delivered the opinion of the court:
Carson Pirie Scott & Company brought action against John A. Hyde and his wife under the so-called Family Expense Act (section 15 of the Husband and Wife Act) to recover for goods purchased by the wife. The parties stipulated to the facts after which judgment was entered for the plaintiff. Defendant John A. Hyde appeals directly to this court, seeking to avoid liability on the ground that the statute is unconstitutional.
It is argued at some length that the State has no business in the internal conduct of family affairs, that so long as a man does not abandon or mistreat his family, control may not be taken from him, and that by the present statute “the State is guilty of invading a man’s constitutionally protected rights of privacy and the pursuit of happiness.” Under a second point similar arguments are made that in the absence of some neglect of duty on his part government auhorities ought not to be permitted to “intervene in family affairs.” The arguments are misdirected. The Act does not purport to provide for control or interference in family affairs. Appellant’s objections are so beside the point that further discussion is unnecessary.
The same may be said of appellant’s points 3 and 4 which assert that neither the common law nor the statutory law specifies any particular standard of living to which any man or his family must conform. He then claims that because no standards are specified to determine what items
The Family Expense Act has been in force since 1874, with little question of its validity. In Myers v. Field,
The Illinois Family Expense Act was taken from the Iowa statute which was upheld in Smedley v. Felt,
The appellant has failed to support his claim that the act is unconstitutional. No error being shown the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
