Commonwealth ex rel. Howell v. Howell

Dissenting Opinion by

Ervin, J.:

The majority opinion affirms an order made by the court below compelling a father to pay tuition of his daughter’s college education.1 The court below refused to permit counsel for the father to produce testimony as to the child’s mental and physical condition and to further show that the child was able to support and maintain herself. We are advised that counsel for the defendant informed the court below of his meager financial circumstances and endeavored to show the court that he was not in a financial position to pay the tuition. We are further advised by counsel for the defend*400ant that the income of the defendant was $3,500.00 a year or less.

We are handicapped in considering this appeal because evidence was not taken, as it should have been, to show the above mentioned factors and conditions. It is true that the father, sometime prior to the hearing, had expressed an intention to send his daughter to college. He had also taken out a $1,500.00 life insurance policy on the life of his daughter. When the father’s counsel asked the question as to what his income was, the following took place: “The Court: I’m talking about the tuition. I’ll consider income when I make the Order. Now, what about the tuition? Doctor Howell was on notice in July and he indicated he intended to pay the tuition. He made a statement he intended to send her to school, and he’s going to send her to school. That tuition will be paid today. Mr. Nix : I wish to have a clarification, is this a specific, definite Order? The Court: Yes, sir. By Mr. Nix: (To daughter) Q. What school is that? A. Temple Community College. The Petitioner: $540.00 is due today. The Court: He admitted he had intended to provide for her—Mr. Nix: May I state something? The Court: Certainly. Mr. Nix : Doctor Howell had indicated, and he has always stated he wishes his daughter to go. However, there are two factors. No. 1, Doctor Howell’s financial situation, which was in a very poor situation at that time, and it has worsened, partially because of these proceedings which have drained what little resources he has. Ti-ie Court: Do you mean Counsel fees ? Mr. Nix : I mean because of the fact he has been required to come back to Court. Let me also point out to the Court that the cases of which I have indicated, that the mere fact that a father might wish, as has indicated, is not predicating an obligation. The Court: I want the tuition paid today. That is the Order. Mr. Nix: Will your Honor grant me a supersedeas? The Court : No.”

*401In Com. v. Martin, 196 Pa. Superior Ct. 355, 358, 175 A. 2d 138, President Judge Bhodes said: “In the absence of an express contract, and unless the circumstances warrant it, a parent is not liable for the support of a child attending college. Com. ex rel. Binney v. Binney, 146 Pa. Superior Ct. 374, 380, 22 A. 2d 598; Com. v. Wingert, 173 Pa. Superior Ct. 613, 616, 98 A. 2d 203; Com. ex rel. Stomel v. Stomel, 180 Pa. Superior Ct. 573, 576, 577, 119 A. 2d 597. On the other hand, where there is an agreement to support and it is within the contemplation of the parties, a father may be liable to support and furnish his child with a college education. Com. ex rel. Grossman v. Grossman, 188 Pa. Superior Ct. 236, 239, 146 A. 2d 315.”

In the Martin case the defendant’s former Avife testified to an agreement entered into in 1954 at the time of the divorce which proAdded for a cash payment of $10,000.00 to her and further that defendant would provide a “secondary education, beyond high school” for the tAVO girls. It further appeared that the defendant on July 28, 1954 executed an insurance trust agreement Avith a trust company relative to an insurance policy on his life. This trust Avas created solely to provide a fund for the education of the settlor’s tAVO daughters. It was stipulated that the insurance policy forming the trust had a cash value of $11,258.65 at the time of the hearing in the court beloAV. The defendant offered no evidence to controvert his former wife’s testimony to the effect that he had expressly agreed to provide his daughters with a secondary school education beyond high school. In the Martin case avg merely held that this evidence supports a finding that defendant voluntarily agreed to provide his daughters Avith an education beyond high school. The Martin case very clearly shoAvs that a binding contract and property settlement agreement between the father and the mother had been entered into by the father and he was undoubtedly *402bound by this legal contract. Com. ex rel. Binney v. Binney, 146 Pa. Superior Ct. 374, 22 A. 2d 598, is directly in point as to the present case and we think controls it. In that case the father carried life insurance on his own life and the life of his older son with a cash surrender value of approximately $7,000.00. The relatrix, his wife, was named as beneficiary in the policies. The premiums totalled approximately $1,600.00 a year. The father, at the hearing before the court below, stated that it was his intention to keep his son there (in college) as long as he was able to do so. In fact, the father had actually paid the first year’s tuition. This case involved tuition for a subsequent year. Notwithstanding this expressed intention by the father, we vacated that portion of the order which provided for the education and maintenance of the appellant’s 19-year old son at college. Judge (now President Judge) Rhodes said in that opinion, at p. 380: “But it is well known that there are worthy parents in all parts of the country, with means greater than this, appellant has, who do not furnish their children with the financial assistance necessary for a college education. We cannot say that each has failed in a legal duty to his child and to the state. To hold that the circumstances of this father require him to furnish his son with a college education would be an unwarranted conclusion. Hence in such a matter he is entitled to a measure of discretion, and must be allowed to exercise his own judgment.” In that case the testimony revealed that the father was the sole proprietor of a business which produced an annual net income for the year 1940 of $6,684.40. The evidence also showed that the parties owned a home by the entireties that had a rental value of $50.00 per month and that they owned a summer home in Vermont and several lots in Florida. They had joint savings fund accounts totalling $5,000.00 and the relatrix had a separate account of $4,000.00.

*403In the present case, while the court below did not permit testimony to show the father’s present financial condition, we are advised by Ms counsel that if testimony had been taken it would have shown an income of $3,500.00 or less a year. It may be that we should change the law to require a father of sufficient means to provide a college education for his child or children. This, however, does not appear to be such a case. Furthermore the evidence in the present case does not reveal any legal contract which obligated the father to provide a college education for his daughter. He merely expressed an intention to do so just as was done in the Binney case.

There is another serious obstacle which prevents affirmance of the order of the court below. The statute under which these proceedings arise is §733 of the Act of June 24, 1939, P. L. 872, as amended, 18 PS §4733. After making initial provision for issuance of process and service on a defendant, the act in material part provides: “The said court [of quarter sessions], after hearing in a summary proceeding, may order the person against whom complaint has been made or petition filed, being of stifficient ability, to pay such sum as said court shall think reasonable and proper for the comfortable support and maintenance of the said . . . children . . . .” (Emphasis added) The court’s power to make an order of support is limited by the words “being of sufficient ability” (Emphasis added). A father might make a binding contract to give a college education to his child or children but the court below did not have power to make an order requiring him to do so unless the father was of sufficient ability to do so. What Judge (now President Judge) Rhodes said in Com. ex rel. Binney v. Binney, supra, at p. 380, is especially applicable to the present case: “The Act of June 24, 1939, P. L. 872, 18 P.S. §4733, affords no basis for a court to require appellant, at least under the conditions dis*404closed by the evidence in this case, to send to and maintain at college his nineteen-year-old son. Com. ex rel. Gillen v. Gillen, 102 Pa. Superior Ct. 136, 138, 156 A. 572.”

I would, therefore, reverse the order of the court below because (1) there was no legal contract made by the father to supply his daughter with a college education and (2) the court below did not permit evidence to show that the father did not have sufficient ability to pay for the college education of his daughter.

Tlie exact language of tlie order of September 21, 1961 was: “Pay tuition for daughter at Temple University today out of Educational policy.”