Dowd v. . Davis

15 N.C. 61
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 N.C. 61 (Dowd v. . Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dowd v. . Davis, 15 N.C. 61 (N.C. 1833).

Opinion

Gaston, Judge.

After stating the case proceeded : This case involves several questions of an interesting character. There is a numerous and helpless portion of the community subject to the operation of those laws which create an involuntary obligation of service, and it is of high importance that these laws should receive such a construction as will protect them from oppression and injury, while at the same time it secures the rights of their temporary masters. The 19th and 20th sections of the act of 1762, fRev. c. 69) contain the principal enactments which authorise and direct the County Courts to bind out apprentices, and regulate the mode in which this power shall be exercised. They direct that when the estate of an orphan shall be of so small value that no one will educate and maintain him or her for the profits thereof, such orphan shall by the direction of the court be bound -apprentice, every male to some tradesman, merchant, mariner or other person approved by the Court, until he shall arrive at the age of twenty-one years, and every female to some suitable employment till her age of eighteen years. They also declare that such court may in like manner hind apprentice all free baseborn children, the female child of a mulatto or mus-tee until she shall attain the age of twenty-one years ‘, that the master or mistress of such apprentice shall find and provide for him or her diet, clothes, lodging and accommodations fit and necessary, shall teach, or cause him or her to be taught to read and write, and at the expiration of the apprenticeship, shall pay every such apprentice the like allowance as is by law appoints ed for servants by indenture or custom. The act then enacts that the binding of such apprentice by order of Court shall be by indenture, to be made in the name of the presiding acting Justice and his successors of the one part, and the master and mistress of the other; that this indenture shall be acknowledged or proved in court and recorded, and a counterpart be kept in the clerk’s office for the benefit of the apprentice,; and. that the per. *64 SOU injured may prosecute a suit thereon in the name of such Justice or his successors, and recover all damages sustained by reason of the breach of the covenant therein contained. The court entertains no doubt but that it is indispensable that every binding of an apprentice by order of court must be by indenture. This is demanded by the plain words of the act, is consistent with the adjudications in our country, and in conformity with the law and usages which obtained in England respecting the binding of apprentices generally, aud probably prevailed here before the passing of the act of 17&-Z. An order of court therefore, not carried into execution by an indenture must be regarded as absolutely null. It is very clear too that in order to execute the requisitions of this act, tiic indenture ought to contain covenants for the performance of each and every of tiie duties which the law enjoins, and for the nonperformance of which it gives a remedy by suit on the indenture. It may be unnecessary to insert on the indenture a covenant for the payment to the apprentice at the expiration of the term of apprenticeship “of the like allowance as is by law appointed for servants by indenture or custom,” because the very section which imposes this obligation on the master adds immediately thereafter, “ that on refusal he shall be compelled thereto in like manner,” and upon looking into the act of Í741 in relation to servants, we find that all their complaints may be received on petition in the court of the county wherein thoy reside without the formal process of an action. But for a violation of the oilier duties enjoined, the remedy contemplated by the act, is by an action in the name of the presiding Justice or liis successors on the indenture, in which actions damages are to be recovered for the breach of the covenants contained in that indenture. But what discrepancies between the indenture required, and that given, shall make the instrument ipso facto null, or prevent the relation of master and servant from being created — what shall render the indenture voidable, or authorise a dissolution of the relation — and when such indenture is voidable by *65 whom, and in what manner it shall be avoided, are en-quiries of much moment,' and perhaps of some difficulty.

*64 Every binding of an apprentice under the act of 1762, must be by indenture. And every obligation thereby imposed upon the master which is to be vindicated by an action, must be the subject of express stipulation But it is otherwise with the payment of the al lowance appointed for servants,because the remedy for its non-payment is by petition- *65 An official bond to an officer appointed to taltó it, vests upon hi's death or resignation, in Ms successors, although they are not named in it.

The indenture which was executed in this case is set forth, and many objections have been urged against its validity. In the first place, it is objected that the act of 1762, requires that the indenture shall be made “in the name of the presiding justice and his successors of the one part, and the master of the apprentice, of the other part; and that this instrument purports to have been made between “the chairman of the county court of Moore on behalf of the justices of said county, and their successors in office of the one part and Cornelius Dowd, of the other part.” It is certainly always to be desired that office bonds should correspond precisely with the forms prescribed ; ami immense and unexpected inconveniencies have frequently resulted from carelessness in this respect. Here is a double deviation from the act. The indenture does not name as it ought, the successors of the chairman, and it names what it ought not, the successors of the justices. The word their” immediately preceding the word “successors” has been improperly inserted instead of the word “ his.” But this objection is not as formidable as it appears.— The words “their successors in office” as here used, have no operation and no meaning. The Chairman acting in behalf of the justices of the County Court can act only in behalf of the then justices. Those who may thereafter succeed or be appointed, may indeed be bound by this act; not however, because it is their act, but because it was a legitimate act, authorised by their predecessors, and conferring rights which all are bound to acknowledge. These words therefore may be rejected altogether as nugatory and without object or meaning. This objection then to the indenture, becomes restricted to the omission of the words “his successors.” But it was decided many years since, and so far as we can find precedents on this subject, we are solicitous to follow them, that in bonds taken under this act, the insertion of these words is unnecessary, for that wherever an engagement is entered into by a public officer for the *66 benefit of others in his official character, and by the appointment of law.

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Related

Anonymous
2 N.C. 144 (Superior Court of North Carolina, 1795)

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.C. 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dowd-v-davis-nc-1833.