Norris v. Stephens
Norris v. Stephens
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Norris brought this action to recover of Stephens for services rendered him as a laborer upon his farm.
The question is, was the plaintiff legally bound or apprenticed to. the defendant by the order of the county court.
The plaintiff’s father died during the late war, leaving a widow and five children, of whom the plaintiff was the oldest. The proof indicates that the widow was without property, but supported her family by her labor, with the assistance of the plaintiff, who was hired to the defendant for one or two years previous to September, 1870, at seven or eight dollars per month. About September, 1870, there, was some misunderstanding between the plaintiff and his mother, the nature and extent of which is left somewhat uncertain. It is claimed, for the defendant, that the plaintiff was abandoned and driven from home by his mother; but this is denied. On the 5th of September, 1870, the county court made the following order: “On motion, the court bound Isaac Norris to John H. Stephens, with him to live and work as an apprentice, and the said John H. Stephens came into open court and executed a bond, with Vincent Boring as security,. which bond is on file in the clerk’s office.” A bond was executed in substantially the usual form, but was not recorded as required. The age of the plaintiff at the time is somewhat uncertain. Accord
The question is, whether the binding was legal and -gave the defendant the right to the plaintiff’s services accordingly. By the Code, sec. 2547, “where the estate of an orphan is of so small value that no person will educate him or her for the profits thereof\ such orphan shall, by direction of the court, be apprenticed. . . . ” And by sec. 1622: “The county •court may bind out as apprentices suitable orphan ■children of any person unable to provide for their support. ...” Both of these sections are taken from the act of 1762, ch. 5, sec. 2549. Sec. 2549, from the act of 1825, ch. 46, sec. 1, enacts that “any ■child totally abandoned by the father, and for whom he fails to provide support- and maintenance, may be bound .out- by the county court as though the father was dead. But no child shall be bound out unless the assent of the mother is first given in open court, •or she be unable to provide for his maintenance.” It is argued that the provision in the above section,
If the mother be not able to support the child it may be bound out, notwithstanding she refuses to assent. But, in such case, ought the mother to have notice of the proceeding? This would seem reasonable, although we find no provision requiring notice-to her. We are not disposed to adopt rulings calculated to embarrass the action of the county court on. this subject. Their jurisdiction is general and unquestioned, and if that court determines that the person is a minor orphan, without estate and a pauper, and unable to procure his or her own support; that the mother is unable to niaintain the child, or has abandoned it, and it is a suitable person to be bound out, we would hesitate to declare the order or judgment void where, as in this case, it is brought collaterally in question. But the question is, whether or not it should appear from the record that the court adjudged or determined the existence of these facts. We hold that where it appears, as in this
The judgment will be reversed and a new trial', awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- J. B. Norris v. J. H. Stephens
- Status
- Published