238 P. 139 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
Respondent Lillian Fisk Jaeger was formerly the wife of Samuel Allen Jaeger, an incompetent person, who appears as appellant herein by James R. Edwards, the guardian of his estate. The only issue of the marriage was Pualeilani Jaeger, a minor, whose age at the date of the orders hereinafter mentioned was four years, and of whose person and estate respondent has since June 23, 1922, been the duly appointed, qualified and acting guardian. By a final decree of the superior court of Sonoma County, entered on July 27, 1922, the parties were divorced, the grounds therefor being the fault of appellant. The care and custody of said minor by said decree were awarded to respondent. By the decree appellant was ordered to pay to respondent the sum of $100 each month for her support, and for the maintenance, support and education of the minor the further sum of $30 each month. After the interlocutory decree and before the entry of the final decree, after proceedings regularly had, appellant was adjudged to be incompetent, and the said James R. Edwards was duly appointed and qualified as the guardian of his estate. Thereafter, during the month of February, 1923, the said minor became ill, due to an attack of tonsilitis, followed by pneumonia, the condition of illness and convalescence continuing until the month of August, 1923. Her condition made necessary an operation, the employment of physicians and nurses and the *130 purchase of medicines. On April 13, 1923, the superior court, on application of respondent, and the consent of appellant through his guardian, given in open court, made its order for the payment by appellant of the sum of $66 for the services of nurses for the minor theretofore rendered and made necessary by such illness.[1] The illness continuing, respondent, between the date of said order and the month of August, 1923, procured the services of physicians and nurses, one of said nurses having been employed prior to and paid pursuant to the order made in April, and the furnishing of medicines for the minor, but made no application to the court for orders directing appellant to furnish or pay for such services and medicines until October 29, 1923, after the recovery of the minor. On the date last mentioned respondent filed her petition for the order of the court directing appellant to pay the additional expenses incurred, amounting to the sum of $993.85, alleging that the estate of appellant was ample, that the guardian of his estate had on hand funds sufficient to pay, and, according to the testimony of respondent, that she was without estate, and her earnings, with the amount allowed by the final decree for her support, were not sufficient therefor and for the extraordinary demands due to such illness; that she had borrowed the sum of $518.85, which had by her been paid on account of the expenses incurred, and that of such expenses the sum of $475 remained unpaid, together with the sum so borrowed. The court, after due notice and hearing, made its order directing the guardian to pay to respondent from the estate of appellant in the due course of administration thereof the sum of $993.85, as and for the maintenance and support of the minor, in addition to the monthly payments theretofore ordered. From this order the appeal was taken.
It is not denied by appellant that the services or medicines were necessary, that the charges therefor were reasonable, that the estate of appellant is able to pay, or that had the application been made before the services and medicines were furnished, the court, the necessity appearing, would have had authority to make the order; but contends that the services and medicines having been procured in advance thereof it was without power to make the order appealed from. *131
We are satisfied that the petition was sufficient to support the order if the court had authority on the facts to grant the relief prayed.
The court acted pursuant to the provisions of section 138 of the Civil Code, as amended in 1905 (Stats. 1905, p. 43), which section, as originally enacted, was as follows: "In an action for divorce the court may before or after judgment give such direction for the custody, care and education of the children of the marriage as may seem necessary or proper, and may at any time vacate or modify the same." The section was amended in 1905 to read: "In actions for divorce the court may during the pendency of the action, or at the final hearing, or at any time thereafter during the minority of any of the children of the marriage, make such order for the custody, care, education, maintenance and support of such minor children as may seem necessary or proper, and may at any time modify or vacate the same."
Prior to the adoption of the codes the statute (Stats. 1851, sec. 7, p. 187) authorizing courts to make orders subsequent to judgment for the maintenance of the children of the marriage provided: "In any action for divorce, the court may, during the pendency of the action or at the final hearing, or afterwards, make such order for the support of the wife, and the maintenance and education of the children of the marriage, as may be just, and may at any time thereafter annul, vary or modify such order as the interest and welfare of the children may require."
In the case of Wilson v. Wilson,
The facts of the McKay case, as shown by the opinion, were that the plaintiff after the decree married one Polastri, who took the children into his own family and supported them as members thereof; that plaintiff claimed no compensation for such support; that as to any compensation therefor such would be to recompense Polastri for moneys spent upon the children. The court held that under the provisions of section 209 of the Civil Code, while Polastri was not bound to maintain his wife's children by McKay, yet having received them into his family and supported them it was to be presumed that he did so as a parent, and that where such was the case they were not liable to him for their support, nor he to them for their services, and that he could have no claim on defendant McKay for such support. The court proceeds to discuss the general rule that where the children have already been sufficiently cared for by the voluntary act of the mother or of strangers the court is not empowered to compel the father to reimburse these persons for such expenses (citing Loveren v.Loveren,
After the decision in the McKay case section 138 of the Civil Code was, by the Statute of 1905, page 43, amended to read as above. In Harlan v. Harlan,
The case of Gay v. Gay,
The reasoning of the court in Gay v. Gay, supra, in construing the language of section 137 of the Civil Code, and applying the section so construed to the facts before it, is equally pertinent to the present case. Neither section 137 nor section 138 of said code expressly provides for allowances for past support either of the wife or children; but considering the purpose of both, and that the first has been given such construction in support of an order based on facts analogous to those in the instant case — wherein it is apparent from the evidence that the allowance originally made for the support of the wife and child was insufficient to meet the necessities due to the illness of the child, that both were without other means sufficient therefor; that if the necessity was to be met the credit of the wife must be pledged, based upon the faith of a subsequent allowance by the court, and that to place the burden upon them or either would in effect deprive them of the possibility of living upon the allowance provided for the future — we are led to the conclusion that the language of section 138, Civil Code, as amended, makes it equally clear that the section permits an order under similar conditions to accomplish like results. *136
The amendment adopted in 1905 to section 138 of the Civil Code was a substantial re-enactment of the Statute of 1851, supra, which statute had been judicially interpreted by the court inWilson v. Wilson, supra. No intention to the contrary being shown, and the Wilson case, in respect of the court's interpretation of the law then in force, not having been overruled, it may fairly be inferred that the legislature intended that the amendment should bear the same interpretation which had been given to the original act. (Black's Law of Judicial Precedents, p. 235; Black's Interpretation of Law, p. 607; Lewis' Sutherland Statutory Construction, 2d ed., sec. 399.) It is our opinion that in view of the purpose to protect the interests of the children and to enforce the obligations of the parents (Harlan v. Harlan, supra), a reasonably liberal construction of the language of the section as amended leads fairly to the conclusion that the order appealed from in this case was authorized thereby.
The order is, therefore, affirmed.
Tyler, P.J., and Knight, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on July 3, 1925.