This is an appeal from an order and judgment declaring that the appellant-father is liable under the divorce decree entered in 1971 for reasonable expenses incurred by his daughter during four years of college, and holding him in contempt for failure to pay the expenses then incurred. The 1971 decree was based upon a verdict *903 of a jury and contained the following provision: "The defendant shall pay to the Plaintiff [mother] or to such person as has the custody, care and control of the minor child, Jon Natalie Jenkins, the sum of $300.00 per month beginning with September 9, 1971 and continuing until said child becomes 21 years of age. In addition to the said sum of $300.00 per month above provided, the defendant shall furnish to the minor child, Jon Natalie Jenkins, four years of college expenses for a college education for the said minor child.” At the time of the judgment under appeal, the child was 18 years old and enrolled in college.
1. In
Choquette v. Choguette,
2. The appellant contends that the requirement of the decree that he furnish his child four years of college expenses for a college education terminates upon the child’s twenty-first birthday. We agree and direct that the order of the trial court be modified to so state.
"Until majority it is the duty of the father to provide for the maintenance, protection, and education of his child.” Code § 74-105. While there is an obligation to provide an education for the child, no means are provided
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to enforce this requirement beyond the terms of the compulsory attendance law found in Code Ann. § 32-2104. However, once a divorce decree is entered awarding custody of the child to the mother, the husband’s obligation of support for the child can be made a requirement of the decree.
Brown v. Brown,
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3. We find no merit in appellant’s contention that the order was excessive in that it imposed a double liability for board. The decree is distinguishable from the verdict in
Taylor v. Taylor,
4. The judgment of the trial court finding the appellant in contempt of court for the college expenses then in arrears was authorized by the evidence; and any procedural defect inhering in the contempt judgment is immaterial and does not show reversible error, because the superior court provided terms consistent with this opinion upon which appellant could purge himself of the contempt.
Judgment affirmed with direction.
