Hackenberg v. Hackenberg

32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 223, 17 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 456, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 339
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedMay 23, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 223 (Hackenberg v. Hackenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hackenberg v. Hackenberg, 32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 223, 17 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 456, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 339 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

HENRY, J.

In the common pleas court the relation of the parties “was the same as here, the plaintiff claiming in her petition relief upon three causes of action, all of which grew out of a divorce proceeding in Lorain county in 1903, wherein the plaintiff was divorced from the defendant and given the custody of their ¡minor child. By alimony agreement made out of court, there was transferred to the plaintiff the homestead in this city, worth from $7,500 to $8,000; the household goods therein contained, and stocks of various companies in par value as follows: National Carbon Co., $10,000; Dow Chemical Co., $10,000; Iroquois Portland Cement Co., $5,000.

Since the settlement, the last named company has become insolvent, and the Dow Chemical Co. stock has depreciated in the market.

Plaintiff’s causes of action were, first, for the support and maintenance of the parties’ son until his majority; second, for breach of guaranty that said' stocks would pay dividends at a rate not less than 6 per cent.; third, for deceit in representing the Iroquois Portland Cement Co. stock to be worth par, when in fact it was at the time of transfer worthless. The trial court directed a verdict against the plaintiff as to the first and third causes of action but submitted the second cause of action to the jury, which found against the plaintiff.

By the first cause of action, the plaintiff sought to recover the reasonable value of the support and cost of maintenance as afforded by her to her son, so far as such provision was necessary and proper for the youth’s uprearing in his walk of life. The defendant introduced more than a score of letters written during the latter’s minority, in which he declares his willingness to provide for the lad, and demands that he be consulted with and applied to respecting the boy’s needs. Although these contained some irrelevant matter they were properly admitted in evidence upon the theory that if the father was willing and able to supply his son’s needs, the plaintiff had no right to anticipate his action, notwithstanding that the custody of the lad had been awarded to her' by the decree of divorce, without express provision for his support. The rule of Pretzinger v. Pretzinger, 45 [225]*225Ohio St. 452 [15 N. E. 471; 4 Am. St. 542] stands, of course, unchallenged to the effect that:

1 ‘ The obligation of the father to provide reasonably for the support of his minor child, until the latter is in a condition to provide for his own support, is not impaired by a decree which divorces the wife ‘a vinculo’ on account of the husband’s misconduct, gives to her the custody, care and nurture of the child, and allows her a sum of money as alimony, but with no provision for the child’s support. The mother may recover a reasonable compensation from the father for necessaries furnished by her to the child after such decree, and may maintain an original action for such compensation against the father, in a court other than that in which the divorce was granted.”

. The father accordingly made a regular allowance, such as he-deemed sufficient to meet the cost of his son’s board and lodging, this part of his maintenance being necessarily furnished by the mother as. an inseparable incident to her right of custody óf the boy, so long as he remained at her home. For his clothing, tuition, pocket money, etc., except in so far as these might be supplied out of said allowance, the father insisted that he should be consulted about, and should authorize in advance, instead of having his credit pledged therefor at the mother’s sole discretion.

The letters to his son, above referred to, were admittedly received by the latter and read by both him and his mother, who, however, refused to accede to the father’s views. The expenses sought to be recovered under the first cause of action below were, therefore, incurred and paid by the mother, and not by -the father.

We fail to find any authority precisely in point upon the question, but upon mature deliberation we hold, that the theory entertained by the court below is correct, and that the mother, notwithstanding that she was decreed the personal custody of the child, was not thereby clothed with any authority' in the first instance, and until the father neglected or refused to make suitable provisions for his son’s maintenance, to incur expense in that behalf, except only with regard to those matters, to-wit, board and lodging, which were naturally incident to the custody of the youth while residing with his mother. In other words, she was in no better position, by virtue of her right of custody, [226]*226to pledge the father’s credit for his son’s maintenance, except in the particulars mentioned, than a stranger would be in. Any one may provide necessaries for a child and charge the same to the father, but not before the latter has refused or neglected so to do. Nor has the mother any wider authority, where the family relations have been disrupted by a decree of divorce obtained by her for the husband’s aggression, and awarding to her the custody of their child, save only that she may recover from the father in any case the reasonable cost of the child’s board and lodging.

An attempt was made by the plaintiff below to produce evidence, consisting of her own testimony and that of an expert witness, to show that the reasonable cost of the support furnished by her to her son in this case amounted to a sum exceeding the allowance paid her for that purpose. She was asked:

“Mrs. Hackenberg, you may tell the jury what, in your opinion, was the reasonable value of the support of, care, clothing, educating, and similar things, afforded your son by you during the period from March 27, 1903, to July 7, 1907 ?”

Objection to this question was sustained and exception noted, and an offer made to show “that the witness would say that such things were of the value of $125 per month. ’ ’

It is manifest that this question embraces items which, on the view above expressed, could not afford a basis of recovery without proof of the father’s refusal or neglect to provide them, and it is further objectionable because the expression “similar things ’ ’ calls for the conclusion of the witness as to what things .were similar. There.was therefore no error in this ruling.

For reasons already explained, the testimony of the plaintiff as to the clothes bought for the son was properly excluded. Her testimony as to the disposition of all her income offered for the purpose of showing by the elimination of the expenditures made for herself, that the residue was the cost of maintaining her son, is of course incompetent as a method of proving that fact.

Mrs. Mary McNeil, experienced in keeping a high class boarding house for many years, testified as to the cost of board such as that furnished young Hackenberg. This testimony was [227]*227afterward properly excluded, because it appeared that her experience was limited to the keeping of boarders in a household of which she was herself a member, and in connection with which she obtained her own support, and she was admittedly unable to separate her costs from her profits.

There was no competent evidence left before the jury to show that the reasonable expense incurred by the mother for boarding and lodging her son exceeded the allowance made to her by the father for that purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 223, 17 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 456, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hackenberg-v-hackenberg-ohcirctcuyahoga-1911.