T v. T

216 Va. 867
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 23, 1976
DocketRecord No. 750537
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 216 Va. 867 (T v. T) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T v. T, 216 Va. 867 (Va. 1976).

Opinion

216 Va. 867 (1976)

T
v.
T

Record No. 750537.

Supreme Court of Virginia.

April 23, 1976.

Marshall R. Williams, for appellant.

No brief or argument for appellee.

Case submitted on brief for appellant.

Present, All the Justices.

1. Before marriage, husband had promised to treat pregnant wife's child by another as if it were his own, thereby agreeing to assume the child support obligation of a biological father. Marriage ensued and husband carried out obligation under contract during more than four years of marriage. Express oral contract for support of child has been established.

2. Contract within ambit of statute of frauds is not void ab initio but cannot be enforced. Statute is not enforced when to do so would cause a fraud and a wrong to be perpetrated. Under proper conditions equity will avoid the statute and enforce an oral agreement. Ordinarily marriage is not such part performance as will take a case out of the statute. But here wife abandoned her plans for employment, and for disposition by adoption of her expected baby, and there was substantial performance by both husband and wife under the agreement for more than four years.

3. To establish equitable estoppel it is not necessary to show actual fraud, but only that person to be estopped has misled another to his prejudice or that the innocent party acted in reliance upon the conduct or misstatements by the person to be estopped. Under circumstances, husband is estopped from pleading the statute of frauds.

Appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Nelson County. Hon. Robert C. Goad, judge presiding.

COCHRAN

COCHRAN, J., delivered the opinion of the court.

In this divorce case the novel question for our determination on appeal is whether the former husband, who knew, when he married his wife, that she was pregnant by another, has a continuing obligation, surviving the divorce, to support the child born during their marriage.

The Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court of Nelson County held that the husband was liable for support of the child, and ordered him to make payments as specified. Upon appeal to the trial court, the support proceeding was consolidated with the divorce suit pending therein. The trial court granted the wife a divorce a vinculo matrimonii from the husband on the ground of desertion but, by order entered January 22, 1975, from which the wife has appealed, relieved the husband of any duty to support the child.

The facts are not in dispute. Late in the year 1968, the wife, who was then single, became pregnant. She made plans to move to another state, have her baby, and then put the child up for adoption. To this end she obtained employment in New York City as a nurse. With full knowledge of her pregnancy the husband promised her that if she would forego her plans and marry him, he would care for her child after it was born "as if it were his own". The wife did not go to New York and married her husband on December 16, 1968.

It was stipulated in the trial court that the husband was not the biological father of the wife's child, a girl born June 16, 1969, in Portsmouth Naval Hospital. With the husband's approval, however, the hospital named him as the father on the birth certificate. He also had the child listed as a dependent for purposes of receiving additional pay and allowances from his employer, the United States Navy, which treated her as his dependent. When the wife's mother confronted him with the fact that he could not be the child's father, the husband made firm protestations to her that he was the father.

For more than four years the husband permitted the child to take and use his name, and he held himself out to the public as her father. She was always listed as a dependent on the couple's tax returns. Prior to the husband's desertion and abandonment of his wife on August 10, 1973, there is no evidence that he ever denied being the father of the little girl.

The ruling of the trial court, as explicated in its memorandum opinion, was based on the fact that the husband was not the biological father of the child because, at the time of her conception, he was in *869 the Navy overseas and could not possibly have had access to the mother. The court noted that the common law rule excluding testimony by either spouse as to non-access, to prove that a child born during a marriage is illegitimate, has been abrogated in Virginia. Code || 20-82 and 20-88.29 (Repl. Vol. 1975), and | 8-287 (Repl. Vol. 1957). The court found from the stipulation and testimony heard ore tenus that the presumption of the legitimacy of the child born during the marriage was fully rebutted and overcome, as permitted by Gibson Gibson, 207 Va. 821, 153 S.E.2d 189 (1967), and Smith Perry, Adm'r, and Als., 80 Va. 563 (1885). Since the child was not the husband's natural or legally adopted child he had no statutory duty to support her. Absent such statutory duty, the court concluded that the husband must be relieved from making child support payments.

The wife does not dispute the general rule that a husband is not liable, merely because of his status as husband, for the support of his wife's illegitimate child born before or after marriage. Annot., 90 A.L.R.2d 584, 585 (1963). She maintains, however, that her former husband is liable for child support in this case because of an express oral contract, estoppel, common law adoption, and the husband's standing in loco parentis as to the child, four theories which have been recognized in similar cases in other jurisdictions. If any one of these theories is applicable, of course, the order of the trial court must be reversed.

In Clevenger Clevenger, 189 Cal.App.2d 658, 11 Cal.Rptr. 707, 90 A.L.R.2d 569 (1961), on which the wife chiefly relies, the California court approved in principle the imposition of liability upon a husband for support of his wife's illegitimate child, born during the marriage, where the facts establish either an express agreement for the maintenance of the child or an estoppel of the husband to deny that he is the father. Custody and control of the child and the right to its earnings would constitute sufficient consideration to the husband to support the contract theory. Recognizing that to hold the husband to a contract there must be an express agreement and partial performance thereof, the court found that there was insufficient evidence in the record to establish the agreement. The court also found the estoppel theory inapplicable because equitable estoppel in such a case can run only in favor of the child, and there was insufficient evidence that any misrepresentation had been made by the husband to the child, who was eleven years of age when the divorce proceeding was initiated. Nevertheless, the case was remanded for a new trial, thereby affording *870 the divorced wife another opportunity to establish liability for child support under the express contract or estoppel theories.

In Spellens Spellens, 49 Cal.2d 210, 317 P.2d 613 (1957), the court held that the husband was not liable for support of his wife's children by her first husband in the absence of an agreement, adoption or some other arrangement, thus recognizing the contract theory for child support in such cases. See also Taylor Taylor, 279 So.2d 364 (Fla. App.

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Bluebook (online)
216 Va. 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-v-t-va-1976.