148 Ga. 25 | Ga. | 1918
Ethel Marie Mock,'on May.5, 1917, filed a petition in which the following allegations were made: Petitioner was bom August 3, 1888. Gn August 20, 1888, petitioner’s mother gave her to Eliza A. Charlton, of Chatham county, Georgia, under a parol agreement between the mother and Eliza A. Charlton that Eliza A. Charlton would educate and adopt petitioner as her child with the right of inheritance. The contract was fully performed by petitioner and her mother; and Eliza A. Charlton, to the date of her death (which occurred in Chicago, 111., on October 20, 1916, while she was temporarily absent from the State), recognized the contract and the relation created thereby. On
1. Properly construed, the allegations of the petition do not show a right of disposition in the mother of petitioner. It is not alleged that the petitioner was 'an illegitimate child, or that her father was dead, or that he had lost his parental control, or that he had ratified or acquiesced in the contract made by petitioner’s mother with Eliza A. Charlton. The first essential of a contract for the adoption of a child, where no statutory adoption exists, is that it be made between persons competent to contract, and be based upon sufficient legal consideration. Fugate v. Allen, 119 Mo. App. 183 (3) (95 S. W. 980); Civil Code, § 3021.
2. The essentials of a resulting trust are not alleged, there being no specific allegation that the petitioner’s earnings prior to her marriage actually constituted the purchase-money, or any part thereof, of the real estate referred to. Civil Code, § 3739. Had the allegations been sufficient in this respect, the right of recovery was in her father if in life, and not in her.
3. The earnings of a minor child belong to the father, unless the child has been manumitted by the father. Smith v. Smith, 112 Ga. 351 (3), 352 (37 S. E. 407); Civil Code, § 3021. In the absence of consent or agreement to the contrary, express or implied, the earnings of the wife belong to her husband. Georgia Railroad Co. v. Tice, 124 Ga. 459 (5), 466 (52 S. E. 916, 4 Ann. Cas. 200); Cotter v. Gazaway, 141 Ga. 534 (81 S. E. 879). In so far as the petitioner sought to recover upon a quantum meruit, the right of action was in her father for the money earned by her prior to her marriage, and in her husband for the value of the support furnished and the services rendered to the decedent after the marriage of the petitioner.
4. The demurrer, which raised the foregoing objections to the petition, was properly sustained.
Judgment affirmed.