¶ 1 Appellant, Patricia Nicholason (Mother), challenges the Order of the Northampton County Court of Common Pleas, which determined that Brett, the parties’ minor son, was emancipated and therefore no longer entitled to parental support. We reverse.
¶ 2 The record reflects Mother and Ap-pellee, Dent Follweiler (Father) were married on May 20, 1978 and divorced in 1982. Two children were born during the marriage, namely Dent Follweiler, II on August 15, 1979 and Brett Follweiler on May 2,1981. Father filed a Petition for Special Relief on April 16, 1998 seeking the termination of the support order for his two sons dated March 20, 1997. At the time of this petition Father was obligated to pay $621.00 in support and $124.00 in arrearag-es per month. Father’s petition alleged that his support obligation should have been terminated as of the dates his sons withdrew from high school. On July 16, 1998 following a hearing on the matter a Domestic Relations Conference Officer filed an order dated July 10, 1998, which reads:
AND NOW, to wit on this 10 th day of July, 1998 IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the support order in this case be Terminated without prejudice, effective February 24, 1998, due to: CHILD BRETT FOLLWEILER BORN 5/2/81 NO LONGER ATTENDING HIGH SCHOOL AND BEING ASSUMED EMANCIPATED. CHILD DENT FOLLWEILER BORN 5/15/79 [sic] IS ASSUMED EMANCIPATED AND REMOVED FROM THE ORDER EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 2, 1998. ORDER CONTINUED TO RUN AT THE AMOUNT OF $621.00 PER MONTH BASIC SUPPORT FOR CHILD BRETT ONLY FOR THE PERIOD OF FEBRUARY 2,1998, THROUGH FEBRUARY 24, 1998. CASE CLOSED. CREDIT BALANCE OF $1,943.55 TO [MOTHER] REMAINS OF RECORD. WAGE ATTACHMENT IN EFFECT IS VACATED.
¶ 3 Mother filed a timely request for a hearing de novo contesting the termination of support for Brett as he is still a minor in need of support. She did not contest the removal of Dent from the order as she acknowledged he is no longer attending high school and is over 18 years old. The de novo hearing was conducted on August 5, 1998 following which the matter was taken under advisement pending the submission of briefs. The court subsequently entered an Order on October 5, 1998 affirming the Conference Officer’s Order dated July 10, 1998 finding Brett to be emancipated. It is from this Order Mother now appeals.
¶ 4 Mother’s sole question presented is “[w]hether or not the trial court abused its discretion [in] declaring a sixteen year old boy emancipated because he quit school, [where] there is absolutely no evidence ... that the minor is capable of self support, and when the evidence ... clearly showed that the minor is not self supporting.” Mother’s brief at 3.
¶ 5 Our standard and scope of review in child support cases is narrow. Absent a clear abuse of discretion, an appellate court will not disturb a properly entered support order.
Middleton v. Robinson,
¶ 6 Mother asserts the trial court erred when it relieved Father of his support obligation by declaring their minor son emancipated. She submits the evidence of emancipation was insufficient as it was merely based upon the fact that he was no longer attending high school and had no physical or mental infirmities that prevented him from working. We agree.
¶ 7 Mother correctly notes that in general the parental duty of support continues “until a child reaches 18 or graduates from high school, whichever event occurs later.”
Blue v. Blue,
¶ 8 Instantly, it is apparent the trial court based- its finding of emancipation upon the fact that the child dropped out of high school, demonstrated the physical capacity to be employed, and did not seek his Mother’s approval concerning his whereabouts. These facts without more do not establish emancipation. From our review of the cases dealing with emancipation generally, we perceive the touchstone of emancipation refers to the minor’s establishment as a self-supporting individual independent of parental control. When a minor still has a need for care, custody and maintenance, the minor is not emancipated and the duty of support continues.
¶ 9 In
Trosky v. Mann,
¶ 10 Our review of the instant record reveals no evidence to suggest this minor is self-supporting or that he even sought to be financially independent. In this regard in response to Mother’s counsel’s direct examination, the minor testified as follows:
Q. Okay. Since you quit school, have you had any jobs?
A. Yes, I have.
*1279 Q. Can you tell us who you worked for and when?
A. I worked at the Ritz and that was, that was -1 can’t remember.
Q. How long were you there?
A. About a week. I worked at Dun-derbak’s for a month and a half at the Lehigh Valley Mall and that was the last job I had.
Q. How much did you make per week in your pocket after taxes when you worked at the Ritz?
A. I made $80 a week.
Q. How much did you make, how much did you make when you worked at Dun-derbak’s at the mall ... ?
A. Well, we got paid every two weeks and I made like about a $200 paycheck.
Q. ... Have you ever supported yourself?
A. No.
Q. Have you ever made enough to pay for an apartment or a room so you could live somewhere?
A. No.
Q. Have you ever made enough so that you could feed yourself?
A. No.
Q. And you’re living still with your mother?
A. Yes, I am.
N.T., De Novo Hearing, 8/5/98, at 12-15.
¶ 11 Economic self-sufficiency means more than the mere physical ability to perform a job. The undisputed evidence of record clearly showed that the minor continued to reside with his Mother and that she was paying for his food, clothing, shelter and other basic necessities of life. The minor further testified that due to the fact that he was under 18 years of age he was summarily rejected for employment by the various mall establishments. The mere fact the minor held minimum wage jobs for a period of six or seven weeks after quitting school does not constitute the self-sufficiency contemplated by the concept of emancipation.
¶ 12 We further note our review of the record indicates that both the Conference Officer and the Hearing Judge began their inquiry by relying on the misplaced notion that a minor who quits high school is “assumed” to be emancipated. Such is not the case. The fact a minor quits high school over his parents’ objections does not, standing alone, equate with emancipation. We acknowledge that when a child reaches majority (and has also completed high school), the duty of the parent to support that child ends.
Crawford v. Crawford,
¶ 13 Order vacated. Case remanded. Jurisdiction relinquished.
