On 20 January 1982 defendant Donnie Harris was admitted to plaintiff North Carolina Baptist Hospital for medical treatment. This treatment was in fact provided. It was stipulated by the parties that the treatment was necessary for the health and well-being of Mr. Harris.
At the time of Mr. Harris’ admission to the hospital, the hospital’s business office submitted to his wife, defendant Vern Dell Harris, a form to sign authorizing treatment. Vern Dell signed this form in her husband’s name, “by Vern Dell Harris.” She declined to sign as guarantor. The trial judge found as a fact that Vern Dell neither requested her husband’s admission to the hospital, anticipated that he would be admitted, nor agreed to pay for the services.
The hospital charged $3,303.61 for the services provided to defendant Donnie Harris. Neither Donnie nor Vern Dell has paid this bill to date.
We are called upon in this case to decide whether, in the absence of an express undertaking on her part, a wife may be held responsible for the necessary medical expenses incurred by her husband. We hold that she may be and that the “doctrine of necessaries,” heretofore applicable only to medical services provided to the wife, applies to such services provided to either spouse.
At common law it was the duty of the husband to provide for the necessary expenses of his wife.
Bowen v. Daugherty,
*350
A corresponding duty on the part of the wife has also been a feature of the common law. She was obliged to provide domestic services which pertain to the comfort, care, and well-being of her family and consortium to her husband.
Ritchie v. White,
The traditional allocation of marital rights and duties was based at least in part on the legal disability of married women to manage their own financial affairs.
See
2 R. Lee,
N.C. Family Law
§ 107 (4th ed. 1980 & Supp. 1985). At early common law, the property of a woman vested in her husband at the point of marriage.
O’Connor v. Harris,
Even after the enactment of the “Martin Act,” 1911 Sess. Laws ch. 109 (now N.C.G.S. § 52-2), giving a married woman the right to dispose of her own property without the permission of her husband, and N.C.G.S. § 47-14.1 (formerly § 47-116), abolishing the privy examination, the judge-made doctrine of necessaries continued to provide financial protection for married women.
See, e.g., Ritchie v. White,
The husband’s common law duty to support his wife and minor children was partly balanced by the wife’s duty to render services in the home. But the law can enforce the former, not the latter.
2 R. Lee, N.C. Family Law § 131, at 128 (4th ed. 1980).
*351
We have consistently held that a wife is responsible for her own necessaries upon her express contract or on equitable principles when the husband was unable to pay, notwithstanding her husband’s concurrent liability.
Bowen v. Daugherty,
Most jurisdictions reaching this issue have held that the doctrine of necessaries should be applied in a gender-neutral fashion. Some states have eliminated it from their common law altogether.
See, e.g., Condore v. Prince George’s County,
This Court has not addressed the question of whether, or under what circumstances, a wife may be held liable for the necessary medical expenses provided to her husband. The defendant wife relies on
Presbyterian Hospitals v. McCartha,
A review of several historical developments in the law of our state indicates a trend toward “gender neutrality.” Many of the statutory provisions that formerly applied only to males now apply to both genders. Thus, N.C.G.S. § 14-322, which had provided for criminal sanctions against males for non-support, now applies to either gender. There is no longer a statutory presumption that the husband is the supporting spouse for alimony purposes. N.C.G.S. § 50-16.1(4) (1984). No longer is the duty to support children the sole primary responsibility of the father. N.C.G.S. § 5043.4(b) (1984).
Perhaps the most convincing evidence that our legislature intends to bring gender neutrality into the law of domestic relations is the Equitable Distribution Act. N.C.G.S. §§ 50-20, -21 (1984 & Supp. 1985). This act is uniform in its treatment of parties to a marriage as equal partners in a joint enterprise and appears to us to be a clear break from the archaic notions reflected in earlier statutes.
We followed the legislative trend toward gender neutrality in our recent case of
Mims v. Mims,
These notions no longer accurately represent the society in which we live, and our laws have changed to reflect this fact. No longer must the husband be, nor is he in all instances the sole owner of the family wealth. No longer is the wife viewed as “little more than a chattel in the eyes of the *353 law.” Nicholson v. Hospital,300 N.C. 295 , 298,266 S.E. 2d 818 , 820 (1980). No longer in all cases is the husband the supporting and the wife the dependent spouse. No longer is the wife thought generally to be under the domination of her husband.
Mims v. Mims,
We find that the reasoning in
Mims
is sound and applies equally well to the judge-made gender-biased rule requiring a husband to pay for the necessaries of his wife, but relieving her of a reciprocal duty. We therefore hold that a wife is liable for the necessary medical expenses provided for her husband. To the extent that the Court of Appeals opinion in
McCartha,
Defendant contends that a gender-neutral application of the doctrine would be better accomplished by abolishing the doctrine of necessaries altogether. We see no reason to take this course. The doctrine has historically served several beneficial functions. Among these are the encouragement of health-care providers and facilities to provide needed medical attention to married persons and the recognition that the marriage involves shared wealth, expenses, rights, and duties. We conclude that the benefits to the institution of marriage will be enhanced by expanding rather than abolishing the doctrine of necessaries. Our decision is a recognition of a personal duty of each spouse to support the other, a duty arising from the marital relationship itself and carrying with it the corollary right to support from the other spouse.
Because this obligation, like the husband’s obligation to pay for the medical expenses of his wife, arises from the marriage relationship, attempts by the wife, as here, to disavow this duty have no effect.
Having held that the doctrine of necessaries applies equally to both spouses, we turn to the question of whether the dismissal of plaintiffs action against Vera Dell Harris was proper. In order to make out a prima facie case against a spouse for the recovery of expenses incurred in providing necessary medical services to the other spouse, the following must be shown:
(1) medical services were provided to the spouse;
*354 (2) the medical services were necessary for the health and well-being of the receiving spouse;
(3) the person against whom the action is brought was married to the person to whom the medical services were provided at the time such services were provided; and
(4) the payment for the necessaries has not been made.
Turning to the facts in the present case, it appears that all of the elements of a prima facie case have been proven or stipulated to by the parties and that no affirmative defenses have been shown. The trial judge found as facts, and the parties so stipulated, that services were provided to defendant Donnie Harris; that these services were necessary to his health and well-being; that Donnie Harris was married to Vern Dell Harris at the time that the services were provided; that the outstanding balance for the services was $3,303.61; and that the payment for those services has not been made. We conclude, therefore, that plaintiff is entitled to recover of Vern Dell Harris $3,303.61, the cost of the medical services provided for her husband by plaintiff.
We, therefore, reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals, vacate the judgment of the trial court, and remand the case to the Court of Appeals for further remand to the District Court, Yadkin County, for entry of judgment for $3,303.61, plus interest, in favor of plaintiff against Vern Dell Harris.
Reversed and remanded.
