March 7, 2014 at 6:53 pm
Teenager Rachel Canning sues parents for child support
A teenager in the US who is suing her parents for cash after leaving home has lost the first round of her legal case.
Rachel Canning, 18, has demanded $650 (£390) in weekly child support from her parents at a court in New York.
The cheerleader also wanted her private school tuition fees, a college fund and her lawyers’ fees paid.
Her parents said their daughter voluntarily left home because she did not like their house rules.
Retired police chief Sean Canning and his wife, Elizabeth, said they had asked their daughter to be respectful at home, keep curfews, help with chores and end her relationship with her boyfriend.
At a family court hearing in New York on Tuesday, Miss Canning, from New Jersey, was told her parents would not have to pay child support or her legal costs.
Judge Peter Bogaard warned that her suit could lead to a “slippery slope”, asking: “Are we going to open the gates for 12-year-olds to sue for an Xbox? For 13-year-olds to sue for an iPhone?”
The school has waived its fees until the case is settled.
Miss Canning claimed her parents threw her out of the family home in November when she turned 18 because they didn’t like her boyfriend.
She claimed they refused to pay for her university education, even after she received acceptance letters for several places.
In court papers, she accused her parents of being abusive, contributing to an eating disorder and pushing her to get a basketball scholarship.
The Cannings, who have two other daughters, said they helped her through the eating disorder and paid for a private school where she would play less basketball than at a state-run school.
Miss Canning is asking to be declared non-emancipated from her parents which means she is dependent on her parent’s support.
“We love our child and miss her,” Mr Canning told New Jersey newspaper the Daily Record before the hearing.
“It’s killing me and my wife. We have a child we want home. We’re not draconian and now we’re getting hauled into court.
“She’s demanding that we pay her bills but she doesn’t want to live at home and she’s saying, ‘I don’t want to live under your rules.'”
Miss Canning has been living with the family of her best friend and is thought to have been offered a scholarship worth $20,000 (£12,000) to study biomedical engineering at the University of Vermont.
The case will return to court on 22 April.
Got a couple like that round here: want this, want that, ignoring the roster and complaining when dinner is late because someone cooking (why is it always me?) also had to wash up. But if ‘Santa’ asks if they’ve been good or bad when the demand is for a new ipad 5 or whatever (yeah, right, as if…) then light the blue touchpaper and retire!!!
By: Lincoln 7 - 8th March 2014 at 09:37
Reading between the lines, she appears to have been a spoilt little brat, who’es actions should have been nipped in the bud right from the start. She was part of a family, and as such, should have mucked in doing her fair share of housework, why should any kid get a free ride for life?.
Jim.
Lincoln .7
By: snafu - 8th March 2014 at 00:23
No, she already appears to be a bitter and twisted loser so things can only get better for her…
By: TonyT - 7th March 2014 at 23:41
The only winner in this will be the lawyers, they will be spending their life savings having to defend themselves, one can only hope it financially ruins the daughter for the rest of her life.
By: trumper - 7th March 2014 at 21:16
You are right there Charlie.
I do understand the odd case where the best interests of the sibling has been completely lost but even so thats where the law and social services should be stepping in.
By: charliehunt - 7th March 2014 at 20:27
If it goes on down the slippery path children will be given all the rights they demand before they are old enough to even understand responsibilities. The one without the other is a recipe for disaster.
By: snafu - 7th March 2014 at 19:51
Indeed, but there are times…;o)
By: trumper - 7th March 2014 at 19:38
Nowt stranger than folk and you can choose your friends but not your family.