Bowdoin v. Bowdoin

144 So. 819, 225 Ala. 618, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 299
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 8, 1932
Docket4 Div. 645.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 144 So. 819 (Bowdoin v. Bowdoin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowdoin v. Bowdoin, 144 So. 819, 225 Ala. 618, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 299 (Ala. 1932).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

It is made to appear from the bill in this cause that E. A. Bowdoin died on or about the 4th day of October, 1931, seized and possessed of a plantation in Coffee county, upon which he resided at the time of his death. This plantation contained in the aggregate 280 acres of land.

Shortly after his death, the will of the said E. A. Bowdoin was duly admitted to probate and record in the probate court of Coffee county, and J. J. Sessions duly qualified as executor thereof. The complainant, as widow, within the time, and in the mode prescribed by law, dissented from the will.

Homestead exemptions were set apart to the widow, and, on petition filed by the executor, dower in the residue of the lands was assigned to her. However, she filed exceptions to the report of the commissioners setting aside dower, and her exceptions were overruled, and the report was confirmed, and the allotment made by the commissioners was made “final and conclusive.”

The complainant thereafter moved that the order of confirmation be set aside, but this motion was overruled by the court.

From the decree confirming- the report of the commissioners, as well as from the order*overruling the motion to set aside the decree of confirmation, the complainant appealed to the circuit court, and the appeal is there pending, and undetermined. The only bond given by the complainant to obtain the appeal to the circuit court was a cost bond, and no bond for supersedeas of the decree was given.

After the decree approving and confirming the report of the commissioners allotting dower was entered, the heirs at law or some of them, and who were the devisees of the-land under the will, of said E. A. Bowdoin, and the said Jesse J. Sessions, as executor of said will, undertook to enter upon, and take possession of all the lands devised to them, except the part set aside by the commissioners as dower to the widow, and except the homestead.

The bill of complaint, which was filed on-February 23, 1932, avers: “That the complainant is entitled to hold the possession of-the entire tract of land until her dower is finally stated and determined but that the respondents herein * * * are interfering, with and denying her right of possession. That the complainant and her tenants are now actively engaged in cultivating and planting of crops on said land, and that the said respondents have entered upon said lands with guns threatening to 4do complainant and her tenants bodily harm; and in fact by presenting said guns forcibly ran com-, plainant’s tenants from the field. That Jesse J. Sessions, as executor of the estate of E. A. Bowdoin, deceased, has instituted an unlaw-, ful detainer suit against Ed. Farmer, a tenant of complainant in the justice court of beat 17. and has served notice upon complainant and her tenants demanding possession of certain portions of said land and threatens numerous other unlawful detainer suits against complainant and her tenants, and is otherwise harassing and threatening.complainant in her possession of said land, and with numerous suits and vexatious litigation.” The prayer of the bill is for injunction restraining and enjoining the respondents from going upon said lands and interfering with complainant and her tenants in their possession until dower in said lands is “finally determined by a court of final resort.”

It is fairly inferable from the -bill that complainant has not been molested in any way in her possession of tile dower and homestead. land.

Upon the filing of this bill, a temporary injunction was issued in accordance with the' prayer of the bill.

The respondents filed a sworn answer to the bill and moved the dissolution of the injunction. There is no footnote to the bill, and the oaths of respondents to the bill were not waived. In their answer, the respondents presented the decree of the court alloting and setting aside to complainant dower, descri-b-' ing the lands assigned to her. They specifically deny any interference with complainant or her tenants in the use and enjoyment of the dower land. They admit that an unlawful detainer suit has been filed against’ Ed. Farmer, and that other such suits were in contemplation to gain possession of the *620 lands, other than the part set aside to the widow for homestead and dower. The respondents also deny in positive terms that they had entered upon the lands with guns or threatened the complainant or her tenants, or that they ran the complainant or her tenants off the land.

The complainant’s contention is that her appeal from the decree of the probate court to the circuit couit had the effect of suspending the decree pending the appeal, and thereby to leave the complainant in the possession and enjoyment of the entire plantation until the appeal, should be finally determined.

The complainant invokes the provisions of sections 7437 et seq. of the Code, to sustain her contention that she is entitled to .retain the entire plantation, until her dower is assigned to her free of rent. The statute so provides. The appellees insist, however, that dower has been assigned in the mode and manner provided by law, and that she no longer has the right to retain the entire plantation against the heirs, or devisees. The complainant, while admitting that an allotment has been made, makes the insistence that her appeal from the decree of the probate court to the circuit court suspended the decree, and thereby gave her the right to retain all the lands, together with their use free of rent and free from interference by the heirs, until her appeal is finally determined in the circuit court, or “until the question of what her dower is, is finally determined by a court of last resort.”

The widow, of course, had the right of an appeal from the decree confirming the report of the commissioners. This right of appeal is secured to her by section 6114 of the Code, upon giving bond as reqrrired by section 6121 of the Code.

The legal effect'of the decree assigning dower to the widow was to terminate her right of quarantine, and to cut off her possessory right to ■ all the lands of her deceased husband, which were not allotted to her by way of homestead exemptions and for dower, and, of course, to permit the heirs to enter upon and to take possession of the lands not included in either allotment. To that extent, it was a recovery by the heirs, or personal representative, as the case may be, of the lands as against the widow.

In the early ease of Doe ex dem. Shelton v. Carrol et al., 16 Ala. 148, this court, in construing the, progenitor of section 7437 of the Code, which ,is in all material aspects the same as section 7437, made this observation: “The object of .the, statute was to protect the widow.in the enjoyment of the homestead and the rents and ,profits accruing therefrom, until her dower was assigned, and to make it incumbent on those entitled to the fee, whether they Wthé.heirs. at'law or purchasers, if they desired to obtain possession of the portion to which they were entitled in the real estate, to become themselves the actors to have the widow’s dower assigned to her. If they remain inactive and acquiesce in hex-possession, she is not subject to the paymexit of rent, nor to molestation. Until her dower is assigned, she holds the premises for an indefinite period and may rent them out and appropriate the proceeds to her own use.”

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 819, 225 Ala. 618, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowdoin-v-bowdoin-ala-1932.