Quigley v. Murphy

4 Ohio N.P. 1
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. 1 (Quigley v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quigley v. Murphy, 4 Ohio N.P. 1 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

Pratt, J.,

Gentlemen of the Jury: — The plaintiff in this case, Edward Quigley, brings this action against the defendant, Michael H. Murphy, and seeks to recover from said defendant, the father of two children, alleged in the petition to be of the ages respectively one of ten years in August, 1894, and the other of seven years in February, 1894, for the'board, nursing, care, clothing and medicines which he claims that he furnished to the defendant’s said children during a period of two hundred and twenty weeks, between the thiry-first day of December, 1889, and the first day of May, 1894; and plaintiff asks for judgment against the defendant for the sum of $2200 and interest from May 1st, 1894. The petition in which plaintiff sets forth his claim alleges that Claudia Q. Murphy is the wife of the defendant Murphy, and the mother of the children in question. That on or about December 31, 1889, the defendant and his said wife entered into an agreement, by the terms of which they were to live separate and apart, but neither to forfeit any-right as regards their children, and that such children should have their home with the plaintiff and his wife. It is also alleged that the defendant agreed that the plaintiff should be paid $5.00 a week for their board. The petition also alleges that the defendant entirely neglected and failed to furnish the necessaries of life— the necessary clothing, care, nursing or medicines, for these children, and that by and with the authority of the defendant’s wife — Claudia Q. Murphj' — acting for and on behalf of her husband, he did during two hundred and twenty weeks supply the said children with their board and other necessaries of life, to-wit: care, clothing and medicine, and he alleges the value of the boarding, clothing and medicines to be $10.00 per week.

The defendant files his answer to the petition — which is designated as the second amended petition in the case — and the one on which the claim now under consideration is being tried, and he answers it denying each and every allegation in the petition except as to certain matters which he admits; and it is proper that I should call your attention to the matters which he admits in his answer, because whatever is admitted by one party or the other you take as being conceded by him, and therefore not necessarily in issue. After this general denial, the admissions that he makes are as follows: that he is the father of the two children in question, and that Claudia Q. Murphy is the wife of the defendant. He further admits that on or about the 31st day of December, 1889, the said defendant entered into an agreement with his wife, Claudia Q. Murphy, un[3]*3der and by the terms of which they were to live separate and apart, and that said contract in no way changed the rights of either of said parents as to their said children; and he further admits that it was further contracted by the terms of said agreement that the children should temporarily, and for no fixed or stated time, have tfieir home with the plaintiff and his wife, Eliza Quigley.

He further says that after the making of said agreement between the defendant and his said wife, Claudia Q. Murphy, and on or about the 1st of January, 1890, this defendant left his children with the plaintiff, who agreed to board them for the sum of $20.00 per month. That under and in pursuance of said agreement between plaintiff and said defendant, said children remained with the plaintiff for a little over two months, until on or about the 5th day of March, 1890, and then he alleges that, “On or about the 5th day of March, 1890, this defendant, with the full knowledge, acquiescence and consent of the said Claudia Q. Murphy, placed his children in the Ursuline Convent of the Sacred Heart in the city of Toledo, Ohio, and arranged for their remaining in said convent permanently; that said convent is a Catholic institution, and that said defendant and his wife are both members of said church; that at said convent said children were well and properly cared for and educated; that said convent was in every respect a proper place for said children.”

Then he further alleges that some time afterward, to-wit, on or about April 2nd, 1890, the plaintiff and the said Claudia Q. Murphy, acting in conjunction with said plaintiff and in no wise thereunto authorized by the defendant, unlawfully, fraudulently, and by deception practiced upon the Mother Superior and other inmates of said convent,and without the knowledge or consent of said defendant, took the said children from said convent, and defendant says that whatever, if any, nursing, care, clothing and medicine, or either, that said plaintiff furnished said children from said time, have been furnished voluntarily and without the knowledge or consent of this defendant, and without any agreement or contract with him or on his part, actual or implied. Then he further alleges that he has been always ready, able and willing to furnish the necessaries of life for said children, and to furnish them proper nursing, care, clothing, medicine and instruction, and has never neglected in any way his said children.

To this answer plaintiff tiles a reply, and in that reply he first admits that on or about the 5th day of March, 1890, the defendant took his said children from the residence of the plaintiff, where they were being boarded and cared for by him as set forth in the petition, to the XJrsuline Convent. A.nd now comes the denial: “But plaintiff says that the defendant took said children to said convent without the acquiescence or consent of his wife, Claudia Q. Murphy.” Plaintiff admits that said convent is a Catholic institution — and now comes the denial again: “Plaintiff says that he has no knowledge, and therefore denies, that said convent was a proper place for children of such tender years.” Then, in reference to the allegation made in the answer as to the taking of these children from the convent, after that, he says: “That afterwards, to-wit, on or about April 2nd, 1890, the wife of defendant, said Claudia Q. Murphy, upon going to said convent to visit said children, found them very much depressed in spirits, sick and discontented, and said Claudia Q. Murphy, fearing for their health and believing that if they were kept away from the home such as she and her parents could furnish, the said children were likely to fade away and die, she did, of her own free will and accord, take said children from said convent, and took them back to the residence of plaintiff, where, at the request of said Claudia Q. Murphy [4]*4and under the express and implied promises of the defendant, this plaintiff did board, nurse, clothe and otherwise care for said children as set forth in the petition.

“And plaintiff further says that it is not true,and he therefore denies that he ever acted in conjunction with said Claudia Q. Murphy in removing said children from said convent, or had anything to do whatever with said removal; but, on the contrary, the plaintiff had no knowledge of their being taken aivay until they were brought to his home by said Claudia Q. Murphy.”

And further, by way of denial, ho says that he denies that said children were unlawfully, fraudulently or by deception of any kind taken from said convent.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quigley-v-murphy-ohctcompllucas-1897.