A minor who enters into a contract for necessaries is liable for the reasonable value of the goods unless he or she disaffirms the contract. a. True b. False. b. False. Parents are liable for the contracts made by their minor children acting on their own. a. True b. False. b. False. Ordinarily, minors can disaffirm their contracts even when they have misrepresented their age. a. True b. False Persons incapable of making contracts generally, may, nevertheless, make legal engagements for necessaries for which they, or those bound to support them, will be held responsible. The classes of persons who, although not bound by their usual contracts, can bind themselves or others for necessaries, are infants and married women. "Alabama law, like the law of most other states, provides that persons providing `necessaries'[[3]] of life to minors may recover the reasonable value of such necessaries irrespective of the existence, *237 or nonexistence, of a (voidable) contract respecting those necessaries. As stated by the Alabama Supreme Court in Ragan v. Williams, 220 Ala. 590, 127 So. 190 (1930), `[w]hen necessaries are furnished to one who by reason of infancy cannot bind himself by his contract, the law implies an