82 Ky. 666 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1885
delivered the opinion op the court.
The infant appellant, Joseph Benge, instituted this action by his next friend and guardian, against Samuel Hiatt’s administrator, in the Garrard circuit court, asking a judgment for the sum of $6,700 against the estate of the intestate, by reason of a contract alleged to have been made by the mother of the infant with the intestate for the infant’s benefit. The case went.
It is alleged that the mother being an unmarried woman, and the infant the natural son of the intestate, the latter being desirous of having the custody of his child, that he might raise and educate him according to his own wishes, and the child being at the time about three years of age and living with, and in the mother’s custody, “the said decedent ■came to plaintiff’s mother and proposed to, and contracted and agreed with, her as the mother and legal custodian of the child, that if she would surrender the plaintiff to him (the intestate) and permit him to have the raising, care and custody of plaintiff, during the period of plaintiff’s minority, in consideration thereof the decedent would take plaintiff, clothe, protect, maintain and educate him according to decedent’s pecuniary ability, and, in addition thereto, would give him $1,000 in money and the tract of land on which the intestate then lived, of the value ■of $2,700.
“ That the contract was entered into in behalf of the plaintiff by the mother, and, in pursuance thereof, she surrendered her legal right to his custody unto decedent, who immediately took him into his custody and control, carrying him to the home of the intestate, in discharge of his contract. The plaintiff was then about three years of age, and his father, when plaintiff was about four years of age, was taken suddenly ill, speechless and unconscious,' and died in a few days without, making any provision for the plaintiff. That his estate was of the value of $30,000, and de
It is maintained by counsel for the appellee that the agreement on the part of the intestate is without any consideration, and not binding on the part of the mother, and therefore the demurrer was -properly sustained.
A contract must be obligatory on both parties or neither will be bound, and while this is the general rule, we are unable to perceive in what manner it affects the question before us.
That the mother was entitled to the custody of the child, to its society and labor, burdened with the care of maintaining it until able to maintain itself, will not be doubted, and when surrendering this custody to the natural father and executing-in full her part of the contract in behalf of the infant plaintiff, we see no sufficient reason for adjudging that such an act, on the part of the mother, constitutes no consideration for the promise on the part of the father.
The common law afforded no remedy as against the father for the support of his illegitimate offspring; but where such a relation exists there is a strong natural and moral obligation on the part of the father to contribute to the illegitimate child’s support; and although such considerations may not be sufficient to support a mere promise to pay either money or property in discharge of this moral duty, when the
In the case of Clarke v. McFarland, reported in 5 Dana, the mother agreed with the father, in consideration of her promise to forbear to proceed against him under the statute, he would from time to time make such auxiliary contributions, in money, as might be necessary for her support, and at the same time agreed that he would secure and pay to the mother, for the child, whenever requested, the sum of $10,000. This court held that the promise was binding, and that the apparent extravagance of the
The facts alleged in this case are all to be taken as true, and the father’s promise to educate and maintain his own child, and give to it money and property amounting to three or four thousand dollars, in the event he is permitted to have its custody, is not such an inadequate consideration as will imply fraud or bad faith on the part of those presenting the claim ; and if the mere forbearance to coerce the father into payment is a sufficient consideration, the separation of the child from the mother and transferring the care and custody to the father is not only a sufficient consideration for the promise, but is that character of contract the value of which can not be well estimated by dollars and cents.
Here the child was actually delivered to the father, taken to his home, the latter assuming the legal responsibility of the support and education of the only object of his affection, and promising the mother, in behalf of the infant, in consideration of the surrender of her claims, to give to the child a. certain specified sum of money and a home of the value of $2,700.
What higher or greater consideration could the mother have surrendered or given than the right to the care and custody of her child ? The child should not be punished by reason of the crime of its parents, or the courts of law and equity closed against such contracts as, when clearly established, are based upon the plainest principles of natural justice.
The contract is therefore binding on the father; and the next question presented by counsel is that it is
In the case of Berry v. Graddy, Administrator of Belt, reported in 1 Metcalfe, Graddy had incurred a heavy expense in the purchase of a farm in Kentucky, and was induced to do so by Belt, who was an uncle of Graddy’s wife; Belt promising to pay $5,000 of the purchase money in three years, if Graddy would purchase the place arid not remove to Mississippi. Graddy performed his agreement, and the statute of frauds being pleaded, it was held that as he could not be restored to the situation in which he was in before the contract was made, nor compensated in damages by any other standard than that furnished by the contract itself, it would be a fraud to deprive him of the benefit of it on the ground that it was verbal merely.
It would be difficult to estimate the válue placed
•The' care, custody and education of the child was with the father, and this obligation -discharged by him as long as he lived. It was purely personal, and for its future support and maintenance we perceive no remedy.. The personal representative • is not entitled to the custody of the child or required to educate it. It was a personal trust confided to the father only, and the obligation to do so terminated in the death of the intestate. The agreement to give the child $1,000 and the farm of the value of $2,700, took effect when the contract was performed by the mother, and the obligation to do so at once existed and could, but for the statute requiring sales of land to be in waiting, have been enforced as to the land; and as the intestate received the consideration upon which his promise rested, and disposed of that which he had agreed’to give, or failed to comply with the agreement, its equivalent in value is the measure of recovery to the extent the promise to convey is invoked.
It is not necessary that this court should determine the question raised as to the right of the mother to make an absolute and unconditional disposal of her illegitimate children; but wThen the mere right to the custody, care and education of the child is surrendered to the natural father, the Chancellor, where the
The case is remanded. for proceedings consistent with this .opinion.