Court Opinion

ID: 8187975
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:10:44.616967+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:29.773012
License: Public Domain

MARSHALL, T.
It is elementary law that an infant is bound by implied contract to pay reasonably for necessaries furnished him. The limitations of the rule are plainly indicated by the statement of it. In order that the infant may be bound, all the circumstances must exist essential to raise a promise by implication of law. There must hare been furnished him property or some thing of value, being such as to administer to his necessities.' That, obviously, excludes the idea of an infant’s being liable upon an executory contract to furnish him necessaries, as has been uniformly held. Gregory v. Lee, 64 Conn. 407, 30 Atl. 53. No liability can be created by an infant for necessaries by express contract. His liability therefor is wholly a creation of law. 1 Parsons, Contracts (9th ed.) 314, note 1.
In view of the foregoing we need not stop to inquire whether an infant may bind himself by implied contract to pay for educational training of the kind promised by the appellant, under the rule above stated, since there is no claim that such training was bestowed upon respondent.
But it is said respondent is liable, since he received a thing of value for his money, to wit, the written evidence of the payment of money to appellant, called a scholarship, showing that he was entitled to the benefits of the latter’s school, and that he has not effectively rescinded the transaction by returning or offering to return the paper. True, ordinarily an infant’s executed contract is not absolutely void. It is only voidable. He cannot repudiate it and successfully invoke judicial remedies to restore him to his former position till he shall have, so far as he reasonably can, made or offered to make restitution. 16 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.) '295; 1 Parsons, Contracts (9th ed.) 321, 323, and notes. Assuming for the purposes of this case that the alleged contract in question is within that rule, and that upon disaffirm-ing it respondent should have returned or offered to return the evidence that he was entitled to the benefits of appellant’s *321school before invoking a judicial remedy to recover bis money,, the record shows that before the action was commenced he demanded a return of his money, then making known his-willingness to return the scholarship, so called, and that tho attitude of appellant was such as to plainly indicate that it claimed the right and intended to retain the money. That waived any formal tender of the paper. Potter v. Taggart, 54 Wis. 395, 11 N. W. 678. In such circumstances, of course, it is necessary that restoration should be made upon the trial as a condition of judgment. Potter v. Taggart, supra. That, it appears, was substantially done. The paper was produced upon the trial, delivered into court, and there left, the attitude of respondent and his attorney plainly suggesting that the paper was considered as belonging to appellant. It follows that the judgment appealed from must be affirmed.
By the Court. — So ordered.