Barton v. Wilson

172 S.W. 1032, 116 Ark. 400, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 133
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 18, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 1032 (Barton v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barton v. Wilson, 172 S.W. 1032, 116 Ark. 400, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 133 (Ark. 1915).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellant M. F. Barton instituted this action in the ¡chancery court of Pope County to establish and quiet her title to certain lands lying in that county, and also a large amount of personal property, all of which she claims by inheritance from .her brother, J. K. Bowers, who died without lineal heirs. A portion of the lands owned by decedent, J. K. Bowers, came to him by inheritance from his father, and therefore constituted an ancestral estate; tihe remaining portion of the lands, Which is quite the largest part of his estate, were lands which he acquired himself by purchase. J. K. Bowers died-in Pope County on November 27, 1912, and was survived by Ms wife, who died one day later1 without having had her dower assigned to her. Mrs. Barton was the only collateral heir of J. K. Bowers of the full blood, but he left other heirs of the half blood, namely, descenidents of his half brother, W. A. Travis. Mrs. Bowers was a Boyd before her marriage and she died cMldless, leaving collateral heirs who were made parties to tMs proceeding. The Travis heirs were also made parties, as was the administrator of the estate of said decedent.

The court in its decree awarded the ancestral lands to the appellant, Mrs. Barton; and divided the personal property and the land constituting the new acquisition, one-half to the Boyds, as heirs at law of the widow of J. K. Bowers, and one-fourth to appellant, Mrs. Barton, and the other fourth to the Travis heirs. The Travis heirs have cross-appealed from that part of the decree which awards a portion of the estate to the Boyd heirs and also from 'the part of the decree which awards all of the so-called ancestral lands to appellant.

The contention of appellant is that because the widow died before her dower was assigned, and without asserting a claim of her right to have it -assigned, she did not become immediately vested with an estate of such a character that it passed at her death to her heirs; and it is also contended that if the widow took any interest in the land, it was as heir of the decedent in the nature of an ancestral estate, which upon her death went back to the source whence it came, i. e., the blood of the original donor, and that her heirs took nothing by inheritance.

The controlling statute on the subject of widow’s dower reads as follows: “If a husband die, leaving a widow and no children, such widow shall be endowed in 'fee simple of one-half of the real estate of wMch such husband died seized, where said estate is a new acquisition, and not an ancestral estate; and one-half of the personal estate, absolutely and in her own right, as against collateral heirs, but, as against creditors, she shall be endowed with one-third of the real estate in fee simple if a new acquisition and not ancestral, and of one-third of the personal property absolutely. Provided, if the real estate of the husband be an ancestral estate she shall he endowed in a life estate of .one-half of said real estate as against colateral heirs, and one-third as against creditors.” Kirby’s Digest, § 2709.

(1) The argument of appellant is based upon decisions of this court to the effect that the widow’s dower right, before 'allotment to her in severalty of her share; is not transferable to a stranger so as to confer any rights enforceable at law. Jacoway v. McGarrah, 21 Ark. 347; Jacks v. Dyer, 31 Ark. 334; Weaver v. Rush, 62 Ark 51; Flowers v. Flowers, 84 Ark. 557. Prom this premise it is argued that, under-the present statute, if the widow dies without asserting her claim, neither her personal representatives nor heirs can maintain an action to recover the land nor for personal property not assigned to her as dower before her death. The statute quoted above was enacted in 1891 and worked a very material change in the law on that subject. Prior to the passage of that statute, the widow took only a life estate, but now, in certain instances, she takes land in fee simple. It has always been the law of this State that the widow’s right to dower in personal property is not lost by her death, but descends to her personal representatives for the benefit of her creditors or heirs, and this is so for the reason ■that her dower right in personalty is absolute. The statute now under consideration gives the widow an absolute estate, and therefore it necessarily follows, for the same reason, that the interest conferred by the statute vests immediately upon the death of the husband and descends to the heirs of the widow, whether the assignment is made before her death or not. She takes absolutely an undivided interest in fee simple, .and it is such an interest as immediately vests and without assignment becomes subject to transmission by conveyance or inheritance.

The following is laid down as the rule with respe'ot to personal property, and we think it is equally applicable to real estate where an interest is conferred in fee simple: “If the surviving spouse of an intestate dies before a distribution of the intestate’s personalty has been made, the survivor’s distributive share vests on the other’s death, both at common law and under the statutes, and passes to the survivor’s personal representatives.” 14 Cyc. 63.

In Indiana, where there is a similar statute, the courts of that State held that the widow’s one-third dower vested at the moment of the husband’s death. Mills v. Marshall, 8 Ind. 54. Such is the construction of a similar statute in Vermont. Johnson v. Johnson, 41 Vt. 467. Under a statute in Iowa which provides that “one-third in value of all the legal or equitable estates in real property possessed by the husband at any time during marriage, * * * shall be set apart as her (the wife’s) property in fee simple if she survives him,” the Supreme Court of that State in construing the statute said: “Upon the death of the husband the widow was vested with the legal title to one-third of the real estate of which her husband died seized. This being so, the estate would naturally descend to her heirs, whether her interest had been set apart or not. The estate vests immediately upon the death of the husband, or it doesn’t vest at all. Being a fee simple estate, it must of necessity descend to the heirs of the widow, unless she has in some manner disposed of it in her lifetime. Such an estate can not be obliterated or destroyed by the mere passive act of the owner unless there is some statute which so declares.” Potter v. Worley, 57 Ia. 66. The Supreme Court of Florida so construed a similar statute in the case of Woodberry v. Matherson, 19 Fla. 778. Mr. Freeman, in his notes to the case of Sanders v. McMillan, 39 Am. State Rep. 19, said: “In some parts of the United .States the estate has (been changed by statute to one in fee, and it is a necessary result of this .change that if the widow does not procure an assignment in her lifetime her heirs must 'be permitted, .after her death, to prosecute the proceedings requisite to an assignment, for, if such were not the case her estate in fee would ¡be converted into .an estate for life only by her mere inaction.”

(2) We think, too, that the question is decided by this court in Drinkwater v. Crist, 83 Ark. 293. After quoting the statute (Section 2700) of Kirby’s Digest), it was said: “It fellows that the mother of appellee was.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 1032, 116 Ark. 400, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barton-v-wilson-ark-1915.