Cory v. Cook

53 A. 315, 24 R.I. 421
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 30, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 A. 315 (Cory v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cory v. Cook, 53 A. 315, 24 R.I. 421 (R.I. 1902).

Opinion

Tillinghast, J.

The principal questions presented by the record in this case relate to the testimony and rulings of the court bearing upon the defendant’s account in set-off.

The plaintiff is the son-in-law of the defendant, and his action is based upon a negotiable promissory note given by her to him on September 30, 1897, for the sum of $669, with interest at five per cent. The account in set-off filed by the defendant is for board, clothing, care, schooling, etc., furnished to the plaintiff’s minor daughter by the defendant. The plaintiff had voluntarily abandoned his wife and children, and had left them with the defendant — his mother-in-law — before the time when the account in set-off commenced to run ; that is, before any of the articles mentioned in said account were furnished.

*422 The amount of the plaintiff’s note, with interest to April 17, 1902, when the verdict was rendered, was $821.10, and the claim in set-off, if fully allowed, amounted to $716.04. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of $71.08, and the case is now before us on the plaintiff’s petition for a new trial on the grounds of certain alleged erroneous rulings of the trial court; that there was manifest error on the part of the jury in computing the amount due on the note; and also that the verdict w;as against the law and the evidence.

1. It is evident from the record that the jury made an error of $33.98 in computing the interest on the note, and that this error arose from their taking and adopting a computation of interest which had been made at a previous time and which appeared on the back of the note. Their verdict was therefore too small by the ab.ove amount, even conceding that they were warranted in allowing the defendant’s account in set-off in its entirety. But we do not think they were warranted in allowing said account in full. There is uncontradicted evidence that the mother of the girl, Alice, furnished some of the articles enumerated and charged in the account in set-off, with money which she obtained elsewhere than from the defendant. It is true, the mother testifies that she only furnished a few of the things in this way, and that she cannot specify them or state what amount she paid for them. But as it devolves upon the defendant to prove her account or some part thereof specifically, and as the jury had no right to allow for any items not furnished by her, it is clear that their verdict, whereby they allowed the full amount of the defendant’s set-off, was too small. And as it is impossible to determine from the present state of the record how much too small it was, it cannot be allowed to stand.

(1) 2. Plaintiff’s counsel contends that as it appears in evidence that the defendant’s husband was living with her as the head of the family during quite a part of the time covered by the bill of items, and that he provided for the family, paying the bills and “running the household.” whatever board was fur- . nished to the plaintiff’s daughter was furnished by him and *423 not by the defendant, and hence that the latter cannot recover therefor.

In the absence of any evidence to the effect that the defendant furnished said board out of her own estate, or that her husband furnished it with the understanding that she was to receive the pay therefor as her own money, we think the plaintiff’s point is well taken. Where board is furnished in a household it is certainly to be presumed, in the absence of any agreement or understanding to the contrary, that the head of the household is entitled to the compensation therefor. Moreover, it appears in evidence in the case at bar that after the death of defendant’s husband, her son, John C. Cook, who had charge of settling his father’s estate, and who was acting for his mother and sister (plaintiff’s wife) in that regard, went to the plaintiff and attempted to have him allow, by way of part payment of a note held by him against the. father, a claim, in favor of his father (defendant’s husband), for the board of the girl Alice during the time that she boarded in the family prior to the death of his father. It would seem, therefore, that the defendant herself at that time treated the claim for board as being due to her husband’s estate and not to her individually. The court correctly charged the jury upon this branch of the case as follows : “If you come to the conclusion, upon the testimony, that Charles Cook, the defendant’s husband, who is now dead, was the head of the family and was entitled to recover for any board which had been furnished, then, for so much of that board as accrued prior to the death of Charles Cook, there can be no recovery or off set on the part of this defendant Abby B. Cook; and if you come to that conclusion'it will bring you down to so much of the charges as have been made since the death of Charles Cook.’-’

As the jury must have found that under the evidence the defendant’s husband was not entitled to recover for said board up to the time of his death, and1 as said finding was clearly against the evidence, this furnishes another ground for a new trial.

(2) 3. Amongst the items contained in the defendant’s account *424 in set-off is one for tuition, books, etc., amounting to $84.10. This amount was paid by the defendant for sending the plaintiff’s daughter Alice to a commercial school in Fall River, Mass., for the purpose of giving her a knowledge of bookkeeping, so that she might be enabled thereby to earn her own living. Plaintiff’s counsel objected to this item, on the ground that it was not in the line of necessaries, and requested the court to instruct the jury that the plaintiff was not liable therefor; but the court left it to the jury to say whether said charge was a reasonable and proper one, in view of the plaintiff’s means.

Whether, in view of the extreme weakness of the evidence bearing upon the financial standing of the plaintiff, this request might not properly have been granted, we need not now decide. But if, in another trial of the case, evidence shall be produced from which the jury can intelligently estimate the father’s means, we think that it should be left to them,.under the circumstances, to say whether the schooling furnished was not reasonably necessary, and whether the father is not liable for the expense incurred by the defendant in furnishing it.

That a father who abandons his minor children is liable to those who furnish necessaries for their support upon his credit, is a proposition too well established to be questioned.

The general liability of the father to support and provide for his children continues until they are in a condition to provide for themselves ; and it is not limited to the bare necessaries of life, but includes all of those things which are reasonably necessary to the comfort, health, training, and education of the child suitable to his degree and station. In Schouler’s Domestic Relations, 5th ed. section 411, the author says: “Food, lodging, clothes, medical attendance, and education, to use concise words, constitute the five leading elements in the doctrine of the infant’s necessaries. But to apply a practical legal test, we must construe these five words in a very liberal sense, and somewhat according to the social position, fortune, prospects, age, circumstances and general situation of the infant himself.” Smith on Contracts, p.

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Bluebook (online)
53 A. 315, 24 R.I. 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cory-v-cook-ri-1902.