Haines v. Fitzgerald

165 A. 52, 108 Pa. Super. 290, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 16, 1932
DocketAppeal 118
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 165 A. 52 (Haines v. Fitzgerald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haines v. Fitzgerald, 165 A. 52, 108 Pa. Super. 290, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186 (Pa. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keiajbr, J.,

Wallace Merle Haines, a boy twenty years old, while walking on the proper side of the road—(the left side, facing traffic: Skodis v. Phila. R. T. Co., 103 Pa. Superior Ct. 533, 537, 158 Atl. 587.)—was run into from behind by defendant’s automobile, driven by his agent on the defendant’s business, which swerved suddenly to the wrong side. He was severely hurt; was in the hospital with a badly broken left leg for thirty-nine days; walked on crutches for a year; since the accident his left leg is shorter than the right one. and he cannot turn his foot inwards. The negligence of the defendant’s agent was not disputed on the trial.

This appeal by the defendant is concerned with matters wholly unrelated to the defendant’s negligence.

The accident occurred on August 1, 1930. The boy became of age on June 13, 1931. Overlooking this fact, an action in trespass was brought on September 10, 1931, by “Wallace Merle Haines, minor, by his parents and next friends, James L. Bruner and Mar-die Bruner, and James L. Bruner and Mardie Bruner, his wife, in their, own right,” against Wiley Fitzgerald, to recover the damages sustained by them respectively. Mardie Bruner was the boy’s mother; James L. Bruner, his step-father. Both causes of action had to be joined in one suit under the Act of May *293 12, 1897, P. L. 63; Mahoney v. Park Steel Co., 217 Pa. 20, 66 Atl. 90.

When the case was called for trial on January 1, 1932, plaintiffs’ counsel moved “to amend the record, so that the words ‘Wallace Merle Haines, minor’ be amended so as to read ‘Wallace Merle Haines’ in his own right, he having reached the age of 21 years”. Defendant’s counsel said, “I reserve my rights. My opinion is, that this suit was filed after this boy was of age. I object to the amendment, as not being the formal amendment to the cause of action.” The court allowed the amendment. It developed, after a few questions, that the boy was twenty-one years old when the action was brought. Appellant contends this caused a variance between the allegata and probata and that the suit could not proceed because brought by the boy’s next friends. He did not ask for a continuance on the ground of surprise. He could scarcely have alleged surprise for it developed that he had known the boy’s age for over a year. He took the position that bringing the suit, as it was done, was an error of substance which did him serious harm, and that the error could not be cured by amending the record so as to omit the next friends. He is wrong.

When a suit is brought in the name of a minor by a next friend, “it is the infant, not the next friend, who is the real and proper party. The next friend, by whom the suit is brought on behalf of the infant, is neither technically nor substantially the party, but resembles an attorney, or a guardian ad litem, by whom a suit is brought or defended in behalf of another”: Morgan v. Potter, 157 U. S. 195, 198. See also 14 R. C. L. 281, sec. 51. This was recognized by our Supreme Court in Mahoney v. Park Steel Co., 217 Pa. 20, 66 Atl. 90, where an action in trespass was brought by a minor by his father and next friend and by the father for himself. When the ease came on for trial a judgment of compulsory nonsuit was entered against *294 the father and the case was continued as to- the minor in order to permit his counsel to move to amend the statement of claim. This was not done until more than three years after the accident. The boy, having then become of age, through his counsel moved the court for leave to intervene as a party plaintiff and to file an amended statement. The motion was refused on the ground that the amended statement set up new and distinct allegations of negligence after the statute of limitations had run. The case was still at issue as to the son on the original statement. At the trial no testimony was offered and a judgment of compulsory nonsuit was entered by direction of the judge. The Supreme Court held the amendment as to cause of action was properly refused. As to the refusal of the court to permit him to intervene as plaintiff, it said, speaking through Mr. Justice Elkin : “We do not see that there was any necessity for a petition and formal order of court allowing him to intervene......Upon the arrival of the minor at full age, the action did not abate, but he had the right to move the court to amend the record, so that he could appear in his own right as a party plaintiff, instead of through his father and next friend, if he so desired......It must not be overlooked, however, that in this case, appellant was a party to the record, from the date of the institution of the suit and was a party at the time judgment of nonsuit was entered against him, and since the entry of this judgment has not' been assigned for error, it stands against him and is the end of his ease.” By our practice a minor is permitted to sue by a next friend,—without any appointment of such next friend by the court, as was the custom at common law—“in order to supply the want of capacity in the infant to afford in his own person a party responsible on the record for the costs”: Heft & Hix v. McGill, 3 Pa. 256; Turner v. Patridge, 3 P. & W. 172, 173.

*295 It follows, then, that if this suit had been brought when Wallace Merle Haines was a minor, he would have been the real party plaintiff. His next friends—■ apart from their demand in their own right—would not, except to supply a party responsible on the record for costs. When by an oversight of counsel the action was brought after he became of age in the form, “Wallace Merle Haines, by his parents and next friends,” etc., he was, nevertheless, at all times the party plaintiff and the addition of the ‘next friends’ was only surplusage, except possibly as to the additional liability for costs. The court committed no error and the defendant was done no harm by the amendment. It was wholly a matter of procedure: 14 R. C. L. 280, sec. 50. The statement as filed complied with the Practice Act of 1915, P. L. 483. It was sworn to by Mardie Bruner, a plaintiff in her own right and was signed by the attorney. The objection on that score came too late in any event, at the trial: Act of May 23, 1923, P. L. 325.

The defense was based on a release, a copy of which is printed in the margin.

*296 At the time it was signed the hoy was a minor. It was signed in the hospital under circumstances referred to at more length later. The consideration was left blank. A check for $375 made payable to the “Order of Mardie Bruner and James L. Bruner, parents and guardian of Wallace Haines,” was given the parents, which was cashed and the proceeds received by the mother. The boy and his parents all testified that he got none of it. There was no evidence in contradiction. Neither Mardie Bruner nor James L. Bruner had been appointed guardian for the boy.

The court charged the jury that if they believed from the evidence that the boy did not receive any of the proceeds of the check or obtain any of its benefits, the release would not bind him because he was a minor when he signed it; that as to the parents, as they kept the money, they were bound and could recover no damages in this case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 A. 52, 108 Pa. Super. 290, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haines-v-fitzgerald-pasuperct-1932.