(dissenting).'
I dissent.
I dissent on two grounds: (1) the majority opinion completely disregarded an order of this Court and (2) plaintiff, a minor, is entitled to a common-law tort action against his employer.
A. Depositions made part of record on appeal should be considered.
Plaintiff filed an application for an order allowing an interlocutory appeal from an amended order of the trial court. The application was granted on several terms and conditions. The first requirement was that plaintiff file a transcript of any pleadings and evidentiary material establishing the type of employment in which plaintiff was engaged, the circumstances surrounding plaintiff’s alleged accident, and facts relating to issues of waiver and estoppel. After the application was granted plaintiff requested that depositions on file be included in the transcript of the record. On motion of defendants in the district court, the depositions were stricken from the record.
Plaintiff filed a motion in this Court which requested this Court to compel the district court to certify as part of the record depositions taken by defendants on March 8, 1982. Among the reasons stated in the motion were (1) plaintiff requested the district court to consider the depositions prior to entry of its decision but the court refused to do so and (2) the depositions were necessary to assist this Court to determine the factual basis upon which plaintiff sought his common-law tort action.
The Chief Judge ordered plaintiff to advise this Court of the significance of the depositions to the issues on appeal. Plaintiff responded with various reasons including the issues of waiver and estoppel. After stating the facts, this Court issued an order (1) that in the interest of judicial economy, the depositions stricken from the record be certified as part of the record on appeal and (2) pending a decision on the merits, whether to order withdrawn the order striking the depositions would be held in abeyance.
No member of this panel participated in these prior proceedings. The depositions of plaintiff, his father and mother were delivered to this Court.
To me, the order means that the depositions were made a part of the record on appeal to be examined and read and a determination made whether the contents of the depositions would assist this Court in arriving at its judicial decision. If the assistance were present, the order striking the depositions would be ordered withdrawn, if not, the order would stand.
Despite the order of this Court, my colleagues held that “[t]he deposition testimony will not be considered” and “plaintiff’s asserted facts will not be considered.” Cases cited as authority were those submitted by defendants to this Court in a memorandum brief. The majority opinion remanded this case for an evidentiary hearing on the issues, inter alia, of waiver and estoppel, the very issues for which the depositions were ordered to be made a part of the record in this appeal.
It is essential in a fair determination of the issues in an appeal that an order entered by this Court be honored with compliance. It constitutes orderly appellate procedure. The order of this Court should not be completely disregarded. It establishes a bad precedent.
B. Plaintiff, a minor is entitled to a common-law tort action.
On July 19, 1978, plaintiff, a minor, 15 years, 7 months and 25 days old, was employed by defendant at an asphalt hot-mix plant owned and operated by defendant. While so employed, he was splashed and burned by hot asphalt. Section 50-6-4, N.M.S.A.1978, enacted over half century ago, prohibited employment of a child under 16 years of age in many types of employment including “any employment dangerous to lives and limbs * * *.” For a violation thereof, an employer is guilty of a misdemeanor. Section 50-6-12. Plaintiff’s employment was illegal.
The majority opinion is wayward in a determination of the issues in this appeal. To point to each error and misconception of the law would cause me to tilt at windmills.
The trial court “ORDERED that the plaintiffs’ exclusive remedy is in workmen’s compensation and not in tort,” and plaintiff’s motion to dismiss his workmen’s compensation case was denied.
The precise question to be determined is whether a 15 year old child illegally employed in a dangerous occupation is governed by the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
For two reasons I exclude from consideration § 50-6-7 of the Child Labor Law which pertains to labor permits: (1) a child under the age of 16 years is not eligible for a permit certificate as long as his work is dangerous in an asphalt hot-mix plant and (2) it is the duty of the employer to determine the true age of a prospective employee to avoid a violation of the Child Labor Law. Shelpman v. Evans Products Co., 147 Ind. App. 192, 258 N.E.2d 868 (1970). Defendant did not perform this duty.
To arrive at a decision, we must confine our discussion to illegal employment of a minor and its relationship to the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
The Act makes no reference to the employment of minors. It is apparent that a child 15 years of age cannot lawfully assent to be bound by the Workmen’s Compensation Act nor can anyone do it for him for the employment of such child is expressly unlawful. There is no lawful contract covering compensation for injuries. Widdoes v. Laub, 3 W.W.Harr.Del. 4, 129 A. 344 (1925). “The person who deals with an infant does so at his own peril.” Parrent v. Midway Toyota, 626 P.2d 848, 850 (Mont.1981). Maynerich v. Little Bear Enterprises, Inc., 82 N.M. 650, 485 P.2d 984 (Ct.App.1971) involved an illegally employed minor, 15 years of age. The court said:
In our opinion, a contract, the performance of which violates a penal statute, is illegal and at least voidable, and will not provide a basis for the assertion of rights under such contract, particularly by the party upon whom the statute imposes the penalty.
Our act, by its terms contains no specific language bringing illegally employed minors within its terms.
In our view, the weight of authority, as applied to statutes similar to ours, supports the proposition that an illegally employed minor may pursue a common law action. [Authorities omitted.]
We hold that Steven is not barred by the Workmen’s Compensation Act from maintaining a common law action, and that the trial court erred in denying him such remedy. [Id. 652, 485 P.2d 984.]
To bar plaintiff’s common-law action, an employer must show a valid contract for hire of an illegally employed minor. Absent a labor permit, this cannot be shown. Being illegal an employer cannot assert any rights under the contract. Maynerich cites as authority Acklin Stamping Co. v. Kutz, 98 Ohio St. 61, 120 N.E. 229 (1918), 14 A.L.R. 812 (1921). Under similar facts and laws, the court said:
The test is: Was the employment of the minor in the given case illegal? If there has been on the part of the employer a violation of the statutes of this state, enacted for the protection of children, the employer cannot avail himself of the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. [14 A.L.R. 816.]
After stating the facts the court said:
—then the employment was illegal, and plaintiff would not be an employee within the meaning of that term as used in the Workmen’s Compensation Act. Its provisions would have no application, and the case would be one as though the act had not been enacted. [14 A.L.R. 816.]
Maynerich also cites the Annotation, 14 A.L.R. 818 (1921). Page 819 states the general rule:
While there is some conflict upon the question, the rule is adhered to by the weight of authority that the employment contemplated by the provision of the Workmen’s Compensation Act is a lawful employment, and that these acts are inapplicable in case of an injury to a minor whose employment is unlawful.
This annotation has been supplemented in 33 A.L.R. 337; 49 A.L.R. 1455; 60 A.L.R. 847; 83 A.L.R. 417; and 142 A.L.R. 1019 (1943).
Inasmuch as no employment contract exists which the law can recognize as lawful and binding, plaintiff was not an employee within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
Rock Island Coal Mining Co. v. Gilliam, 89 Okl. 49, 213 P. 833, 835 (1923) said:
It is our opinion that in enacting the Workmen’s Compensation Law the Legislature referred to legal employment, and that the provisions of the act have no reference to minors who are employed in violation of the statute. To construe the law so as to permit an employer who has employed children illegally, in express violation of the statute, to insist that they are deprived of their common-law rights and must look to the Compensation Act for relief, would nullify the provisions of the statute prohibiting child labor, and would be in disregard to the public policy of the state. The Workmen’s Compensation Law was not intended to prescribe rights and remedies for persons engaged in unlawful or criminal occupation. It in no manner destroys the purposes of the Workmen’s Compensation Law to hold that its provisions were not intended to apply to children who are unlawfully sent to work in hazardous employments and that where they are injured in such employments they have a common-law action against the employer.
Rock Island remains the rule of law of Oklahoma. Baker v. Hunn Roofing, Inc., 399 F.Supp. 628 (D.Okl.1975).
For a century, the courts have protected minor children and condemned employers when such children were employed in violation of child labor statutes. Many courts held the employer to be negligent as a matter of law. Case Note, 7 L.R.A. (N.S.) 335 (1907); supplemented in 48 L.R.A. (N.S.) 656 (1914). This spirit was expressed in Rolin v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 141 N.C. 300, 53 S.E. 891 (1906), 7 L.R.A. (N.S.) 335, 340 (1907):
If the age is known to the defendant, the employment is a positive defiance of the law; if the employment is without pursuing the method prescribed, and so easily followed, to learn the truth, its failure to do so gives it but little, if any, better status. * * * [T]hey take children into their service with full knowledge of the risk to which they are exposed, and should be required to take the consequences of such employment.
We should preserve this judicial attitude today and tomorrow. To hold otherwise would in large degree nullify the Child Labor Law and would have no tendency to discourage the practice which the statute has made illegal.
One of defendants’ affirmative defenses is that plaintiff misrepresented his age and is estopped. No authority is cited to support this defense. From early days to the present, it has been held that a minor whose age is falsely represented with his knowledge and acquiescence for the purpose of securing employment is not estopped from showing that he was under the age at which the statute permitted him to be employed and would not bar his right to action. Case Note, 20 L.R.A. (N.S.) 500 (1909); supplemented in 25 L.R.A. (N.S.) 708 (1910); 42 L.R.A. (N.S.) 624 (1913), followed by several A.L.R. Supplements, 142 A.L.R. 1029.
In Glucina v. F.H. Goss Brick Co., 63 Wash. 401, 115 P. 843 (1911), 42 L.R.A. (N.S.) 624 (1913), plaintiff, under the age of 14, was employed in a brick factory. Defendant pleaded as a defense that the father represented the boy to be over 16, that he appeared to be over 16 and the boy was employed solely by reason of the representations made and the appearance of the boy. The court said:
But we are of the opinion that the employer must know at his peril that the person employed is over the prohibited age. In that same case, we held that it was no defense that the child represented himself as being over fourteen years of age. * * * Even if the appearance of the child indicated that he was over the age of fourteen years, that fact would not relieve the defendant, because the statute makes no such exception. It recites: “Every person who shall employ any male child under the age of fourteen years at any labor whatever, in or in connection with, any store, shop, factory * * * shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” [Emphasis added.] [Id. 42 L.R.A. 628.]
Shelpman, supra, said:
Historically there are many cases holding that a minor illegally employed as a result of misrepresentation of age, who was then injured in a prohibited employment, was not barred from his right to recover for such injuries. [258 N.E.2d 873.]
Waiver, estoppel and ratification during minority are not legal defenses available to an employer who illegally employs children. Maynerich summarily disposed of an employer’s contention that a minor child waived any rights he may have had to pursue a common-law action because he accepted workmen’s compensation benefits. A child who does not know that payments received are made under the Workmen’s Compensation Act does not waive his rights. The same facts are true in the instant case.
Nevertheless, such a contention by the employer should not have been considered. A child does not know what his legal rights are under the Workmen’s Compensation Act or the common law. For a child to receive workmen’s compensation checks is not an intentional relinquishment of a known right under the common law. Neither is a child estopped, nor can he ratify.
A child can only act through a guardian appointed by the court who protects the rights of a child and a deprivation of such rights can take place only in court proceedings. Roberts v. Hillsborough Mills, 85 N.H. 517, 161 A. 29 (1932) involved an employer who entered into an agreement with the mother as next friend of plaintiff for payment of workmen’s compensation benefits. It appears that the plaintiff was not illegally employed. Payments were received for some seven months. Plaintiff, by his father and next friend, then sued defendant for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff while in defendant’s employment. Defendant pleaded the agreement in bar. The trial court ruled that the mother of plaintiff had no authority to bind plaintiff by the compensation agreements. Also there was no disaffirmance of the agreements prior to bringing the action at law. Defendant moved to dismiss the suit because no tender had been made of the amount paid as compensation. The motion was denied. Plaintiff recovered judgment in tort. The rulings of the court were sustained in an appeal by defendant. Omitting citation of authorities, the court said:
Ordinarily, there are only two recognized ways in which a minor may take binding action in the enforcement or discharge of his legal rights; namely, through a duly appointed guardian acting within his powers, or through his next friend by proceedings in court. Neither method having been employed, it was his legal right to repudiate the assumed election in his behalf. The ruling of the court that the mother had no authority to bind the plaintiff is sustained.
Neither the statute, nor the procedure applicable to minors, required any particular form of disaffirmance of the election purporting to have been executed in the plaintiff’s behalf. The bringing of the action at law through his next friend was a sufficient repudiation thereof. [Id. 30.]
The extent of the defendant’s legal right in this action, as respects the compensation paid, is to offset the payments made against the damages recovered by the plaintiff. [Id. 31.]
Roberts was followed in Johnson v. National Biscuit Co., 96 N.H. 44, 69 A.2d 703 (1949) and Ortega v. Salt Lake Wet Wash Laundry, 108 Utah 1, 156 P.2d 885 (1945) where a minor child was illegally employed.
To add the illegal employment of a minor doubles the score against the employer.
Plaintiff is entitled to proceed with his common-law tort action against his employer.
C. Plaintiffs motion to dismiss compensation claim should be denied.
A half century ago, a conflict of authority existed whether an illegally employed minor was entitled to workmen’s compensation benefits. Kenez v. Novelty Compact Leather Co., 111 Conn. 229, 149 A. 679 (1930). In a well reasoned opinion, Kenez held that a child employed in violation of the statute is within the scope of the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
Regardless of the implications which may be drawn from Maynerich, the rule should be that a child illegally employed is not an employee within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Act as far as the employer is concerned. The employer is in the wrong. The child is not. A balance should be struck in considering the Compensation Act and illegal employment.
Maynerich is cited in Whitney-Fidalgo Seafoods, Inc. v. Beukers, 554 P.2d 250 (Alaska 1976). Under identical facts, and defenses made, the court held that the illegally employed minor possessed the right to make an election. The court said:
It would be just as inequitable to allow the employer to avoid liability for compensation benefits on the basis of the illegality of the employment contract, as it would be to permit it to deny common law liability on the basis of the wrongful contract. We hold that this form of illegality produces a voidable, rather than a void contract. Thus we believe that the minor should have the option of avoiding or ratifying the contract of hire, similar to the prerogative minors possess with regard to other contractual arrangements. In so holding, we further the intent of the legislature to protect minors in employment relationships from exploitation and similar abuses. [Id. 254.]
Plaintiff has that option in the instant case.
When an employer does not comply with the Workmen’s Compensation Act, an employee who sustains compensable injuries is afforded one of two remedies: (1) an employee may maintain a common-law action in which the employer is denied the common-law defenses of contributory negligence, assumption of risk and the fellow servant rule, and (2) an employee may, in lieu of a common-law action, apply to the district court for compensation benefits under the Act. Arvas v. Feather’s Jewlers, 92 N.M. 89, 582 P.2d 1302 (Ct.App.1978). This rule should apply to a minor who is illegally employed. It is in effect, non-compliance with the Workmen’s Compensation Act. Under the first remedy, the common-law action, the child is not subject to the law of comparative negligence. It is rule judicially created and does not override the statutory provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
On the other hand, the parents of a child may prefer immediate payment of burdensome hospital, medical and doctor expenses along with compensation payments.
Public policy, equity and good conscience favor the protection of a child illegally employed and injured in the course of his employment. The child is in his formative years and attending school in preparation for future usefulness in life. To impair or destroy that future should give to that child the right to choose which path to follow in the law.