107 Mich. 490 | Mich. | 1895
(after stating the facts). 1. No creditor can complain of a husband, or bind him for necessaries on the ground of an implied contract, where the wife herself could not. Crittenden v. Schermerhorn, 39 Mich. 666. Persons trusting a wife, living separate and apart from her husband, upon his credit, do so at their own peril. Gill v. Read, 5 R. I. 345; Bennett v. O’Fallon, 2 Mo. 57. The home, which the father, and husband has furnished, is the place in which the law gives him the right to provide for his wife and children. When he has done this, and is ready and willing there to provide for them, according to his means, he has fully performed both his legal and moral
None of the authorities cited by the plaintiff, unless it be Gill v. Read, supra, support the opposite doctrine. Some of them hold that when a decree of divorce has been rendered dissolving the marital relation, but making no provision for the custody and support of the children, the father’s duties and obligations remain the same towards his children as they are without a divorce. Gilley v. Gilley, 79 Me. 292. Bauman v. Bauman, 18 Ark. 320, goes no further than to hold that if the wife, complainant in a bill for divorce, is dissatisfied with the allowance, made by the court for the support of her child, she need not accept the allowance, but may cast the burden upon him by surrendering the child to him. The court said in that case that it did not appear that the father was unwilling to take the child or was an unfit person.
In Rummy v. Keyes, 7 N. H. 571, the facts were that the husband and wife had never lived together, and he had never made any provision for the support of his wife and child, in consequence of which, she being ill, and unable to support herself and child, both became a charge upon the town. The decision seems to-be based upon the fact that under the laws of that State the father had a right to the custody of his children, and might obtain possession of their persons by habeas corpus, but that, by suffering them to remain with their mother, he constituted her his agent to contract debts for clothing and necessaries.
The decree in the court of chancery adverse to the wife, who was complainant, has established the fact, conclusive between them, that the defendant was without fault, and that she voluntarily and unjustifiably abandoned her husband and his home. Such decree has been held by this court not conclusive as to third parties. Corry v. Lackey, supra. It was clearly incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove the implied contract upon which he relied. Such contract is predicated upon the wrong of the husband and father. There is no presumption that the
2. I am of the opinion that plaintiff’s claim was included in the wife’s allowance for alimony made by the chancery court. It is true that a part of plaintiff’s services were rendered previous to any allowance for alimony. As a ground for the allowance made July 11, 1891, plaintiff’s bill, amounting then to $44, was appended to her petition, accompanied by an affidavit by the plaintiff setting forth the services rendered to the wife and child. Upon this petition and the proofs adduced, the court allowed additional temporary alimony to the amount of $75, and increased the weekly allowance for the support of the child. I think it the fair inference that the plaintiff’s bill was included in that allowance, although the order did not so specifically state. No other; purpose in presenting this claim is apparent than to secure its payment in that proceeding, and to have it included in the allowance. Such, too, is the common practice. It was held in Baumm v. Bauman, supra, that, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, it would be presumed that solicitor’s fees were considered in fixing the amount of alimony pendente Ute. If this be so, the sufficiency of the allowance cannot be attacked collaterally. Crittenden v. Schemerhorn, supra.
Judgment reversed, with the costs of all courts, and-no new trial granted.