Ballard v. Smith

210 S.W. 489, 183 Ky. 705, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 563
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 28, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 210 S.W. 489 (Ballard v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballard v. Smith, 210 S.W. 489, 183 Ky. 705, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 563 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

Appellants and defendants below, J. J. Ballard and A. B. Leibig, owned and operated a laundry in Pineville, Kentucky. On June 22, 1913, they employed Laura Smith, an infant about seventeen years and eight months old, and put her at - certain kinds of safe work in the laundry. She continued to work there until July 22, just one month from the time she began, on which day, at the hour of beginning work in the morning, she commenced to feed a machine known as a mangle. "Within a few minutes thereafter her hand was caught in the rollers of the mangle and three of her fingers severely mashed and her hand otherwise injured and bruised, the bones in the three fingers being crushed so that according to the testimony [706]*706she is probably a permanent cripple. This suit was filed by her father, the appellee and plaintiff, Alex. Smith, against defendants,' to recover damages for the loss and deprivation of the services of his infant daughter until she shall- arrive at the age of twenty-one years, and “for medical service, medicine and nursing and caring for his said child, because of said injury, ’ ’ which he has expended and which will be necessary to expend in the future, aggregating in all the sum of $1,000.00, for which amount he asked judgment.

The petition alleged that plaintiff’s daughter was under twenty-one years of age, which fact defendants knew, and with that knowledge employed her without plaintiff’s knowledge or consent and set her to work at a hazardous employment in operating a mangle, which is a dangerous piece of machinery and requires in its operation special knowledge, skill and experience, which plaintiff’s daughter did not possess, and which fact was known by defendants at the time.

The answer denied the averments of the petition and pleaded contributory negligence on the part of the daughter, as well as assumed risk by her, and in another paragraph alleged that she was employed in the laundry to iron shirts with an -ordinary smoothing iron, not connected with any machinery dangerous or otherwise, and that she was put at that work and instructed and directed to do no other character of work in the laundry on penalty of being discharged; that at the time she was injured she of her own accord undertook to feed the mangle without the knowledge, direction or consent of defendants or their foreman in charge and was so injured while thus engaged. Counter pleadings formed the issue, and upon trial under instructions from the court the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $600.00, upon which judgment was rendered, and complaining of it defendants prosecute this appeal.

The chief grounds urged for a reversal are that the court erred in giving to the jury instruction No. 1, and in failing to instruct the jury as requested by defendants. The criticised instruction which the court gave is:

“If you believe from the evidence in this case that the defendants, J. J. Ballard or A. P. Leibig, or any person acting for them, employed Laura Smith, a daughter of the plaintiff, Alex. Smith, to work in the laundry mentioned in the -evidence, without the consent of the plain[707]*707tiff, Alex. Smith, and that she was under twenty-one years of age, and that the defendants, or those acting for them, who employed the said Laura Smith, knew or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known that she was under twenty-one years of age, and that she was injured in the hand, and that the work at which she was engaged in said laundry at the time of the injury, if she was injured, was dangerous or hazardous, then you ought to find for the plaintiff, Alex. Smith.”

The chief objection to the instruction is that it makes the defendants liable if the work at which the daughter “was engaged” at the time she received her injury was dangerous or hazardous and did not make the liability of the defendants to plaintiff depend upon the dangerous or hazardous character of the work which the daughter was employed to do, or at which she was engaged under the directions, express or implied, of the defendants.

The law seems to be that to enable a parent in cases of this kind to recover of the master for injuries to his infant child, three things must concur: (a) The employer must have known, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, of the infancy of the child; (b) the employment must have been made without the knowledge or consent of the parent, and (c) the infant must have been employed to do and put at dangerous and hazardous work, at least to such an extent as that injury would likely result. The general rule upon this subject is thus stated in 29 Cyc., 1643:

“If the child is injured in the course of a dangerous service the employer' is liable, but the mere fact that a child was injured while in the employ of a person by whom he has been employed without the knowledge of the parent does not render the employer liable in an action by the parent for the loss of. the services of the child, where the employment was not hazardous and the injury was not due to the employer’s negligence.”

This court seems to have adopted the rule of the text in the cases of L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Willis, 83 Ky. 57; Union News Co. v. Morrow, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 302; I. C. R. R. Co. v. Henon, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 298, and Hendrickson v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 137 Ky. 562.

_ In the Willis case, according to the opinion, the defendant, without the consent or knowledge of the parent, “employed and permitted the son to render service for it in the hazardous capacity of brakeman. ’ ’ It was eon-[708]*708tended by defendant that it had not employed the Son because the conductor, with whose knowledge and consent he was performing the service as brakeman, had no authority to permit him to do so so as to bind the defendant. This contention was rejected by the court and the liability of the defendant upheld upon the ground that “If one engages the servant of another in an obviously dangerous business, he renders himself responsible for any injury which the servant may sustain while so engaged and which can rationally be attributed to the undertaking; and this is so even if the injury results immediately from the neglect or unskillfulness of the servant, owing to the fact that the person, by so illegally interfering, assumes all the risk incident to the service.”

In the Morrow case the infant was employed to sell papers, magazines and periodicals upon the train while making trips. The instruction, in submitting to the jury the facts upon which defendant’s liability depended, said: “If you believe from the evidence . . ' . that such employment of said Samuel S. Morrow (the infant) was dangerous and hazardous for a boy of his age and experience, and that the said defendant had notice and knowledge, or should have known that such employment .was dangerous and hazardous,” &e., then the jury should find for the plaintiff. That instruction was approved by this court.

In the Henon case the infant was employed by the defendant railroad company to work in a gravel pit, but on the day he was injured he was taken out of the pit and was put to work on a gravel train. While so engaged he’was caused through a bump or jar of the train to fall from a ladder and sustain injuries, to recover for .which his- father ^brought, the suit seeking judgment in his own right as*parent. The court referred with approval to the Willis case and to the case of N. N. & M. Y. R. R. Co. v. Carroll, 17 Ky. Law Rep.

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Related

L. & N. R. R. v. Willis
83 Ky. 57 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1885)
Hendrickson v. L. & N. R. R.
126 S.W. 117 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W. 489, 183 Ky. 705, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballard-v-smith-kyctapp-1919.