Child Can Intervene in Parents' Divorce Seeking Money for College
A child can intervene in his parents' marital settlement agreement to enforce a provision that directly benefits him, the Pennsylvania Superior Court has ruled.
August 18, 2017 at 07:40 PM
7 minute read
A child can intervene in his parents' marital settlement agreement to enforce a provision that directly benefits him, the Pennsylvania Superior Court has ruled.
A unanimous three-judge panel ruled Aug. 11 in Weber v. Weber that Michael Weber has standing to seek enforcement of a section of his divorced parents' agreement that would require his father to pay his share of the expenses Weber incurred during undergraduate and graduate school. The decision vacated a ruling of the Crawford County Court of Common Pleas.
Beth and Mark Weber divorced in 2000, and in 2007 she sought enforcement of a section of their settlement agreement requiring them to equally share the cost of their children's education, according to the court's opinion. Michael Weber filed a petition seeking to intervene and was permitted by the trial court to join the action as a plaintiff. After Beth Weber filed a motion for voluntary nonsuit, which was granted, there were no filings in the matter until 2016, when Michael Weber filed a petition for special relief.
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