49 N.H. 187 | N.H. | 1870
“The duty of parents to provide for the maintenance of their children,” says Blackstone “ is a principle of natural law.” “ It is an obligation,” says Puffendorf, laid on them, not only by nature herself, but by their own proper act in bringing them
And such, therefore, is the condition of the common law in this country, Gordon v. Potter, 17 Vt., 348. Neither do the statutes of New Hampshire afford any remedy for enforcing this right, against a parent so reckless of moral duty as to refuse to recompense a neighbor who may have relieved the want and suffering of his child. Our statute laws, like the English statutes of 43 Eliz. and 5 Geo. 1, from which they were borrowed, are intended only for the indemnity of the public against the maintenance of paupers, and not for the reimbursement of an individual who may have relieved the necessities of a poor person in suffering and distress ; and under our statute no action can be sustained against a parent to recover for necessaries furnished to his child, except by the town, and after notice to the person chargeable. Gen. Stats. ch, 74 ; Farmington v. Jones, 36 N. H. 271.
This view of the matter may, at the first glance, seem startling, as opposed to our natural sense of justice ; since the duty of parents to provide reasonably for the maintenance and education of their children, until they shall be of sufficient age and capacity to provide for themselves is so clearly obvious to the mind and conscience, and so clearly prescribed by the positive precepts of religion, (for St. Paul says that “ if any provide not for his own, and especially for those of his own house, he hath denied thefaithandis worse than an infidel,”) that a violation of this duty, should, it would seem, be visited with severe punishment by human laws.
But the reason for this seeming defect in the law, is said by Mr. Chitty, to be that the common law considered moral duties of this nature as better left in their performance to the impulses of nature ; or, as Chancellor Kent remarks, 2 Com. 189, “ the obligation of parental duty is so well secured by the strengh of natural affection, that it seldom requires to be enforced by human laws.” Paley’s Moral Philosophy 226. Therefore the liability of the parent, in England and in this country is, as we have seen, founded solely upon contract, express or implied.
But, nothwithstanding the feeble and scanty provisions of the common and statute law in this respect, it is held to be an indictable of-fence on the part .of a parent, of sufiicient ability, to refuse or. neg
■ On the other hand, the obligation of a parent, where the circumstances are such as to authorize the implication of a promise or contract to pay for necessaries provided by another for his child, is not unrestricted in its requirements but is guarded l)y wise and reasonable limitations. “For the policy of our laws” (says Blackstone) “which are ever watchful to promote industry, did not mean to compel a father to maintain his idle and lazy children in ease and indolence ; but thought it unjust to oblige the. parent against his will to provide them with superfluities and other indulgences of fortune, imagining they might trust to the impulse of nature, if the children were deserving of such favors.” 1 Bl. Corh. 449. And by Statute 59 Geo. Ill ch. 12 § 26, the penalty on refusal of the father to provide such maintaince for his minor children as two justices of the peace shall direct, is no more than twenty shillings a month, though the amount of maintenance is not limited by the amount of the penalty for disobedience, and the father’s goods may be distrained therefor.
The legal obligation of the father, therefore, to pay for necessaries furnished a minor child rests upon contract alone; and where a parent gives no authority, and enters into no contract, he is no more liable to pay a debt contracted by his child, even for necessaries, than a mere stranger would be. Chitty Cont. 166, (10th Am. Ed.) In declaring this proposition the learned author is sustained by a strong current of authorities.
Thus, in Shelton v. Springett, 20 Eng. L & Eq. 281, it is said, “ a father is not-liable on a contract made by his minor child, even for necessaries furnished, unless an actual authority be proved, or the circumstances be sufficient to imply one and it is also said, in the same case, that the mere obligation to provide for the child’s maintenance, affords no legal inference of a promise.
And in Mortimer v. Wright, 6 M. & W. 482, Lord Abinger said : ‘ ‘ In point of law, a father who gives no authority, and enters into no-contract, is no more liable for goods supplied to his son, than a brother, or an uncle, or a mere stranger would be.” And that “the mere moral obligation on the father to maintain his child, affords on inference of a legal promise to pay his debts.” “To bind the father, in point of law, for the debt incurred by his son, you must prove that he has contracted to be bound, just in the same manner as you would prove such a contract against any other personand Parke B. said a father was under no legal obligation to pay his son’s debts, except, indeed, by proceedings under the statute ; the mere moral obligation imposing no legal liability. See, also, Blackburn v. Mackey, 1 C. & P. 1; Fluck v. Tollemache, id. 5 ; Rolfe v. Abbott, 6 C. & P. 286; Gordon v. Potter, 17 Vt. 348; Varney v. Young, 11 Vt. 260;. Raymond v. Loyd, 10 Barb. 483 ; Chilcott v. Trumble, 13 Barb. 502 ; 2 Kent’s Com. 190 note 3 (11th ed ).
Our courts seem to have followed the decision in Van Valkenburg v. Watson, 13 Johns. 480, in which it is said that “if the parent neglects that duty” (to furnish necessaries for his infant children) ‘ any other person who supplies such necessaries, is deemed to have conferred a benefit on the delinquent parent, for which the law raises an implied promise to pay on the pai’t of the parent.”.
It is obvious here that the necessity for a contract — “promise”—is pot dispensed with, but expressly declared, in the learned chancellor’s view of the case; and the rule as stated by him is shown to be not Jess stringent than that declared by Abinger C. B., Park B. & Mr. Cliitty, when practically applied, for, in the same case, the party furpishing the goods to the minor child is held to the exercise of extreme diligence in inquiring into the condition of the parties, parent and child, before he can ask a jury to find from the circumstances of the case an implied promise on the part of the patent; and, “what is actually necessary,” he says, “will depend upon the precise situation of the infant, and which the party giving the credit must be acquainted with at his peril.”
And we do not understand the case of Pidgin v. Cram, 8 N. H. 352 as going to the extent of dispensing with the necessity for a contract or promise on the part of the parent, as the essential foundation of his legal obligation, but only as indicating what circumstances are essential and indispensible to the implication of such promise. It is there said, following the language of the court iu Van Valkenburgh v. Watson, that “in general, a parent is under a natuIral obligation to furnish necessaries for his infant children ; and if the parent neglect that duty, any person who supplies such necessaries is deemed to have conferred a benefit on the delinquent parent, for which the law raises an implied promise to pay on the part of the parent.”
The learned Ch. J. Richardson, then continues as follows : “But in order to authorize any person to act for the parent in such a case, there must be a clear and palpable omission of duty in that respect on the part of the parent.”
If by the use of these terms the learned chief justice intended to say that the law implies a promise from such a “palpable omission of duty” as is evinced by an absolute refusal, deliberately expressed, to provide for the necessities of his minor children, we should not be able to assent to such a declaration. On the contrary, to use the language of Parsons, C. J, in Whiting v. Sullivan, 7 Mass. 109, “as the law will not generally imply a promise where there is an express promise, so the law will not imply a promise of any person against his own express declaration; because such declaration is repugnant to any implication of a promise.”
But this proposition must be taken with the qualification that
In the case of Pidgin v. Cram, there was held to be no liability; and the verdict for the plaintiff was set aside upon grounds thus stated by the court: ‘ ‘Here the daughter was nearly of the age of fifteen, and was residing with her mother when the articles were furnished. She may have been capable of furnishing herself with every necessary, by her own exertions. It does not appear that any application was ever made to the defendant for any assistance. For aught that appears he may have been ready and willing to furnish all that was wanted. The evidence in this case was not, then, sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict for the supplies furnished to the daughter.”
To the same effect is Townsend v. Burnham, 22 N. H. 277.
In Farmington v. Jones, Perley, C. J., says : “It does not appear that the support was furnished at the defendant’s request, or that he has made any express promise to pay. The plaintiff must rely upon a promise implied in law from the facts stated in the report of the auditor.” The claim in that case was for support furnished the defendant’s daughter while sick of the small-pox and detained in the house where she was visiting, the same being established as a pest-house by the officers of the town ; and it was held that the facts were not such as to raise the implication of a promise to pay.
Now, although one of the earlier cases in this state, Hillsborough v. Peering, 4 N. H. 86 declares (erroneously as we think) the obligation of parents to support their children to be a requirement of the common law, independent of any statute; it is not apparent that any attempt has ever been made to enforce such obligation, otherwise than .upon the ground of a contract or promise on the part of the parent sought to be charged, nor has it ever been claimed that mere moral obligation or duty raises, any implication of a promise or contract.
In French v. Benton, 44 N. H. 30, Bellows, J., remarks (concerning the assumption of the plaintiff’s counsel, in the argument of that cause, that the father by a palpable omission of duty, such as. turning the child out of doors and refusing to provide for him, en-i ables the child to pledge' his father’s credit for necessaries) that “there is much conflict of the authorities, but the settled doctrine of the English coimts now seems to be, that the moral obligation of the parent to support his minor child imposes no obligatiou to pay his debts, unless he has given him authority to incur them, and that the contract of the father must be proved, just in the same manner as if he were a brother, son, or stranger.”
And he continues as follows: “Without undertaking to decide what is the law of New Hampshire, it is quite evident that the tendency of the modern authorities is to limit the liability of the parent for necessaries to cases where they are furnished at his request, express, or to be inferred by a jury from circumstances, upon the genera] ground as stated in Brainbridge v. Pickering, 2 W. Black. 1325, that no one shall take it ‘upon him to dictate to a parent what clothing a child shall wear, at what time they shall be purchased, or of whom. All that must be left to the discretion of the father and mother.’ A similar tendency exists in respect to promises founded upon the consideration of moral obligations; and it may now be considered as settled that such considerations will not be regarded as sufficient, unless a valid legal obligation had once existed, although afterward barred by some statute or positive rule of law.”
Onithe whole, the principles of law applicable to this class of cases seem to take the form of these propositions : That a parent cannot be charged for necessaries furnished by a stranger for his minor child, except upon a promise to pay for them ; and that such promise is not to be implied from mere moral obligation, nor from the statutes providing for the reimbursement of towns ; but the omission of duty from which a jury may find a promise by implication of law must be a legal duty, capable of enforcement by process of law.
In accordance with these principles, it will be for the jury to say, in a given case, whether all the facts and circumstances warrant the finding of a promise, express or implied.
In reaching a result they will be at liberty, of course, and will be likely to take into consideration all the circumstances connected with the parent’s neglect, as indicating his intention, views and pui-poses with regard to the wants of his child, and the weight and contx*olling infiuexxce of all the evideixee, governed by the rules of law as we have endeavored to promulgate them, will undoubtedly seldom fail to x’esult ixx substaxitial justice and equity.
Let us then apply these considerations to the case before us. It is quite apparent from the conduct of the minor with regax’d to the articles purchased, that a large proportion of them were in xxo sense xxecessaxy for the comfort, support or convexxience of the miixor at the time they were pixrchased. The fur collar, the kid gloves, the x-ubber shoes, the boots aixd the trousex’s wex’e all made “objects of trade”by the young man, axxd the sxxit of clothes, he says,he did not need.
The infex’ence from the statement of the case is that these ax*ticles were all deducted from the plaintiffs account aixd that the bal
Indeed .the verdict of the court is not placed up on any such grounds but only upon these, namely: That the father had sufficient means to yield support to his son when he gave him his time, that he was bound to have furnished him a better education, or more parental care than the son has received, and before he was turned adrift upon the world. And for this failure of duty, which the law properly imposes upon all parents of his ability, the defendant is justly bound to pay the balance of the plaintiff’s account.”
We cannot regard these considerations as sufficient to warrant the finding ot the court. They may in special instances be worthy of application in the forum of conscience, but we think they cannot be adopted in general practice nor admitted in this particular case. To make the father’s liability dependent upon no other conditions than those which are said to be a sufficient foundation for the verdict of the court in this case would be to expose the parent to the ruinous consequences not only of his son’s wasteful extravagance and imprudence, but also to the arts of designing and unscrupulous tradesmen. To follow.on the analogy suggested between this case and that of Pidgin v. Cram, before cited: Here the son was seventeen years of age. He was residing with the person whom he contracted to serve, for wages probably sufficient to pay for all his necessary expenses. This fact, and the fact that he was not discharged by his employer but left his service without any assignable reason, shows that he was capable of furnishing himself with every necessity, by his own exertions. It does not appear that any application was ever made to the defendant for assistance. For aught that appears, he may have been ready and willing to furnish all that was wanted.
The evidence was not, than, sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict for the supplies furnished to the son.
We have paid no attention to the fact that the defendant had “ in some form given the young man his time,” since the plaintiff was not informed of that fact, and we have not regarded it as material in this case.
Verdict set aside and a new trial granted.