Power v. Harlow

23 N.W. 606, 57 Mich. 107, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 750
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 23 N.W. 606 (Power v. Harlow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Power v. Harlow, 23 N.W. 606, 57 Mich. 107, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 750 (Mich. 1885).

Opinion

Oooley, C. J.

This case has once before been in this Court, and the opinion filed in deciding it is reported in 53 Mich. 507. It was sent back for a new trial, and has been tried with the result that the plaintiff has recovered a considerable judgment.

The action was brought to recover damages for an injury which is alleged to have been caused by the negligence of 'the defendant’s servant. The material facts, as they were brought out on the former trial, are the following:

Defendant is owner of a farm near the city of Marquette, which is managed for him by one Hodgson. Parcels are leased from the farm to laboring men for the raising of vegetables, and the lessees cultivate these parcels with the assistance of their wives and children. The manager has been accustomed to use dynamite on the farm to rid it of stumps. The dynamite is put up in rough wood boxes, and with it, in a small tin box, are the exploders. These are shaped like ordinary percussion caps, but much larger, and are partially filled with a fulminate, which is very powerful, and liable to explode if accidentally struck or picked with a pin or knife, or touched with fire. In the spring of 1883 a box of the dynamite with exploders was deposited by Hodgson under a small temporary shed near where parcels had been leased, and within a few feet of where the tenants would pass in going to and from their parcels for purposes of cultivation. Plaintiff’s father was one of these tenants, and on July 4, 1883, the father was at work on his parcel, and plaintiff, who was then eight years and four months old, went with a brother who was two years older to take the father his dinner. They worked with the father awhile, and then moved about at pleasure in the vicinity of the shed. The plaintiff looked into the shed, saw the box there, looked into it, saw the exploders, took out one, and, being aware of no danger, struck it with a stone, when it exploded and injured him severely.

[110]*110This Court held, when the case was here before, that there-was evidence to go to the jury of negligence on the part of the defendant, in keeping the exploders thus exposed, and in dangerous proximity to where persons were accustomed to-pass and repass, and where small children, who were rightfully in the vicinity, and who were without knowledge of the peril, might take and handle them. It was also held that, as there was no distinct path for the tenants and their families in going back and forth, the plaintiff could not be-regarded as a trespasser in going to the shed, which was but a few feet from where a direct line from the highway to his-father’s parcel would pass ; and that defendant, knowing that his tenants made use of the services of their children, should have anticipated that they would follow their childish instincts, in taking and handling what was left exposed, when they were aware of no harm in doing so.

On the second trial the efforts of the defense were very largely given to showing that the plaintiff knew the danger of handling the explosives, and that he had repeatedly been warned to keep away from and not handle them. Also that the father of the plaintiff was grossly negligent in permitting the boy to be about the shed where he knew the dynamite and explosives were stored. The counsel for the defendant in this Court has presented succinctly,' but in a very forcible manner, the evidence given upon this branch of the case, and it must be confessed that the showing is a very strong one; so strong that, perhaps, if we were to pass upon the facts, we might be constrained to accept it as conclusive. But the jury) have given their verdict upon the facts; and we review, not the conclusions of the jury, but the rulings of the court.

The errors assigned relate, in the main, to the action of the court in submitting the case to the jury. Only one ruling upon evidence is complained of. For the purpose of showing that the plaintiff knew the danger of handling the exploders, and had been warned to let them alone, the defense called Dr. Northrup, who attended upon the plaintiff after the injury, and showed by him that some one, in the presence of the plaintiff, — and his recollection was it was the [111]*111plaintiff’s mother, — made the statement that the boy had been frequently warned of the presence of the exploders, and told to let them alone. The plaintiff was at the time unde? the influence of an anmsthetic, and the doctor could not say that he was in a condition to understand what was going on about him. He was lying on a lounge and crying. Upon this evidence the trial judge remarked : A statement by the mother, not in the presence or hearing of the father, or the boy, the plaintiff in this case, in my judgment, would not be admissibleand he ordered it struck out.

It is claimed by the defense that the mother, as well as the father, was natural guardian of the boy (East Saginaw C. R. Co. v. Bohn 27 Mich. 503), that as such she was chargeable with care for him, and her negligence is imputable to him. The deduction from this is that her admissions are evidence against him to prove his or her fault. No authority is cited to this, and we are aware of none. The natural guardian has no power to admit away the rights of the ward whose person is committed to his custody. He is guardian of the person only, having no control of any estate the ward may possess, and could not be given a control except on judicial proceedings and after giving security for responsible care. This being so, it cannot be plausibly claimed that by an irresponsible admission he may deprive his ward of important rights. A right of action is as much property as is a corporeal possession, and, in the case of a minor, is protected bjr the law in the same way and under the same securities. The mother could not release it even for full consideration and by the most formal instrument; much less, therefore, 'could she, by mere word of mouth, when not under oath, or otherwise chargeable with responsibility, destroy his right of action by her admissions. The circuit judge was therefore right in his ruling. As the evidence did not fairly tend to show the plaintiff heard what was said, we have no occasion to consider what the ruling should have been had that fact appeared.

The following requests for instructions, on the part of the defense, were refused:

[112]*112“There was nothing illegal/for the defendant to permit his servants in charge of the work of the farm to use explosives for the purpose of taking out stumps, and he had a perfect right to do so, and to keep the explosives where he saw fit upon his farm, provided he or his servants used reason.able care to see that all who had a right to be upon said farm were informed of the dangerous character of such explosives, if they did not know such facts, and also where the same were stored.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 N.W. 606, 57 Mich. 107, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/power-v-harlow-mich-1885.