St. Francis Regional Medical Center, Inc. v. Bowles
Decision Date | 31 December 1991 |
Docket Number | No. 66075,66075 |
Parties | ST. FRANCIS REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, INC., Appellee, v. Edward D. BOWLES, Defendant, and Tamara Bowles, Appellant. |
Court | Kansas Court of Appeals |
Syllabus by the Court
1. The common-law doctrine of necessaries obligates a spouse to pay for the other spouse's necessaries, which include those things needed and suitable to the spouses' rank and condition and the style of life they have adopted.
2. The common-law doctrine of necessaries is stated and applied to a claim for medical services rendered to defendant's husband.
John Black, of Black and Black, Lawyers, Salina, for appellant.
John B. Gilliam, Troy H. Gott, and Christopher A. McElgunn, of Klenda, Mitchell, Austerman & Zuercher, Wichita, for appellee.
Curtis J. Waugh, Wayne T. Stratton, and David E. Bruns, of Goodell, Stratton, Edmonds & Palmer, Topeka, for amicus curiae Kansas Hosp. Ass'n.
Before REES, P.J., DAVIS, J., and STEPHEN D. HILL, District Judge, Assigned.
Plaintiff St. Francis Regional Medical Center, Inc., has pursued this action against Edward Bowles and his wife, Tamara Bowles, to collect its charges for medical services provided to Edward. All parties agree that the medical services provided to Edward were necessary services and that the hospital's charges are reasonable and proper. Edward has confessed judgment in the principal amount of $12,021.54.
Because of Edward's financial inability to pay, the hospital has sought identical but nonduplicative recovery against Tamara under the common-law doctrine of necessaries. The essence of that doctrine is that a spouse is obligated to pay for the other spouse's necessaries, which include those things needed and suitable to the spouses' rank and condition and the style of life they have adopted. Chipp v. Murray, 191 Kan. 73, 76, 379 P.2d 297 (1963).
Tamara appeals from the summary judgment entered in favor of the hospital and against her. She argues that, because the doctrine of necessaries stems from the common-law concept of the unity of marriage under which a wife was deemed dependent upon her husband because she could not separately own and hold property in her name, the doctrine operates only to obligate a husband to pay for his wife's necessaries. From that she argues that a wife is not obligated to pay for her husband's necessaries. Although it does not support her defense in the present case, Tamara suggests that, because the doctrine is not gender neutral, its implementation violates the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Tamara proposes that the doctrine should be abolished.
We are referred to no Kansas appellate decision where the doctrine of necessaries has been expressly applied to obligate a wife for her husband's necessary expenses.
The earliest Kansas reference to the doctrine of necessaries that we have found appears in Harttmann v. Tegart, 12 Kan. 177 (1873).
Within Harttmann, it is stated: "We suppose a mutual legal as well as moral obligation rests upon every husband and wife to furnish each other, so far as it is within their power, everything necessary for their mutual comfort and enjoyment." 12 Kan. at 179.
Contrary to Tamara's assertion that the doctrine of necessaries was based on the concept of unity of marriage, in Harttmann our Supreme Court reasoned that the doctrine arose from agency principles. 12 Kan. at 179-80.
In State v. Koontz, 124 Kan. 216, 217-18, 257 P. 944 (1927), this appears:
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