15 Ga. App. 693 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
Julia B. Hoyal and her husband were divorced when their infant daughter was about one year of age, and the court then awarded the' custody of the child to her, and the child remained continuously in her care and custody from that time up to a comparatively recent date, when Mrs. Hoyal was committed to the State Sanitarium. The father is not a resident of Georgia, and his present whereabouts 'are unknown. He has never in any way
1, 2. The first question to be decided is whether or not the estate of a divorced woman, who is a lunatic committed to the State Sanitarium, is liable for necessaries furnished to her minor child, where her former husband, the father of the child, is in parts unknown, and has contributed nothing to the support of the child and exercised no control over it since the granting of the divorce. It appears to us that, under the admitted facts, the father
To approach the subject from another direction, it has been held in Atlanta & West Point Railroad Co. v. Venable, 65 Ga. 55, 56, that “the word 'parent’ is connected with no trade and is not a word of art; it means ordinarily mother as well as father, and must be so construed.” “Parent” has often been held to include the mother. Words & Phrases, vol. 6, p. 5173. The legal duty of a parent to provide for the maintenance, protection and education of minor children is too well established to require more than casual mention. See 1 Blackstone, Com., chap. 16; Nicholson v. Spencer, 11 Ga. 607-610, 611. “We learn . . , in our elementary lessons, that parents are legally and in duty bound to maintain their infant children.” Burns v. Hill, 19 Ga. 22, 25. Mrs. Hoyal is the “parent” of Minnie Iioyal, the minor child, and the custody of the child was awarded to her by the court; the father long since abandoned the child and thereby lost his parental control and his right to the child’s services or earnings; the mother would be entitled to recover the value of the services of the child under contract or on account of injury inflicted upon the child; as a consequence of her legal right to control the child and enjoy the services and earnings of the child, the mother is under a corresponding duty to maintain and provide for the child, if it is in her power to do so; the insanity of the mother may release her from the obligation of personal service in behalf of her minor child, but will not discharge her estate from the legal obligation for necessaries supplied to the child.
3. The second question raised by the motion for a new trial is