Kriedo v. Kriedo

150 A. 720, 159 Md. 229, 1930 Md. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 10, 1930
Docket[No. 14, April Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 150 A. 720 (Kriedo v. Kriedo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kriedo v. Kriedo, 150 A. 720, 159 Md. 229, 1930 Md. LEXIS 108 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

Digges, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 10th day of February, 1927, the appellant was divorced a vinculo matrimonii from the appellee, by decree of the Circuit Court ETo. 2 of Baltimore City. The decree provided that the appellant (the mother) should have the guardianship and custody of Morris Kriedo, the minor child of the parties, with privilege to the appellee (father) to see the child at all reasonable times, and that the father pay to the mother the sum of seven dollars per week, accounting from the date of the decree, for the support of said child, until he should become self-supporting or until the further order of the court. It appears the decree was in conformity with an agreement entered into between the parties, except that the chancellor added “or until the further order of the court.’7

*231 On Angnst 1st, 1929, the appellant filed her petition in the divorce proceedings, in which, after reciting the decree in the original case, it is in substance alleged that Morris Kriedo was eight years of age at the time of its passage; that he was taken seriously ill with appendicitis on or about March 28th, 1929, was promptly taken to a hospital, wherein he underwent two operations, and as a result of said illness he died on April 10th, 1929, at which time he was ten years of age; that during said illness and by reason of said death the appellant incurred expenses for hospital, medical, surgical, and-funeral services, in the aggregate amount of $712.10; that the seven dollars per week allowed by the decree was hardly sufficient, and was only intended, to cover the actual and ordinary expenses for the support of the child, and- did not cover such expenses as were incident to his illness and death; that the appellant is in poor health, scarcely able to support herself; that the appellee is a diamond setter and watchmaker, and also conducts a jewelry store; that the appellant has borrowed money and paid the hospital and funeral expenses, amounting respectively to $290.10 and $110.00, which she is obligated to repay; that the bills of Dr. Silverman, for $250, and Dr. Abrams, for $62, are unpaid. The petition prays for an order directing the appellee to pay the appellant the amount of the hospital and funeral bills theretofore paid by her, and also pay Dr. Silverman and Dr. Abrams their bills as aboye set forth. A demurrer being interposed, and sustained by the court, this appeal resulted.

It is settled in this state that a father is under the common law obligation to support a minor child, without regard to a decree divorcing the parents. Blades v. Szatai, 151 Md. 644. The question there considered was the liability of a deceased father’s estate for the payment of support money during minority as awarded by decree divorcing the parents and giving the custody of the child to the mother. It was there said: “The father was under the common law obligation to support his child during its minority, and this obligation continued without regard to a divorce decree, unless in that decree the court should order that it be supported by some *232 one other than the father. The fact that the decree ordered the father to pay three dollars per week to the mother for the support of the child, in no way affected his common law obligation to support it, but only prescribed the amount to be paid for its support, and through whom the child was entitled to receive it.” It is equally well settled that parties to divorce proceedings cannot by agreement between themselves fix the amount necessary for the support and nfaintenance of their minor children, so as to bind the courts. The court may adopt the amount agreed upon and incorporate it in the decree, but it has the power to change or modify the decree in this respect, when it shall be made satisfactorily apparent that new or changed conditions or circumstances make a modification necessary. Alvey v. Hartwig, 106 Md. 254; Boggs v. Boggs, 138 Md. 422; Melson v. Melson, 151 Md. 196; Code, art. 16, sec. 39; Hood v. Hood, 138 Md. 366.

The petition here specifically alleges that the claims of Dr. Silverman and Dr. Abrams, amounting to $312, have not been paid, and prays that an order be passed by the chancellor directing such payment. It is clear, we think, that if the appellee is indebted to anybody for this amount, it is to the doctors and not to the appellant. The implied obligation on the part of the father to pay for necessaries for the support of a minor child is to the person furnishing same; this implication arising by reason of the duty and obligation imposed upon the father by law to provide properly and reasonably for the support of minor children, according to their station in life and the financial ability of the father. That this obligation is to the person providing the child with such support or rendering necessary services has been definitely determined by this court. McCurley v. Stockbridge, 62 Md. 422; Carter v. Carter, 156 Md. 500. In the last mentioned case, which was an effort by a divorced wife to obtain in a court of equity payment by the husband of counsel fees for .services rendered by attorneys in resisting the husband’s right to have the custody of a minor child, the court, after first determining that such an obligation was at law and not in equity, said: “If the difficulty of finding any ground for *233 the chancellor to entertain this petition under the circumstances of this case be passed, there are two insuperable objections to the allowance of the fee to the mother. In the first place, she has not shown that she has paid anything out on account of fees in the present matter, and so, if any liability could exist on the part of the father, it would be to the solicitor, who was employed by the mother and who remains unpaid.” It follows, first, that the responsibility of the father, for the doctors’ bills which have not been paid, is to the physicians rendering the service and not to the mother; and, second, that the enforcement of such claim by the doctors must be sought in a court of law. Neither do we find any substantial distinction between the mother’s claim and those of the physicians, her claim being, for hospital and funeral services rendered the deceased child at the mother’s request, and which have been paid by her. In Carter v. carter, supra, it was also said by Judge Parke, speaking for the court: “It follows that, although there can be no liability in this case of the father to the mother for her counsel fees by reason of their former marital relation, yet, by reason of his parental obligation, the father may be liable, even to the mother, in the absence of any reason for imposing upon her Lis primary obligation, if, upon his default, she has supplied the minor with necessaries. This obligation is at law and not in equity.”

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Bluebook (online)
150 A. 720, 159 Md. 229, 1930 Md. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kriedo-v-kriedo-md-1930.