Roberts v. Hillsborough Mills

161 A. 29, 85 N.H. 517, 1932 N.H. LEXIS 116
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 7, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 161 A. 29 (Roberts v. Hillsborough Mills) 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
Roberts v. Hillsborough Mills, 161 A. 29, 85 N.H. 517, 1932 N.H. LEXIS 116 (N.H. 1932).

Opinion

Snow, J.

I. Any workman injured while in the employment of one who has accepted the workmen’s compensation act may elect to receive compensation thereunder or to bring an action at common law for negligence. By the terms of the statute an injured workman is barred from recovery in such an action by “accepting any compensation” under the act, by giving the prescribed notice or by “beginning proceedings therefor in any manner.” P. L., c. 178, s. 11. The pursuit of either the statutory or common-law remedy releases the employer from liability under the other. Gordon v. Company, 83 N. H. 221, 222. The statute presupposes capacity in the actor to make an election of remedies. Davis v. Company, 82 N. H. 87, 88. Such an election requires the exercise of knowledge, judgment and discretion of which the law presumes an infant incapable. There is nothing in the statute indicating any purpose to bestow upon minor workmen power to act sui juris. Moore v. Hoyt, 80 N. H. 168, 170, 171. The use of the general terms “workman” and “workmen” to designate the beneficiaries of the act carries by implication no enabling power to one incompetent to act in his own behalf. On the contrary, the power to petition the court for relief upon failure of the employer to make compensation under the act is expressly given to “the injured workman, or his guardian, if such be appointed ...” s. 25. *519 Like power is given the guardian of “an injured workman” who “shall be mentally incompetent.” s. 33. Not only by the absence of any enabling provision, but by implication from its express terms, the statute leaves workmen who are infants or non compos mentis to the enforcement of their remedies thereunder in the manner in which such rights are customarily asserted. It discloses no intention to trench upon the protection which the present day common law affords to the incompetent. Moore v. Hoyt, supra; Stephens v. Duxbridge Iron Works, [1904] 2 K. B. 225, 229, 230.

Obviously decisions under workmen’s compensation acts which expressly, or by necessary implication, bestow upon infant employees the status of adults are not here pertinent. 14 A. L. R. 818; 33 A. L. R. 337; 49 A. L. R. 1435; 56 A. L. R. 887; 60 A. L. R. 847; 36 Harv. L. Rev. 892.

Ordinarily there are only two recognized ways in which a minor may take binding action in the enforcement or discharge of his legal rights, namely, through a duly appointed guardian acting within his powers, or through his next friend by proceedings in court. Clarke v. Gilmanton, 12 N. H. 515, 517; Beliveau v. Company, 68 N. H. 225, 227; Strong v. Company, 82 N. H. 221, 222, 223. Neither method having been employed, it was his legal right to repudiate the assumed election in his behalf. The ruling of the court that the mother had no authority to bind the plaintiff is sustained.

Neither the statute, nor the procedure applicable to minors, required any particular form of disaffirmance of the election purporting to have been executed in the plaintiff’s behalf. The bringing of the action at law through his next friend was a sufficient repudiation thereof. See Eaton v. Hill, 50 N. H. 235, 241; Stack v. Cavanaugh, 67 N. H. 149, 155.

The defendant, however, contends that as the election was partially executed there could be no rescission thereof except upon a “tender back” of the compensation received. This contention invokes the rule that a minor seeking to avoid an executed contract on the ground of his infancy must account for what he has received under it, by restoring or paying the value of whatever remains in specie within his control and allowing for the benefit derived from whatever cannot be so restored. Hall v. Butterfield, 59 N. H. 354, 358; Bartlett v. Bailey, 59 N. H. 408; Stack v. Cavanaugh, supra, 155; Wooldridge v. Lavoie, 79 N. H. 21, 22. If the rule were otherwise applicable here, the defendant fails for want of proof. Under the rule, failure to restore is a prerequisite to the maintenance of a minor’s *520 action only under the conditions laid down. Of these the defendant had the burden of proof. It does not appear that any part of the moneys paid remained unspent in the plaintiff’s possession or within his control at the date of the writ, and no presumption will be indulged to that effect. The principle of the rule invoked, however, is inapplicable here. Compensation when elected is paid by statutory direction and not by virtue of any contract to accept it. Eleftherion v. Company, 84 N. H. 32, 34. See Moore v. Hoyt, supra, 169. In so far as the acceptance of compensation discharges the defendant’s common-law liability, it is a statutory and not a contractual bar. There being no valid agreement to accept compensation or to discharge the plaintiff’s right of action, there was no contract to rescind. Hamel v. Company, 73 N. H. 386, 389; Genest v. Company, 75 N. H. 365, 368. The defendant’s motion to dismiss was properly denied.

The right of the defendant to repayment, or to an accounting for the sums advanced by way of compensation, arises from an implied obligation based solely on equity and good conscience. It was the defendant’s right to decline to make payments by way of compensation until the' authority of the mother to bind the plaintiff had been established by her appointment as guardian, or by the bringing of the appropriate petition as his next friend. There being no evidence of fraud, the defendant must be presumed to have made the payments with a full knowledge of the legal privileges that the law accords to infants. The extent of the defendant’s legal right in this action, as respects the compensation paid, is to offset the payments made against the damages recovered by the plaintiff. The defendant’s right to such offset is conceded by the plaintiff.

II. The plaintiff was of retarded mentality, having spent four years in making the fourth and fifth grades of the grammar school, following which at the age of sixteen he entered the defendant’s employ as an oiler boy, and was assigned to the “ drawing room.” His principal duty was lubricating machines with a brush or a can. When using the latter he followed instructions to stop the machine and tighten a check nut so that it could not start. His spare time was spent in gathering up waste, sweeping the floors and wiping up oil around the machines. After about a year’s service as oiler boy he was assigned to the operation of three two-spindle gillbox machines, situated in the drawing room. On each machine are two aprons, each six inches in width, which come out between two steel rolls and pass up over a top guide roll in the form of belts and thence downward *521 on the back side, the rolls on which they are belted being two and a half inches in diameter.

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Bluebook (online)
161 A. 29, 85 N.H. 517, 1932 N.H. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-hillsborough-mills-nh-1932.