McLain v. Meadows
McLain v. Meadows
Opinion of the Court
In this action, brought under section 196a of the Civil Code, the mother of an illegitimate child sues the father to compel him to contribute to the child’s support. From a judgment for plaintiff, defendant appeals.
*403 The child was horn March 28, 1913. Defendant himself is a minor, though subsequent to the commencement of the action he took unto himself a wife and is now a married man.
It is contended that, because the child was conceived and born before the legislature enacted any legislation making the father of an illegitimate child liable for its support, defendant cannot be held liable without giving the statute a retroactive effect. This objection is based upon a misconception of the purpose and nature of the action and of the code provision under which it is brought. By the great weight of authority—with which we agree—the proceeding is civil, not criminal, and its object is not the imposition of a penalty for an immoral act, but merely to compel the father to provide for the support and education of his offspring and thus keep it from being a charge upon the community. In the absence of any legislation creating a legal liability, there rests upon the parents of an illegitimate child a natural obligation to support it; and a statutory provision such as that contained in section 196a, adding legal sanction to the parents’ natural and moral obligation, is an enactment in the exercise of the state’s police power to compel those who are responsible for the child’s existence to bear the burden of the expense that its existence necessitates. (State v. Addington, 143 N. C. 683, [11 Ann. Cas. 314, and note on p. 316 et seq., 57 S. E. 398]; State v. Pickering, 29 S. D. 207, [40 L. R. A. (N. S.) 144, 136 N. W. 105]; 7 C. J. 967.) Such a statute does not attempt to punish the parent for his past conduct. It does not attempt to punish him for begetting the child or for neglecting to support it before the enactment took effect. What it does do is to require the father, and the mother also, from the time the statute became a law, to contribute to the child’s support and maintenance, thus relieving others upon whom otherwise the burden might chance to fall. This the legislature may do, and it is entirely inconsequential that the child was conceived or born before the statute became a law. Regardless of when the child was conceived or born, the statute makes it the present legal duty of the father to support it. It is to enforce that present legal duty, and none other, that the action is brought. (Libby v. State, 42 Okl. 603, [142 Pac. 406] j Commonwealth *404 v. Callahan, 223 Mass. 150, [111 N. E. 773]; Wamsley v. People, 64 Colo. 521, [173 Pac. 425], See, also, Gambetta v. Gambetta, 30 Cal. App. 261, [157 Pac. 1141]; People v. Stanley, 33 Cal. App. 624, [166 Pac. 596]; and Fernandez v. Aburrea, 42 Cal. App. 131, [183 Pac. 366]—cases in which the child was born or 'conceived before the statute became operative.)
No other points are urged of sufficient merit to warrant discussion.
Judgment affirmed.
Sloane, J., and Thomas, J., concurred'.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ESTHER McLAIN, Respondent, v. RUSH MEADOWS, Appellant
- Cited By
- 7 cases
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- Published