Hartwell Handle Co. v. Jack

115 So. 586, 149 Miss. 465, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 51
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1928
DocketNo. 26759.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 115 So. 586 (Hartwell Handle Co. v. Jack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartwell Handle Co. v. Jack, 115 So. 586, 149 Miss. 465, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 51 (Mich. 1928).

Opinions

Cook, J.

Elkin Shell Jack, a minor, by Mrs. Mary Shell Jack, his mother and next friend, instituted an attachment in chancery against the appellant, the Hart-well Handle Company, an Illinois corporation, seeking to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by said minor while he was in the employ of appellant and was engaged about his duties around a planing machine. The return of the sheriff on the writ of attachment shows a levy upon the land occupied by the mill plant of appellant, and also all machinery and property located thereon. The court below granted a decree awarding the complainant damages in the sum of five thousand dollars, and impressing upon the lands, mill, and machinery of appellant a lien for the satisfaction of the decree, and from this decree an appeal, without supersedeas, was prosecuted.

The appellee was thirteen years of age at the time of his injury. • When he was employed by appellant he was put to work at a planing machine, the operating part of which consisted of revolving rollers with knives bolted on them to plane lumber which was passed through the machine. Short pieces of timber were being run through this machine, and it was the duty of the appellee to receive these timbers as they came from the machine and stack them near by. The appellee had never worked *473 around machinery before, and he was injured on the third day after he was employed. At the time of the injury no timbers were being fed into the planing machine, for the reason that the foreman was endeavoring to make some adjustment of a piece of tin or screen that) had been attached to the machine for the purpose of keeping shavings from flying from the machine into the faces of the employees around it. The machine was running at the time, and with his hands the appellee undertook to brush some accumulated shavings from around the rollers to which the planing knives were attached. His right’ hand and arm were caught by these rollers, and the arm was torn off about three inches from the shoulder.

There was some effort to show that the mother of appellee consented to his employment by the appellant, and, while the testimony does not show any express consent, it tends to show that she did not protest or endeavor to prohibit such employment. As to whether the appellee was instructed in regard to the dangers of his employment, the testimony is conflicting; but under our vieiy of this case we do not deem it necessary to set forth the testimony upon these two points.

The appellee invokes the Child Labor Law, sections 5137 to 5145, Hemingway’s 1927 Code, and the court below held that the employment of the appellee in viola.tion of the provisions of this statute was negligence per se and was the proximate cause of the injury.

The Child Labor Law was first enacted as chapter 164, Laws of 1914, and was amended by chapter 314, Laws of 1924, the provisions of the latter act which are here material being sections 1 and 3 thereof (sections 5137 and 5139, Hemingway’s 1927 Code), which read as follows:

Section 1. ‘ ‘ That no boy or girl under the age of fourteen years shall be employed or permitted to work in any mill, cannery, workshop, factory or manufacturing establishment within this state.”

Section 3. “That it shall be unlawful for any person, firm or corporation to employ, or detain, or permit to *474 work, in any mill, cannery, workshop’, factory or manufacturing establishment in this state, any child under the age of sixteen years without first requiring said; child to present the affidavit of the parent or guardian, or person standing- in parental relation to- such child, stating the place and date of the birth of such child, and also stating the last school attendance of such child, the grade of study pursued, and the name of the school and the name of the teacher in charge. The employer shall preserve such affidavit and keep a complete register of all such affidavits, showing all the facts contained therein.” -

Under the provisions of section 1 of this act the employment of any boy or girl under the age of fourteen years in any mill, workshop, factory, or manufacturing-establishment within this state, either with or without the consent of the parent or guardian of such minor, is absolutely prohibited, while under the provisions of Section 3 of the act children over the age of fourteen and under the age of sixteen years may' be lawfully employed in such plants, provided the employer shall take and preserve the affidavit of the parent or guardian of such child that is required by said section. Section 1 of this act definitely establishes an age limit under which children shall not be employed in industrial plants where- they will be exposed to the danger of personal injury from the machinery used therein. It is a legislative declaration that on account of the immaturity of youth, such a child does not possess sufficient experience, discretion, and judgment to engage in work around machinery which may be inherently dangerous, or which may be dangerous to children on account of their lack of experience and judgment, and the employment of a minor under fourteen years of age, in violation of this statute, is negligence per se which will render the employer civilly liable for any injury to the child which is, in a legal sense, the proximate result of the violation of the statute, and *475 therefore within its protective purposes. There must, of course, be some causal connection between the unlawful employment and the injury to the child, but, in order that the unlawful employment may be held to be the proximate cause of the injury, it is not necessary that the injury be the proximate result of some act or omission of the minor in the discharge of the particular duty assigned to him, but the employer will be held liable if the injury resulted from the employment and was incident to any of the risks or dangers in and about the, business, or inherent in its environment.

While the provisions of the said chapter 314, Laws of 1924, have not been previously construed by this court, the great weight of authority supports the view that the: employment of a minor in violation of a statute abso-i lutely prohibiting such employment is negligence per se. In volume 4, Labatt’s Master and Servant, section 1571a, in discussing this question, the author used the following language:

“Having regard to the character of the facts involved in cases which involve the employment of children under the age limited by a statute, it seems clear that, whenever the injury resulted directly from exposure to the ordinary risks of the employment, the plaintiff is, at the very least, entitled to have his right of recovery determined by the jury. But in the opinion of the present writer, a court would, in such circumstances, always be warranted in holding, as a matter of law, that the illegal employment was the proximate cause of the injury.! There appears to be no ground upon which it can reasonably be contended that an injury so received was not a natural and probable consequence of the tortious act. In fact, the very consideration which has led to the enactment of statutes of this description is that, in certain! employments, children are so likely to be injured that it is desirable, as a matter of public policy, to prevent them entirely from engaging in those employments.

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Bluebook (online)
115 So. 586, 149 Miss. 465, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartwell-handle-co-v-jack-miss-1928.