Esteb v. Esteb

246 P. 27, 138 Wash. 174, 47 A.L.R. 110, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 997
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1926
DocketNo. 19490. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 246 P. 27 (Esteb v. Esteb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Esteb v. Esteb, 246 P. 27, 138 Wash. 174, 47 A.L.R. 110, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 997 (Wash. 1926).

Opinions

Askren, J.

This is an action to modify a decree of divorce to provide for the support of a minor child. From an order modifying the decree, the husband has appealed. Since the hearing in this court, the husband died, and the executrix of his estate has been substituted as appellant.

. The facts follow: In 1915 respondent secured a divorce from decedent. She was granted the custody of their two minor children, Esther and Carmelita, and provision was made for their support. Thereafter, *175 under appropriate proceedings, the divorced wife was granted a certain amount of community property in settlement of the marriage relation. The older daughter, Esther, has since become of age. The younger, Carmelita, became eighteen years of age in July, 1925. The decree originally provided for a certain sum per month for her support until she reached the age of eighteen years, which was the legal age of majority at that time. In 1923, the legislature, by ch. 72, Laws of 1923, p. 222, placed the age of majority for females at twenty-one years. [Rem. 1923 Sup., § 1572.] In January, 1925, the respondent brought this action to modify the decree and to require the decedent to contribute to the support of Carmelita the sum Of $60 per month.

The record shows that the daughter Esther is employed as a stenographer, earning approximately $110 per month; that she boards with her mother and pays forty dollars per month therefor. The mother has no financial means, and her health is such that she is unable to perform any labor other than ordinary household duties. The daughter Carmelita, in February, 1925, began to attend the College of Puget Sound, located in Tacoma, where she is majoring in English, with the intention of becoming a teacher thereof, and the record shows that she is especially adapted for this sort of work. She attempted to take a typewriting course, but was advised by her teacher that she was too nervous to follow that line. In her desire to secure an education quickly, she went to summer school two years, and was enabled to finish the regular four-year course in two and one-half years. The record shows also her special aptitude for the class of work she is taking, it appearing that, owing to her excellent grades in Latin, she was permitted by the foreign language department of the Lincoln high school to take Greek as a *176 freshman, this being, according to the testimony of one witness, the only instance of its kind in the history of the school. While attending the College of Puget Sound, she resides, at the home of respondent.

■ Decedent, after his divorce, remarried twice, the first marriage lasting approximately ninety days, and the second taking place in February, 1923. He had living with him at the.fime of the trial his wife, and two of her sons by a former marriage, one being eleven and the other about eighteen, both of whom are attending school, the older being in high school. Decedent was employed as a pilot conductor by the Chicago, Milwaukee ■& St. Paul Railway Company, in whose employ he had been almost continuously since 1900. Aside from severe nervous trouble which required him to be under restraint for a short period in 1912, and again in 1920, he had been continuously employed. Owing to his nervous condition, and to eye trouble, the position which he' then occupied, which was described by one witness as a sort of “third conductor on the train,” was the only available work that he was capable of performing. During the past three years, his wages averaged something over $3,000 per year. He lived in his own home on a piece of rented ground near Cedar Falls, and in a portion of the Seattle watershed district. He was, at-the time of the hearing, 52 years of age. • He had on hand securities the amount of which he placed at between $9,000 and $11,000, and which drew interest at from é per cent to 7 per cent, averaging, according to his testimony, approximately 5y2 per cent.

• The trial-court, after hearing the evidence-, concluded that Carmelita needed and required the education which she is receiving at the college; modified the previous decree,, and placed the amount for her support at $60 *177 per month, until she became of age, 21 years. The court did not expressly provide that the money should be used to send her to college, but placed it upon the ground that it was necessary for her support. It is quite evident, however, from reading the court’s oral decision, that it was intended and expected that this support money should be used for that purpose.

Many questions are raised by appellant, but we think they may be combined under two assignments of error:

Was this provision of $60 per month, though nominally for the support of the minor daughter, in reality an additional award to the mother?

At the trial of the cause, there crept into the record some testimony regarding the previous troubles of decedent and respondent, especially with reference to the community funds, which decedent had on hand at the time of the divorce, and which he had secreted. It is unnecessary here to detail the lawsuits which followed, including applications to the court for a division of the secreted funds after their whereabouts were ascertained. It is sufficient to say that the record discloses a situation which put decedent in an embarrassing position as to his action in regard to the amount due his divorced wife, although it may be admitted that, legally, the matter had been disposed of and that respondent was in no position in this action to urge decedent’s previous delinquency. Appellant argues from this that, since Carmelita is living at home with her mother, the payment of this $60 per'month for her support was really intended to punish decedent for his previous misconduct, by allowing respondent to receive .the $60 for the purpose of maintaining her home. But while the court may have adverted in its oral opinion to the past conduct of decedent, and to the present financial and physical condition of respondent, we *178 think a fair inference from its decision is that those things were taken into consideration solely for the purpose of determining the condition of respondent, and whether she was able, therefore, to assist her daughter in securing her education, and as to what amount would be required therefor.

The main and serious question in this case is this: Has the court the legal right to compel a divorced father to provide funds for a college education for his minor child whose custody has been given to the mother?

We have never been called upon to decide this precise, question before. If the court has this legal right, it must be upon the ground that the same is necessary, for the duty of a father to provide for his minor child when the custody be in another is restricted to necessaries.

From earliest times the question of what is a “necessary” has frequently perplexed the courts. Under practically all the authorities those things are necessary which include shelter, food, clothing and medical attendance, together with an education. As to what kind of food, clothing, shelter, etc., is necessary, has usually been left to a jury to decide, taking into consideration the minor’s position in life, station in society, and the fortune of the child or its parents.

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Bluebook (online)
246 P. 27, 138 Wash. 174, 47 A.L.R. 110, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esteb-v-esteb-wash-1926.