Baker v. Baker
This text of 89 A. 131 (Baker v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivering the opinion of the court:
Bertha A. Baker, the plaintiff in this case, filed a petition for divorce from her husband, Harry G. Baker, the defendant. The petition contained a prayer for the “care and custody of Lealand L. Baker, a minor child bom during the continuance of the marriage.”
Upon the hearing of the case, at the present term, the court granted a decree nisi to the plaintiff, and directed that the decree contain an order awarding to Bertha A. Baker, the plaintiff, the care and custody of the minor child according to the prayer of the petition.
Counsel for the plaintiff presented, and the court subsequently signed, a decree containing the following order:
“It is. further ordered and decreed that the plaintiff Bertha A. Baker be given the sole care and custody of the minor child Lealand L. Baker, bom during the continuance of the marriage of the plaintiff and the defendant in this action.”
Attention is directed to the use of the word “custody” in the decree in place of the word “maintenance” heretofore uniformly used in such decrees.
“That the Superior Court within any of the counties of this state is hereby authorized and empowered in its discretion in any cause of annulment of marriage or divorce now pending or hereafter brought before said court, and in which a decree nisi for annulment of marriage or for divorce from the bonds of matrimony or a decree for a separation is entered by said court to make [440]*440such order for the distribution, care and maintenance of the children bom during the continuance of the marriage sought to be affected by such proceeding, as is just and reasonable and said court may from time to time revise and change such order as occasion may require.” 25 Del. Laws, c. 214.
After the passage of this supplemental act, the court, in making decrees awarding the custody of minor children, followed the wording of the statute, and now for the first time we have changed this recognized practice and have inserted the word “custody” in lieu of the word “maintenance”. We are of the opinion that it clearly is the intent of the statute to give the court authority to make decrees containing provision for the care and custody of minor children.
In view of the language employed by the court in decrees heretofore made, and of that employed in the present decree, we think it proper to say that in no case has the question of maintenance been adjudicated, considered or raised, and the liability of the husband, therefore, for the support of his children would not be in any wise affected by anything contained in any former decree. The court simply used the language of the statute, including the word “maintenance”, but without any thought in any case of adjudicating that fact.
We direct that divorce decrees containing an order for the care and custody of children hereafter follow the language employed in the present case.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
89 A. 131, 27 Del. 438, 4 Boyce 438, 1913 Del. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-baker-delsuperct-1913.