cases say that 'the doctrine is doubtful.

The majority opinion quotes a New York case to sustain its conclusion, which has been expressly overruled in that same case by the New York Court of Appeals. It also cites Mr. Thompson, and yet Mr. Thompson is of the opinion that the rules announced in.this case are not sound. The case of Norman v. V. P. C. Co., 68 W. Va. 408, 69 S. E. 858, 31 L. R. A. (N. S.); 504, is the best considered case I have found on the subject of liability of the master to' the minor for personal injuries, when the employment was in violation of an express statute. Four of the judges wrote opinions in that case, which shows that the question was thoroughly considered. While some of the justices dissented, the decision and opinions are valuable. I think the true rules are thus stated in the majority opinion in that case: “The true rule is believed to be — -and comparatively few cases when carefully studied will be found to be in conflict Avith it — that the fact that the defendant’s act complained of was a violation of a statute or ordinance is merely a circumstance to be considered by the jury on the question of negligence, except when the court can say, as a matter of laAV, that the consequences against Avhich the statute or ordinance was intended to provide have actually ensued from its violation. — 21 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.) p. 480. The doctrines in relation to assumption of risk and of felloAV servants do not apply, if the evidence es*210tablishes that the statute against the employment of boys in mines has been violated. The doctrine of contributory negligence, however, is not based upon contract of employment, and is open as a defense in cases like this one. Some of the decisions hold that under no circumstances can contributory negligence avail in a case like the one at hand. But the weight of authority is the other way, and, to our minds, consistent with legal principles. The statute does not in words abrogate the defense. A civil action does not get its force from that statute. It only looks to the violation of the statute for evidence to support the action. Why shall not common-law principles apply? — Bishop, Non-contract Law, § 140, and supra; 20 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 151; Watson, Damages for Personal Injuries, § 267; Queen v. Dayton Coal & I. Co., 85 Tenn. 458, 32 S. W. 460, 30 L. R. A. 82, 49 Am. St. Rep. 935; Rolin v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 141 N. C. 300, 53 S. E. 891, 7 L. R. A. (N. S.) 335, 8 Ann. Cas. 638; Sterling v. Union Carbide Co., 142 Mich. 284, 105 N. W. 755; and other cases.”

I do not mean to say that there are not dicta in other opinions than those of the courts of Illinois to support all the conclusions reached in this case, but I do say that this decision is against the weight and number of authorities, and that the courts of Illinois are the only ones that have gone to the full length of the decision in this case. The opinion in effect holds that the pleas of contributory negligence are not availing in an action for damages by the minor based upon a violation of this statute. To this I cannot agree. If the violation of the statute gives rise to a cause of action, it is one for negligence only; and, if so, a plea of contributory negligence must he availing, because it confesses the negligence alleged, but alleges the *211plaintiff’s own negligence, as the proximate cause of the injury. This of necessity must be a good defense. It is very true, which I concede, that given acts of the plaintiff may be contributory generally, and would be so but for the statute; but, to say that there cannot he a good plea of contributory negligence to an action brought for a violation of this statute, I cannot agree.

There were pleas of contributory negligence in this case, hut the court says they could not be proven, and might he charged out, no matter what the evidence was. To this I cannot agree. I do, of course, agree that a plea which alleges an impossibility, whether it be a legal or a physical impossibility, cannot be proven, and may he charged out of the case; but in fact, in law, and in physics, it is not at all impossible, or even improbable, that a boy 13 years of age may injure himself and be alone responsible for his act, although he was employed to work in a coal mine, and Avas so working Avithin the line of his employment when he so injured himself. Moreover, in this particular case there was ample evidence, if believed, to support a finding that the boy Avas 14 years old when employed, and when injured, and for this reason, if for no other, the affirmative charge could not have been properly given for the plaintiff. If there Avas no dispute in the evidence as to this fact, and the opinion in this case is correct, then the affirmative charge ought to have been given as to all the counts declaring upon a violation of the statute, as well as upon the pleas of contributory negligence, because there Avas not dispute of the employment of the plantiff nor that he Avas injured while so employed, and, under the opinion of the court, this Avas all that was necessary to fix liability on the defendant.

While, as I have before stated, I admit that there are authorities and precedents to support the holding of *212the majority in this case, I do not believe that any case can be found like this, where it clearly appears that the boy and his parents, acting together, have, by virtue of this or of any other statute, committed a palpable fraud upon an employer, and have been allowed to reap and enjoy the fruits of their fraud from the very one defrauded, upon no other ground than that the employer was received by their false representations as to the age of the boy. Such a result is wrong in morals as well as in law. If such a result cannot be prevented in a court of law, then surely some court of equity or conscience ought to be able to relieve against such an injustice.

How could this employer have protected himself against this result? The majority answer by saying he ought not to have employed the plaintiff. The defendant is now painfully conscious of that fact, but he was not when he employed the plaintiff, but honestly believed that he ought. It is shown that he had this statute in mind, and did all that prudence dictated to comply with it, and thought that he had done so. He went to the fountain sources to obtain his information as to the age of the boy; that is, to the boy and to his parents and acquaintances. They, with one accord, assured him the boy was 14 years of age. It is shown that the Bible which contained the record of the boy’s birth was not in the possession or custody of the boy or of his parents. It was not their family Bible, and it is not shown who made the entries, or when they were made.

Sayre, J. — I. also dissent.