Stephen W. ISON, Appellant,
v.
FLORIDA SANITARIUM AND BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION, d/b/a Florida Hospital, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
William R. Lyle, Jr., and William Murrell, Jr., of William Murrell, Jr. & Associates, Orlando, for appellant.
William Trickel, Jr., of Whitfield, Wright, Leonhardt & Trickel, Orlando, for appellee.
SCHWARTZ, ALAN R., Associate Judge.
This is an "appeal" from an order of the Orange County Circuit Court *201 sitting in its appellate capacity, which itself affirmed a judgment of the Orange County Small Claims Court, entering judgment in favor of the Florida Sanitarium and Benevolent Association d/b/a Florida Hospital and against the present "appellant" Stephen W. Ison, in the amount of $352.60. The claim upheld by the courts below involved hospital services rendered to Mr. Ison's daughter Debra, who was then 18 years of age and thus a "minor" under the then applicable Florida law. The lower courts upheld the hospital's contention that Mr. Ison was liable for the debt as a "necessity of life" provided to his daughter. Since we have no jurisdiction on appeal to review an appellate decision of the Circuit Court, Dresner v. Tallahassee, Fla. 1964,
In the absence of a transcript of testimony of the proceedings before the Small Claims Court, the parties stipulated, as permitted by Florida Appellate Rule 3.6(h), that one month prior to the rendering of the hospital's services in February 1972, Debra had "left home permanently, ... got a place to live of her own," and that she had become and been completely self-supporting. Her father, Mr. Ison, had paid none of her bills and had provided nothing more than ordinary in fact, minimal monies in the payment of social amenities which one might render another who was his child, but who was nonetheless independent. Indeed, at the time that Debra went into the hospital on an emergency basis, Mr. Ison declined to sign a financial responsibility document which the hospital's personnel attempted to secure from him; he did sign a consent to operate from only because the hospital said it was required in order for treatment to be provided. On these thus-undisputed facts which demonstrate without question that Debra had secured and enforced her "right of the minor to collect and control [her] own wages and labor for [her]self," see Dora v. Cochran, Fla. 1962,
The Florida law has rather consistently held that a common law emancipation may be effected between parties notwithstanding non-compliance with the statutory means of securing emancipation under F.S. § 62.011. E.g., Jackson v. Citizens' Bank & Trust Co.,
There is no question that once such an emancipation is established, the parent *202 who is no longer able to command the obedience or services of his child is likewise no longer liable for his debts even those for "necessities" such as medical treatment. See cases collected, Annot.,
Certiorari is granted and the judgment is quashed with directions to reverse the judgment of the Orange County Small Claims Court.
CROSS and DOWNEY, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Early Florida cases, e.g., Mills v. Joiner,
