Stanton v. Stanton
United States Supreme Court
421 U.S. 7 (1975)
- Written by Sharon Feldman, JD
Facts
A divorce decree required James Stanton (defendant) to pay child support to Thelma Stanton (plaintiff) for a daughter and son. Pursuant to a Utah law that set the age of majority for girls at 18 and for boys at 21, James discontinued support payments for the daughter when she turned 18. Thelma moved for additional support until the daughter turned 21. The trial court denied the motion. The Utah Supreme Court affirmed, observing that a male requires education and training before he assumes the responsibility for providing a home, girls tend to mature earlier than boys, and females tend to marry earlier than males. The United States Supreme Court granted review.
Rule of Law
Issue
Holding and Reasoning (Blackmun, J.)
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