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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Ketchen v. Ketchen [1871] ScotLR 8_420 (11 March 1871)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/08SLR0420.html
Cite as: [1871] ScotLR 8_420, [1871] SLR 8_420

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 420

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Saturday, March 11. 1871.

8 SLR 420

Ketchen

v.

Ketchen.

Subject_1Aliment
Subject_2Parent and Child
Subject_3Divorce.
Facts:

Circumstances in which held that £25 per annum was a sufficient sum to be paid by a captain in the army for the support of a daughter, four years

Page: 421

of age, in the custody of her mother, from whom he had been divorced; and action concluding for payment of £60 per annum dismissed accordingly.

Headnote:

James Ketchen, a lieutenant in the Bombay Native Infantry, the defender in this action, married Julia Matilda Grant on July 5th 1862, went with her to India, and was thereafter promoted to the rank of captain. Four children were born of the marriage, of whom Ethel Julia Grant, the pursuer in this action, alone survived. In October 1868 they returned to Great Britain, and went to reside at Kingillie House, near Nairn; but in May 1870 Mrs Ketchen obtained a decree of divorce against her husband on the ground of adultery. In June 1870 the Second Division of the Court refused the prayer of a petition by the defender for the custody of his child, and gave the custody to the mother. In July 1870 defender offered to pay £25 per annum as aliment for his daughter, but that offer was declined as unsuitable. On November 23d, 1871, pursuer raised the present action, concluding for aliment at the rate of £60 per annum. It appeared that defender was proprietor of Kingillie House, the rental of which was entered on the Valuation Boll as £65, but that the property was burdened with heritable debts to the extent of £1000. Defender's pay as captain in the Indian army amounted to nearly £500, but from September 1868 to September 1870 he had been in receipt of half-pay only, while, subsequently to the latter date, he was allowed 10s. 6d. per diem only.

Pursuer pleaded that “The defender, being the pursuer's father, is bound to aliment the pursuer, and is therefore liable as concluded for.”

Defender pleaded, inter alia—“(1) The pursuer, being a pupil, has no title to sue, and the action ought therefore to be dismissed. (4) The action is barred by the statements and pleadings of the pursuer's mother (the vera domina litis) in the petition for custody.” (This plea referred to a statement by the mother, in objection to that petition, that “she was quite able to support and educate the child in a manner befitting her position in life.”) “(6) The offer made by the defender to pay £25 a-year was, in the circumstances, a reasonable one, and this action was unnecessary.”

The Lord Ordinary ( Jerviswoode) pronounced an interlocutor “ordaining the defender to make payment to the pursuer of the sum of forty pounds sterling (£40) yearly, in name of aliment, payable at the terms, in manner, and with interest, as concluded for in the summons, and that during the pupilarity of the pursuer, without prejudice to such claim for aliment thereafter as she may be advised to insist in.

Note.—It was here earnestly argued, on behalf of the defender, that having regard to the principles of law applicable to the class of cases within which the present may be held to come, and of which the case of Maule v. Maule, as decided in the House of Lords is a prominent instance, the aliment which the defender should here be found liable to pay should be fixed at a sum sufficient merely to preserve the pursuer from absolute want. But the Lord Ordinary holds, and in his present judgment has proceeded on the footing, that the case of Maule does not rule, or seriously affect, the principle which is to be applied.

Here the foundation of the claim, at the instance of the pursuer, is the misconduct of the defender himself. That this is so is rendered clear by the terms of the judgment, and of the opinion of the Court, as delivered in the case of Ketchen v. Ketchen (the defender), reported under date July 2d, 1870; and it appears to the Lord Ordinary that it would be contrary to principle to find first that the defender is disqualified by his personal conduct to act as the custodier of his child, and to follow such a finding by fixing the aliment which is, in consequence, to be paid to another, who is to act in loco parentis, at the lowest possible rate consistent with the actual subsistence of the child.”

The defender reclaimed.

Burnet for him.

Lancaster for respondent.

At advising—

Judgment:

The Lord Justice-Clerk—I am of opinion that the offer made by the defender for the aliment of his child is sufficient in the circumstances, and that the action should therefore be dismissed. “When the defender presented a petition to us, praying for the custody of the child, we debarred him from separating it from its mother; but her statement, that she was in a position to support and educate it, formed an element in the considerations which induced us to give her the custody. Now, this is really an application by the mother for the aliment of the child. Keeping in view, therefore, her former statement, and the circumstance that the child is to live with the mother, I think the defender has made a sufficient offer of aliment, and it is not necessary to touch on the general principles by which such aliment is to be determined. The amount offered is enough in the meantime, but if a change in the circumstances of the defender takes place, an increased aliment may perhaps reasonably be demanded.

Lord Benholme—I hold that the action should be dismissed, on the ground that the offer made by the defender is sufficient, although circumstances may so far change as to justify the pursuer in asking for an increase. The case of Maule is the ruling authority in all these cases, and cannot be regarded as otherwise than binding. The Lord Ordinary, however, appears to me to have allowed himself to be a little affected by the previous misconduct of the father, and to have granted a higher aliment than that offered, as a kind of penalty; but I consider £25 per annum as an allowance for a child living with its mother to be sufficient in the circumstances, while the misconduct of the father has no bearing on the matter.

Lord Cowan and Lord Neaves concurred.

The Court accordingly pronounced an interlocutor dismissing the action, “in respect of the offer made by the defender to pay £25 per annum as aliment.”

Solicitors: Agents for Pursuer— H. & A. Inglis, W.S.

Agent for Defender— N. M. Campbell, S.S.C,

1871


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/08SLR0420.html