Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court:
Lorena D. Travell sued Shawn A. Dodds for the cost of medical treatment for her niece, Alexandra Phillips, whom Dodds allegedly injured in a traffic accident. Travell claimed that at the time of the accident, she was in loco parentis to Phillips and that section 15(a)(1) of the Rights of Married Persons Act (750 ILCS 65/15(a)(l) (West 2004)), commonly called “the family expense statute,” obliged her to pay the medical bills. Dodds moved for summary judgment on the ground that Travell was neither the parent nor the legal guardian of Phillips. The trial court granted the motion, and Travell appeals. We hold that if one accepts a child into one’s household and stands in loco parentis to the child, the family expense statute obligates one to pay for medical treatment the child receives during the relationship. Therefore we reverse the summary judgment and remand this case for further proceedings.
I. BACKGROUND
Dodds’s attorney took the depositions of Phillips and Travell. Phillips testified she was bicycling across an intersection in Springfield on August 9, 2004, when a truck struck her, fracturing some discs in her spine. She was in the hospital for two days. At the time of the deposition, she was 18 and living with her boyfriend. But at the time of the accident, she was 17 and living with Travell, her aunt, who (Phillips believed) had obtained “legal custody” of her.
Travell testified that Phillips’s mother was dead and no one had come forward as the father. In 2003, Phillips was living with a cousin in Dallas, and the cousin was preparing to move to Germany. The cousin “gave [Travell] a paper,” which they signed and notarized, enabling Travell to bring Phillips to Springfield. (This “paper” does not appear to be in the record.) Travell thereby acquired what she considered to be “legal custody” of Phillips, who lived with her for the next two years, until they moved to Springfield.
Travell considered herself responsible for Phillips’s medical bills. She testified: “After the accident[,] all the bills came to me[,] and then they said I was responsible ***. *** [W]hen I got to the hospital[,] they had already processed her admission paper, and they didn’t ask me anything, and then the bills started coming.” The medical bills in the record are addressed to Travell. She had not paid any of them yet. She had bought pain medication, however, because Phillips “had to have that.”
II. ANALYSIS
A. The Purpose of the Family Expense Statute
The family expense statute provides as follows: “The expenses of the family and of the education of the children shall be chargeable upon the property of both husband and wife, or of either of them, in favor of creditors therefor, and in relation thereto [,] they may be sued jointly or separately.” 750 ILCS 65/15(a)(l) (West 2004).
When construing a statute, we may consider “the reason and necessity for the statute and the evils [the legislature] intended to remedy.” Roth v. Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund,
As the Supreme Court of Iowa explained, this change in the law helped the wife, husband, and creditor:
“The statute was enacted for the benefit of the husband or wife, and person from whom the things constituting the family expenses were obtained, to the end that credit could be obtained and extended for something essential, necessary, or convenient, or so deemed by the husband or wife, to be used in or by the family.” Davis v. Ritchey,55 Iowa 719 , 721,8 N.W. 669 , 670 (1881).
By interpreting the family expense statute to apply to persons who, under the common law, stand in loco parentis, we would remove an obstacle to commerce and lessen the financial risk of providing medical care to the child, thereby benefitting the child, the creditor, and the persons in loco parentis (who, presumably, intend to provide for the child). Such an interpretation would tend to effectuate the legislative intent of making adults liable for family expenses if they hold themselves and the child out as one family. See Chicago Manual Training School Ass’n v. Scott,
B. The Legislature’s Presumed Awareness of the Concept of “in Loco Parentis”
“ ‘Where statutes are enacted after judicial opinions are published, it must be presumed that the legislature acted with knowledge of the prevailing case law.’ ” Cargill v. Czelatdko,
C. The Applicability of the Family Expense Statute Outside the Marital Relationship
By its terms, the family expense statute makes a “husband and wife” jointly and severally liable for family expenses. 750 ILCS 65/ 15(a)(1) (West 2004). The record appears to contain no evidence that Travell is married. Courts, however, interpret the family expense statute as requiring parents to pay their children’s medical and educational expenses regardless of whether the parents are married. Mercy Center for Health Care Services v. Lemke,
D. Travell’s Status as a Person in Loco Parentis
Dodds disputes that Travell was in loco parentis to Phillips. According to Dodds, Travell has produced no evidence that she “[took] on the obligations of a parent” or “assumed the financial burdens arising out of the relationship of a parent and child.” We note that in his motion for summary judgment, Dodds never disputed Travell’s status as a person in loco parentis; he merely argued that because Travell was a nonparent who lacked legal custody, Travell could not recover the expenses of Phillips’s medical treatment. In any event, looking at the evidence in a light most favorable to Travell and drawing all reasonable inferences in her favor, we find a genuine issue of fact as to whether Travell stood in loco parentis to Phillips. See Moore v. Kickapoo Fire Protection District,
E. The Duty of a Person in Loco Parentis To Furnish Medical Care for the Child
The family expense statute makes parents liable for the medical expenses of their minor children. Graul v. Adrian,
“ ‘One who by reason of his tortious conduct is liable to a minor child for illness or other bodily harm is subject to liability to
(b) the parent who is under a legal duty to furnish medical treatment for any expenses reasonably incurred or likely to be incurred for the treatment during the child’s minority.’ ” Worley,347 Ill. App. 3d at 496 ,807 N.E.2d at 1226 , quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts §703(b), at 510 (1977).
Dodds is liable to Travell only if Travell had a duty to provide medical care to Phillips. “Custodial parents have an affirmative duty to protect and provide for their minor children” (People v. Peters,
In Scott,
In the present case (looking at the evidence in a light most favorable to Travell and resolving all reasonable inferences in her favor), the hospital rendered services to Phillips at a time when Travell was holding herself and Phillips out as a family. Travell could have refused to take Phillips into her household in the first place, or she could have decided, at some point, that she no longer wished to stand in loco parentis to Phillips. Travell could not retroactively terminate the relationship, however, to evade liability for medical expenses already incurred. Having voluntarily assumed the role of parent, Travell had “a legal duty to furnish medical treatment” for Phillips, and she had a corresponding cause of action against Dodds for the cost of the treatment. See Restatement (Second) of Torts §703(b), at 510 (1977). Travell could not enjoy the benefits of parenthood without shouldering the expense.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand this case for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
KNECHT, J., concurs.
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring:
Although I concur with the conclusion reached by the majority, I write separately because the majority opinion appears to conclude Travell did stand in loco parentis to Phillips. However, this case comes to us at the summary-judgment stage, and as our supreme court recently pronounced, “[t]he purpose of summary judgment is not to try a question of fact, but rather to determine whether a genuine question of material fact exists” (Bagent v. Blessing Care Corp.,
Also, the majority opinion need not cite and should not have cited the Scott case, a 1911 appellate court opinion. See
