Chaloux v. International Paper Co.

73 A. 301, 75 N.H. 281, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 4, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 73 A. 301 (Chaloux v. International Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chaloux v. International Paper Co., 73 A. 301, 75 N.H. 281, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 33 (N.H. 1909).

Opinion

Bingham, J.

The question here presented is whether the plaintiff, whose son was instantly killed through the negligence of the defendants, can maintain an action for damages for the loss of the son’s services from the time of his death until he would have attained his majority. It is conceded that there is no statute giving a right of action in such case. The plaintiff’s contention is that recent decisions in this state recognize the existence of a right of action for damages for loss of service between death and majority ; that at common law a father has an absolute legal right to the services and earnings of his.minor son; that by reason of the defendants’ negligence the plaintiff has been deprived of this right; that as the party possessing the right and the one who has infringed upon it are both in existence, the question of the survival of actions, urged as a reason for the conclusion reached in Wyatt v. Williams, 48 N. H. 102, does not arise; and that what is there said inconsistent with this contention is obiter dicta and not material to the decision .of the case.

The recent cases upon which the plaintiff relies are Carney v. *282 Railway, 72 N. H. 364, and Warren v. Railway, 70 N. H. 362; but neither of them can be said to support the plaintiff’s contention. In the former, the court was considering the question of damages recoverable under our statute (P. S., c. 191, s. 12) by an administrator of an estate of a minor child billed through the defendants’ negligence; and it was held that the administrator could not recover for the child’s “ earning capacity ” from the time of his death until he attained his majority, although he might from that time on, for the reason that under the statute “ damages are to be assessed on the basis of the loss suffered by the deceased party and his estate,” and if the son had lived, his earnings during minority, unless emancipated, would have belonged to his father, or in case of the father’s death to the mother. It cannot be inferred from this holding that the court understood, or undertook to intimate, that the father could have maintained a suit for the loss of the son’s services from the time of his death until he reached his majority. In the latter case the death of the child was not shown to have been instantaneous. This appears from the charge of the court to the jury. 209 Briefs and Cases 609, 611. The statement in the opinion — “had the child survived, the action would have been brought in its own name. The father’s cause of action would have been what it is now — case for the loss of the child’s service ” —must be read with this fact in view; and when so read, it has reference to the father’s right of action for loss of services prior to death.

In Wyatt v. Williams, supra, the court said: “At common law, for the killing of a human being, no civil action could be maintained against the person who caused it, . . . by a person standing in the relation of . . . father or master to the person killed, and the law was the same, whether the act which caused the death was felonious or not.” And after discussing the various reasons assigned for the holding, it says that the rule is founded upon public policy, and if the reasons assigned “ are various and not altogether consistent, yet the rule has been too long established, and too generally recognized as a settled principle of the common law, to be now shaken by anything short of a legislative act.” This case was decided in 1861, and from that day to this no action has been brought in which the parent has been allowed damages for loss of services after the child’s death — a fact reasonably conclusive as to the law in this state and of the understanding of the profession upon the subject. State v. Railroad, 52 N. H. 528, 548; Bedore v. Newton, 54 N. H. 117; Whitaker v. Warren, 60 N. H. 20; Poff v. Telephone Co., 72 N. H. 164.

But there seem to be other substantial reasons why this action cannot be maintained. In Campbell v. Cooper, 34 N. H. 49, 62, *283 63, the subject was discussed at length, and it was there said: “ At common law, the lather is entitled to the services and earnings of his minor children, because he is bound to support and educate them. The right grows out of the obligation and is correlative to it. When one ceases, the other ceases also. The helplessness of the infant, demanding the tutelage and support of the father, in contemplation of law terminates in ordinary cases at twenty-one, and the child becomes emancipated from parental control and entitled to his own earnings. If by reason of continued helplessness, arising from physical or mental infirmity, the emancipation does not then take place, and the burthen of the support continues, the corresponding right to the services continues with it. If, anticipating the period of emancipation, fixed by law at the age of twenty-one, the father surrenders to the son the right to his earnings at an earlier age, and permits him to go into the business of life as his own master, while he thus continues independent of parental control the obligation to support him remains suspended. So, too, if the father drives his minor son from his home, and refuses to contribute to his support, the right to his earnings is also suspended so long as this dereliction of duty continues. But this obligation to support the child continues only during the lifetime of the father.” He cannot, at common law, bind his infant children “to service after 1ns decease,” for the law “imposes upon the father no obligation to make provision for the support or education of his infant children after his decease. . . . The father is not to be considered as having an absolute right of property in the labor and services of his offspring until twenty-one. Whatever right he has, it is but a qualified and contingent interest, depending on their living with him and being maintained by him, and arising out of the personal trust under which he holds them for their protection and tutelage. While he continues to furnish them support, he may appropriate their earnings to his own use; but he has no present property in their future earnings, except as coupled with the condition that he shall be burthened with their support when the earnings accrue.” And it was held that all power on the part of the father over the labor and services of his minor child ceases at the father’s death, “ except so far as such power may be conferred by statute.”

In Jenness v. Emerson, 15 N. H. 486, a minor son was allowed to recover wages due for his labor and services, his father being dead and his mother insane and a pauper. It was there said : “As a general rule, . . . parents are under obligation to support their minor children, and in some degree liable for their education and entitled to their earnings ”; that the “ right to the services arises directly out of the duty and liability for support.” And it *284

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 A. 301, 75 N.H. 281, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaloux-v-international-paper-co-nh-1909.