of the supreme court of the District of Columbia, who sat with the Court in the hearing of this appeal in the absence of Mr. Chief Justice Alvey, delivered the opinion:
The assignments in error are as follows:
1. The court below erred in confirming the auditor’s report.
2. The court below erred in overruling the exception to the auditor’s report.
3. The court below erred in overruling each one of the sixteen exceptions to the auditor’s report filed by the appellant.
These assignments of error involve the consideration of the *314question of the continuing jurisdiction of the courts in divorce proceedings. So far, however, as the jurisdiction of the court over the allowance of alimony is concerned, there can be no possible question. The decree of divorce expressly reserved to the court the right to thereafter deal with that subjcet, the language of the decree being: “It is further ordered and de•creed that the defendant shall continue to pay as alimony the sum heretofore allowed to the complainant by the order of the court on the 11th day of May, 1891, until the further order of this court.” It follows, therefore, that so far as the jurisdiction of the court touching the allowance of alimony is concerned, the decree of July 25, 1891, was not final, and hence the court below was clearly within its jurisdiction in requiring the appellant to pay to the appellee, in addition to the costs of suit, ali-mony at the rate named in said decree from the date thereof, July 25, 1891, to the date of her second marriage, August 20, 1892.
This brings us to the main question involved in the case, viz., whether the court was without jurisdiction, under the circumstances of this case, to require the appellant to pay to the appellee the $2,777.29, or any part thereof, expended by her in the maintenance and education of their infant daughter. It is contended on behalf of the appellant that the court was without jurisdiction to make such decree, for the reason that the decree of divorce of July 25, 1891, was, in that respect, final.
On the other hand, it is contended on behalf of the appellee that such decree did not become final so as to deprive the court of jurisdiction to thereafter, upon a proper showing, reopen the case and make such further orders therein touching the maintenance and education of the child as to the court might seem right and proper.
As specifically applicable to this question the following section of the Revised Statutes for the District of Columbia, in force at the date of the decree of divorce, July 25, 1891, may be cited:
Section 747 provides that “the court shall also have power to -order and direct, in every case of divorce, who shall have the *315.guardianship and custody of the children of the marriage so divorced and who shall be charged with their maintenance.”
Although the appellee, in her original bill, prayed that she be given the care and custody of the child, the decree of divorce, .as already pointed out, made no provision in relation thereto, and therefore it must be assumed, in the absence of any suggestion in the record to the contrary, that she abandoned so much of her bill. It further appears from the record that from the date of the decree of divorce until the filing of her petition for reimbursement, the appellee voluntarily assumed and exercised the sole custody and control of said child, as well as the right to determine for herself the character and extent of the expenses incident thereto, without notice thereof or demand therefor upon the appellant, other than the filing of her said petition against him some ten years later, notwithstanding, as appears by appellant’s substantially uncontradicted testimony set out in the record, he offered to assist her in the support and education of the child, Avliich offer she promptly declined, giving as her reason therefor that she did not need his assistance, as her then husband, “Mr. Burkart, was acting kind and gave her everything for the child and hei-self.”
Had the court in this situation of the case and under the terms of its decree of July 25, 1891, jurisdiction to reopen the case and by its further order require the appellant to reimburse the appellee for the money thus expended by her during the nearly ten years that had elapsed between the date of said decree of divorce and the filing of her said petition? We are clearly of opinion that it had not; not because the court had no longer jurisdiction over the subject-matter, — the general doctrine of the courts of the United States being that jurisdiction over the custody and support of children in divorce cases is a continuing one; but because, in the very nature of the original decree, it being silent as to the custody of the child, there was nothing upon which to base its subsequent decree charging the appellant •with the expenses theretofore incurred by the appellee for the child’s support- These expenses were incurred, not because .she had been awarded the custody of the child; not because the *316father had abandoned or refused to support it; not because she was obliged to do so from any considerations of humanity or other imperative demand upon her disclosed by the record, but simply because she chose to do so as a matter of personal preference.
Inasmuch as the jurisdiction of the courts over the custody and support of children in divorce cases is a continuing one, the court below had the undoubted right to reopen the case, and upon a proper showing award the future custody of the child to the mother, and to decree its future support against the father, but there is nothing in the decree of July 25, 1891, nor in the circumstances of the case, upon which to base a decree requiring the appellant to reimburse the appellee for the expense thus voluntarily incurred and paid by her prior to the filing of her said petition.
So far as the decree related to the dissolution of the marriage it was absolute and final, and so far as it is related to the alimony awarded to the wife, which was the only question therein reserved, it is conceded by counsel on both sides, and was so held by the court below, that it became final upon her marriage to Burkart.
In Bowman v. Worthington, 24 Ark. 522, the court said: The subsequent remarriage of the wife annuls the allowance of alimony, and therefore, on the death of her second husband, the wife cannot claim the alimony allowed her from her first-husband. See also Sidney v. Sidney, 4 Swabey & T. 178, 34 L. J. Prob. N. S, 122, 11 Jur. N. S. 815, 12 L. T. N. S. 826; Albee v. Wyman, 10 Gray, 222; Olney v. Watts, 43 Ohio St. 499, 3 N. E. 354; Bankston v. Bankston, 27 Miss. 692; Stillman v. Stillman, 99 Ill. 196; 2 Bishop, Marr. & Div. par. 434.
This being all that was comprehended in the original decree, and such decree having thus served its full and final purpose,, that was the end of it. According to the great weight of authority upon the subject, the situation of the case would not- be essentially different had the court decreed the custody of the child to the mother, without providing for its support.
“When a wife has applied for the custody of the child and *317obtained it without asking a decree for its maintenance, she must be deemed to have assumed the burden of its support and relinquished all claims upon the father.” 9 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 872; Finch v. Finch, 22 Conn. 412; Husband v. Husband, 67 Ind. 583, 33 Am. Rep. 107; Cushman v. Hassler, 82 Iowa, 295, 47 N. W. 1036; Brow v. Brightman, 136 Mass. 187; Burritt v. Burritt, 29 Barb. 124; Fulton v. Fulton, 52 Ohio St. 229, 29 L. R. A. 678, 49 Am. St. Rep. 720, 39 N. E. 729.
If under such a decree the father would not be liable for the support of the child, then a fortiori would he not be where, as in this case, in the absence of such a decree, the mother not only voluntarily retained its custody and exercised sole control over its person, education, and support, but declined the proffered assistance of the father in paying the expenses incident thereto ?
“As a general rule the obligation to support the child rests primarily upon the father, but even this is governed more or less by the peculiar circumstances of each case.” Burritt v. Burritt, 29 Barb. 124.
While it cannot be questioned that where the marriage is dissolved by divorce, and the decree, as in this case, malms no provision for the custody and support of the children of the marriage, the father’s duty and obligation continues as at common law; on the other hand, this duty is reciprocal to the right of the father to the custody and services of his children, and if in such case he is deprived thereof by the voluntary assumption of their custody by the mother, such custody must, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, be presumed to carry with it the obligation to support them. Burritt v. Burritt, 29 Barb. 124; Brown v. Smith, 19 R. I. 319, 30 L. R. A. 680, 33 Atl. 466.
In a late case, in which the mother was awarded the custody of the child without provision by the court for the child’s support, the court said: “The law presumes that every question involved in the action in which the judgment was rendered— and the right of the plaintiff to an allowance for the maintenance of the child was one of those questions — was passed upon by the court, and that the claim for such maintenance was *318decided adversely to the plaintiff.” Rich v. Rich, 88 Hun, 566, 34 N. Y. Supp. 854. See also Husband v. Husband, 67 Ind. 583, 33 Am. Rep. 107; Brown v. Smith, 19 R. I. 319,, 30 L. R. A. 680, 33 Atl. 466.
There are numerous cases where, upon proper application for the support of the children of the divorced parents, the courts have decreed such support, simply upon the ground of parental duty. But even in such case it is held, in substantially all the well-considered cases, that such compensation can go only for the future and not for past support. Thomas v. Thomas, 41 Wis. 229; Courtright v. Courtright, 40 Mich. 633; Ramsey v. Ramsey, 121 Ind. 215, 6 L. R. A. 682, 23 N. E. 69.
In discussing this aspect of the case, Mr. Justice Marshall, in Zilley v. Dunwiddie, 98 Wis. 438, 40 L. R. A. 579, 67 Am. St. Rep. 820, 74 N. W. 126, said: “Allusions are made to the-moral and legal duty of a father to maintain his child, with-which all concur, but obviously that mere duty is one enforceable only by the public. In an action by a private individual' such duty is only a circumstance to be considered in determining; whether contractual relations, express or implied, exist between-the parties.”
There is a marked distinction, however, between parental' duty to the child which the public may enforce, and duty as; evidence of a contract that may be enforced by a private person privy thereto, by a personal action at law.
The question here is not what are the reciprocal rights of this; child and its parents as respects each other, but what are the-duties and obligations of the divorced parents, as between themselves, in respect of the child’s support.
While the relations of the parties to the child were not changed by the decree of divorce, their relations to each other were. Erom the moment the decree was passed the relation of Mrs. Burkart to her former husband was that of a stranger, and therefore, in the absence of an obligation on his part, arising out of a contract, express or implied, she stands in no better position to recover for the expenses incident to the past support of the child than would a total stranger.
*319The moral and legal duty of a father to support the child is not sufficient in itself to support a promise. At most it is a circumstance from which, in connection with other facts and. circumstances of a given case, a promise may be inferred. But no such inference can arise in this case, where it is repelled by ample proof that the appellant offered to contribute to the support of the child, which the appellee declined, on the ground that both she and the child were being supported by the second husband.
Lord Abinger, C. B., in Mortimore v. Wright, 6 Mees. & W. 482, 9 L. J. Exch. N. S. 158, 4 Jur. 465, says: A father who gives no authority and enters into no contract, is not liable for goods sold to his infant son. The mere moral obligation affords no inference of a promise.
To the same effect is Seaborne v. Maddy, 9 Car. & P. 497. It was there held that no person is, in the absence of a contract so to do, bound to pay another for supporting his children. To the same effect is the entire body of the English law, and, with few exceptions, all our American authorities.
Among the cases cited by counsel for the appellee in support of their contention is that of Alexander v. Alexander, 13 App D. C. 334, 45 L. R. A. 806. In that case a divorce a vinculo was granted at the suit of the wife, with a certain fixed monthly sum as alimony, and the right to apply for an increase, but without any reservation to the husband to apply for a reduction. After some years the defendant petitioned the court to reduce the alimony, and a decree was entered reducing the alimony as prayed.
In affirming that decree this court said:
“The authorities appear to be unanimous to the effect that the adjudication was a continuing one, and that the courts retained the whole subject under their control, increasing or diminishing the amount of alimony from time to time, as might seem just under changed or changing circumstances, and this wdthout reference to the fact that the original decree might have been entirely silent in regard to the reservation of right to the parties, or either of them, thereafter to apply to the court for a *320modification. Bishop, Marr. & Div. § 593; Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, title ‘Alimony,’ where numerous cases on the subject are collected.”
The court further said: “We think that a decree for the payment in payments periodical and of indefinite continuance was necessarily a decree for continuing superintendence by the courts, and which, therefore, for good cause accruing after-wards, the court might properly modify so far as concerned its future execution.”
While this case is authority for the general proposition that in the matter of the custody and maintenance of the children of divorced parents the court must necessarily retain a continuing jurisdiction, it has but a remote bearing upon the question under consideration.
So far as the “future execution” of the decree under consideration is concerned there remained but one single feature of the decree to be executed, viz., that relating to alimony.
It is nowhere suggested in that case that the court in the exercise of such jurisdiction may reopen a case of this character, and by a supplemental and retroactive decree require the father to reimburse his divorced wife for past expenditures in the support of the child of the marriage, whose custody and maintenance she had voluntarily assumed.
If the decree of divorce of July 25, 1891, was not satisfactory to the appellee because it did not award to her the custody of the child, and charge the father with its maintenance, she should have first applied to the court in due time to reopen the case and amend its decree in this regard, and if successful, her expenditures thereafter for the support of the child, instead of being self-imposed, would have been under the authority of the court, and therefore properly chargeable against him.
“If the decree contains no provision for the support of the children, the only remedy of the wife is to have the order modified by the court which granted it, and an order for such maintenance, as the husband is not liable to his divorced wife for the support of the children after divorce, unless the decree im*321posed such liability.” 7 Enc. PL & Pr. p. 131, and numerous cases there cited.
In most all of the cases cited by counsel for the appellee, the decree of divorce expressly awarded the custody of the child to the mother; and the courts held that such decree, to the extent of the cost of supporting such child, was a continuing one, and therefore they do not apply to the precise question here involved. The case most nearly like the present one, cited in the brief of counsel for the appellee, was that of Zilley v. Dunwiddie, 98 Wis. 428, 40 L. R. A. 579, 67 Am. St. Rep. 820, 74 N. W. 126.
While, as was said by Mr. Justice Marshall, in his able dissenting opinion in that ease, it is difficult to discern with certainty the grounds upon which this decision is placed, there is this well-defined distinction between that case and the one under consideration. In that case, the father, upon the expiration of the time during which the mother was awarded the child’s custody, demanded of the mother the future custody of the child, and served notice upon her that if she continued to retain its custody he would not pay for its future support. The child, however, refused to reside with its father, and the mother, without waiving her right to claim reimbursement from the father, continued to support the child. The court held that the father being entitled, by the express terms of the decree, to the custody of the child, after it reached the age of ten years, and failing to enforce that right, a promise on the part of the father to compensate the mother for her necessary expenses in supporting the child would be implied from his acquiescence in such maintenance by the mother.
In this case no such promise can be implied, because, while the father was legally entitled to the custody of the child, he refrained from enforcing that right and permitted it to remain with the mother, not because the child refused to quit the custody of the mother and live with him, and thus by its own act creating the necessity for its future support by the mother, and the consequent obligation of the father to pay for such support, as in the Zilley Case; but because the mother of her own voluntary choice retained the custody and companionship of the child *322and assumed the right to support it in her own way and according to her own judgment, and in disregard of the father’s expressed willingness to assist in its maintenance.
Another case cited by counsel for the appellee is that of Pretzinger v. Pretzinger, 45 Ohio St. 459, 4 Am. St. Rep. 542, 15 N. E. 471, decided in 1887. In that case the divorce was granted upon the application of the wife on account of the fault of the husband. The mother was awarded the custody of the child and alimony, but with no provision for the child’s support. Subsequently the divorced wife brought an original suit at law against the father to recover for the sums theretofore expended by her for the child’s support, and her action was sustained on the ground of parental duty.
Apart from the essential distinction between that case and the ease at bar, namely, that that- was an action at law to recover the disbursements of the wife for the support of the child, while in her custody under the decree of the court, the decision of the court in that case, tested by the later judgment of the same court in Fulton v. Fulton, 52 Ohio St. 229, 29 L. R. A. 678, 49 Am. St. Rep. 720, 39 N. E. 729, decided in 1895, cannot be regarded as authority in support of the appellee’s contention. In that case, which was also a suit at law, the same question involved in Pretzinger v. Pretzinger, 45 Ohio St. 459, 4 Am. St. Rep. 542, 15 N. E. 471, was again presented to the court, except that the decree of divorce was granted upon, the application of the husband for the misconduct of the wife.. It was there held that: “Where a divorce a vimulo has been
granted to a husband on account of the aggression of the wife,, and the minor children of the parties assigned to the custody of the divorced wife, without an order respecting their maintenance, and while so in her custody she furnished to them necessaries, she cannot recover against her former husband, their father, for her expenditures in this behalf in the absence of" .proof .of a promise by him to pay for such necessaries, or of a request that they should be furnished to the children.” Fulton v. Fulton, 52 Ohio St. 229, 29 L. R. A. 678, 49 Am. St. Rep. 720, 39 N. E. 729.
*323It is true that the court, instead of directly overruling the Pretzinger Case, distinguished the two cases on the ground that the divorce in the former was for the fault of the husband and the latter for fault of the wife. The observations of Marshall, J., in Zilley v. Dunwiddie, 98 Wis. 428, 40 L. R. A. 579, 67 Am. St. Rep. 820, 74 N. W. 126, upon this so-called distinction are pertinent in this connection:
“The right to recover, so far as it could be sustained on moral and legal duty, did not change in any respect by the circumstance that the divorce was granted for the fault of the wife. In both cases the divorced husband and wife were strangers to each other. The learned and very able court would have made a more orderly retreat from its early position by saying that it was based upon a wrong principle, for the two cases are manifestly inconsistent, and the result of trying to harmonize them presents the appearance ordinarily observed where the effort is made to preserve consistency by trying to harmonize things'that are diametrically opposed to each other.”
In any view of the case it is manifest that if the appellee is entitled to be reimbursed by the appellant for the expenditures in question, her remedy, if any she has, which may well be doubted, is in a court of law and not in this proceeding. To require the appellant, under the circumstances of this case, to reimburse the appellee, would be to assume that the mother and not the father of the child was its rightful custodian, and as such had the right to support and educate the child according to her own judgment and at his expense, and for which he must stand ready to respond upon the call of the mother. The statement of the proposition carries with it its own condemnation.
When it is remembered that a divorce a vinculo matrimonii contemplates an absolute and final separation of the parties, and that in legal contemplation they are to each other as strangers, the divorced mother no more than a stranger can, in the-absence of a proper order or decree of the court, or their abandonment by the father, assume the custody of the children, and. then require him to reimburse her for the cost of their maintenance. It follows, therefore, that with the exception of so> *324much of the decree appealed from as relates to alimony and •costs of suit, said decree must be reversed with costs.
The cause will be remanded to the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, with' directions to vacate said decree and to •enter a decree allowing alimony to the complainant, as prayed, and dismissing her petition as to the matter of allowance for the support of the child.
And it is so ordered. Reversed.