Girls' Industrial Home v. Fritchey

10 Mo. App. 344, 1881 Mo. App. LEXIS 127
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 10 Mo. App. 344 (Girls' Industrial Home v. Fritchey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Girls' Industrial Home v. Fritchey, 10 Mo. App. 344, 1881 Mo. App. LEXIS 127 (Mo. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The petition alleges that plaintiff is an institution incorporated under certain acts of the Legislature approved in. 1855 and 1857, and set out by their title and the dates of their passage ;‘that the objects of the institution is the providing for the children of depraved or destitute parents ; that in June, 1866, Isabella Semple, then a widow, placed in the charge of defendant her minor child, Annie Semple, and then agreed to pay to plaintiff $4 a month for the board and lodging of said Annie whilst she should be under plaintiff’s care ; that the child remained under plaintiff’s care until she died, on April 15, 1876, still a minor; that plaintiff boarded and lodged said Annie for ninety-six months, at the rate of |4 a month; that plaintiff, during that period, furnished to Annie necessary clothing reasonably worth $277.65 ; and paid for necessary medical attendance for her, $75 ; and for the necessary expenses of her funeral, $59.50; all which is set out in an account filed as an exhibit. The total charge is $796.10. The petition further alleges that Isabella Semple was declared insane by the Probate Court of the city of St. Louis, on March 22, 1876 ; that Fritchey is her guardian, and, as such, has in [346]*346hands the sum of $1,185.76. The answer was a general denial. The causé was tried without, a jury, and there was a finding and judgment for $774.28.

The testimony showed that Mrs. Semple was, in 1866, a very poor woman ; that she placed the child in the institution of plaintiff, and agreed to pay for its board at the rate of $4 a month; that she was to clothe the child herself; that, after the child had been there a week or two, the mother was engaged to wash at the institution, for $12 a month ; that she paid the first month’s board, and no more ; that before the end of the second month the mother became insane, and was sent to the asylum, where she has remained ever since. The ladies in charge of plaintiff’s institution took kind care of the child, not expecting to receive any further pay. The girl had epileptic fits. When she was twelve years old they tried to place her out; and she was in various places for periods amounting altogether to more than a year; but no one would keep her, on account of the fits. The articles charged in the bill'of particulars were all furnished to the child. The items are for clothing, medical attendance, and funeral expenses. The clothing was the plain necessary clothing furnished to the other children in the institution. The medical charge is for giving the child electric baths, as to which the testimony is that they gave her relief; the funeral was a plain one — it cost $59.50 ; and it would have been possible to bury the poor girl, without absolute indecency, for something less than this'. The insane mother was constantly visited by the charitable lady who has the management of the plaintiff’s institution, and manifested a truly maternal anxiety that the funeral should be decent, and that it should be paid for. The testimony shows that the articles furnished were low in price and strictly necessary, except as to funeral expenses. The child was fed and clothed just as the other children in this charitable institution were fed and clothed.

We think that the testimony supports the judgment. The [347]*347mother is the head of the family when the father is dead. She has the same control over the minor children as he had, and we see no reason why her duties to them should not be the same. The English policy on the subject is declared by the statute of 43 Eliz., c. 2, which provides that the father and mother of poor persons shall maintain them at their own charges, if of sufficient ability. Nor do we know any reason or authority for the position assumed by counsel for defendant, that the position of a widowed mother towards her children is not in all respects that of a father, as to every obligation towards them.

There is a conflict of authority as to the ground of the liability of a parent for necessaries furnished to an infant child. Some insist that it springs from the natural duty of the parent to support his offspring; whilst others make it a question of agency and authority, and say that the parent is bound only for what is furnished with his consent, express or implied. The first is the doctrine of Kent and Parsons ; the latter view has been taken in Illinois, Alabama, and Vermont. 2 Kent’s Comm. 191; 1 Pars. on Con. 253; Stanton v. Willson, 3 Day, 37; Edwards v. Davis, 16 Johns. 284; Gordon v. Potter, 17 Vt. 348; Hunt v. Thompson, 3 Scam. 180; Owen v. White, 5 Port. 435; Fowlkes v. Baker, 29 Texas, 135.

In New York it is said (Poock v. Miller, 1 Hilt. 108; Van Valkenberg v. Watson, 13 Johns. 480) that a parent is under a natural obligation to furnish necessaries for his infant children, and, if he neglects to do so, a person who supplies them confers a benefit on the delihquent parent, for which the law raises an implied promise to pay on the part of such parent. If the unfortunate mother of this child had retained her reason, and left her child in this institution, where, the proof is, that all parents are expected to pay something for their children when they can possibly do so, the law under the circumstances would have, implied a promise to pay for such necessary clothing as she had [348]*348agreed to furnish to the child when she placed it there, and-as' she neglected to furnish. And although one who has been a lunatic may avoid his express contracts, yet upon contracts implied in law, as for necessaries for his wife, his liability continues. Pearl v. McDowell, 3 J. J. Marsh. 658. And the testimony in this case shows that so far as this poor lunatic mother could manifest her will, she wished that decent necessaries should be furnished to her child, and that they should be paid for. And even if the English rule be adopted, that the mere moral obligation to maintain his child affords no inference of a promise to do so, yet, when there is some evidence that a parent has desired a stranger to furnish necessaries to his infant and helpless child, very slight circumstances will warrant the inference that the parent who is compelled by disease or the stress of circumstances for a time to abandon his child desires the stranger to continue to furnish necessaries to it at his charge, and that he assents to and authorizes this, and will pay for it if he can. The testimony in the present instance does not present a case of making a parent liable for necessaries furnished to the infant child against the parent’s will. Though, on the authority of Chancellor Kent, even this might be done, for he says that “ during the minority of the child, the parent is absolutely bound to provide reasonably, fpr its maintenance aud education; and he maybe* sued for necessaries furnished to a child under just and reasonable circumstances.” 2 Kent’s Comm. 191. And even where actual authority of the parent to furnish strict necessaries to the son is not directly proved, it may be implied from sufficient circumstances.

Defendant moved to strike out the bill of particulars. We think the motion was properly overruled. Dates were not put opposite each article furnished; but, from the nature of the case, it was -impossible that this should be done. Every article furnished was set out in a separate item, and the dates were given in periods of six months [349]*349each.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Mo. App. 344, 1881 Mo. App. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/girls-industrial-home-v-fritchey-moctapp-1881.