Vega v. Vega
Vega v. Vega
Opinion of the Court
Affirmed.
Concurring Opinion
concurring specialty-
I write to express two views in this case wherein the trial court property entered judgment against the former husband for $15,347.25 in arrearages for child support. First, the former husband sought, unsuccessfully, to establish waiver and estoppel to the claim of the former wife. I find it unreasonable that a child, not represented by a guardian ad litem, could lose the financial support due that child because of some act by the custodial parent to which a guardian ad litem might have objected, had there been one. Child support is a daily reality. It determines if and what a child eats; what a child wears; the education the child is receiving; the daily care the child has or does not have; medical, dental, opto-metric or other benefits the child obtains or does without; the activities in which the child does or does not engage; and the intellectual and emotional growth which the child enjoys or of which the child is deprived. In case after case in which the
Second, child support is a constant, daily obligation. Time and again, we see the cruel maxim to which a child is victim; namely, out of sight, out of heart. Fathers appear, leave and reappear without maintaining that ongoing presence, financially and emotionally, which is a child’s birthright. The late Oliver Wendell Holmes could well have likened children to puppies when he observed that even the latter know the difference between being kicked and being tripped over. If all fathers were truly sensitive to their children’s ongoing needs, the adult financial delinquency involved here might never have occurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Raymond E. VEGA v. Linda VEGA a/k/a Linda Fischer
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published