Bradford v. Culbreth

10 A.2d 534, 40 Del. 373, 1 Terry 373, 1939 Del. LEXIS 54
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 22, 1939
DocketNo. 7
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 10 A.2d 534 (Bradford v. Culbreth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradford v. Culbreth, 10 A.2d 534, 40 Del. 373, 1 Terry 373, 1939 Del. LEXIS 54 (Del. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Rodney, J.,

charging the jury:

This is an action at law for dower brought by the plaintiff, 'Helen Rogers Bradford, against the named defendants. By the action the plaintiff not only seeks to have assigned and set off to her, for her life, the one-third part of the lands and premises mentioned in the writ and declaration, or the one-third part of the net rental value thereof, but by the action the plaintiff seeks also to recover reasonable damages for the detention of her dower in the past from the time she contends she became dowable, and this date from which the plaintiff claims she was dowable was June 30, 1900.

The unusual nature of the action and the paucity of [377]*377instances in which it has been employed in Delaware makes it expedient that I give to it some passing attention. I shall not pause to consider whether the right to dower had its origin in the common law and our Statutes only related to the remedy as held by the Court of Errors and Appeals in 1847, in Layton v. Butler, 4 Harr. 507, or whether the right of dower, while existent at common law, was so circumscribed by the law of Delaware as to liens against the husband in his lifetime as to have had its real origin in the law of 1816 (Vol. 5, Laws of Delaware, p. 174) as held by the Superior Court in 1838 in Coulter v. Holland, 2 Harr. 330, at page 334, and tentatively approved by the Court of Errors and Appeals in 1877, in Bush v. Bush, 5 Houst. 245, at page 266.

In either event it was the law of this State in 1900 as now set out in Sec. 3767, Revised Code of 1935, that the widow of a man “who during their marriage was seized of an estate of inheritance in any lands, or tenements, within this State, shall have the third part of all the lands and tenements whereof her said husband was seised, as aforesaid, * * * to hold to her as tenant in dower for and during * * * her natural life, free and discharged from all and every the alienations, covenants, debts, liens and incumbrances, made, entered into, contracted, or created by the said husband after the intermarriage, unless she shall have relinquished her right of dower therein by her own voluntary act, according to the existing laws of the State.”

I shall also pause but briefly to consider the nature of the action. At common law where the widow had received no part of her dower she was entitled to recover it in an action of ‘‘Dower unde nihil habet”. At early common law she could recover no arrears of dower or damages for the detention, but this was provided in 1235 by the Statute of Merton (20 Hen. 3). We had in Delaware no statutory provision governing arrears of dower or damages for the de[378]*378tention, until the Act of February 11, 1829 (Vol. 7, Laws of Delaware, page 361), which was passed for inclusion in the Code of 1829 and which, without change of phraseology, has been split up and is now found as Sections 3776-3781 of Revised Code of 1935. In Layton v. Butler, supra, it was stated that the common law proceedings were simplified by the Act of Assembly, and that an action for dower was the common law action and the action for damages for detention was created by the Statute. In Betts v. Matthews, 4 Harr. 427, substantially the same judges said the damages “are a mere accident given by the Act of Assembly”. Until the question of damages becomes material it is not necessary for me to consider whether the present case is brought pursuant to the common law as simplified by the Act of Assembly, or whether it is brought purely by virtue of the Act itself. The statute sets out the proceedings in an action of dower and provides (Sec. 3779) :

“The demandant shall recover reasonable damages for the detention of her dower, which damages shall be in satisfaction of any demand on account of rents and profits * * *.”

It is also provided (Sec. 3780) :

“Upon judgment, the court, instead of awarding a writ for delivering seizin, may appoint five judicious and impartial freeholders of the County to lay off the dower, and also to assess the damages for the detention, if not previously assessed by a jury * *

The plaintiff, by her declaration, demands that the defendants render to her dower out of the freehold of Thomas B. Bradford (her husband) in certain described lands and premises at the corner of Water and State (formerly Main) Streets, in Dover, Delaware. She also claims damages for the detention of her dower, and these damages she fixed at $50,000.00.

To this declaration the defendants filed a number of pleas, but the difficulties of the case cluster around the plea that Thomas B. Bradford was not seized of such an estate in the land that would entitle the plaintiff to dower.

[379]*379From the evidence the following material facts appear, which will be given in some chronological order:

The plaintiff has proven that the land in which she claims dower once belonged to Vincent Lockerman, the great grandfather of Mrs. Culbreth, one of the defendants, and of Thomas B. Bradford, the former husband of the plaintiff. From Lockerman the title may be traced downward by descent, devises and conveyances to Lucinda Hall Bradford, the mother of Lucinda Hall Bradford Culbreth, and also the mother of the husband of the plaintiff. Mrs. Bradford had also three other children, William Bradford, Robert R. P. Bradford and Willard H. Bradford.

Mrs. Bradford, the mother, by will dated February 26, 1879, and probated September 25, 1888, after making certain bequests of personal property and pecuniary legacies to all of her children by an item (which for convenience I call Item 10), provided:

“I give, devise, and bequeath to my said daughter (Lucinda Hall Bradford) the house in Dover, now occupied by myself, as long as she shall remain single, or desires to remain in it. If she marry, or for any reason makes another place her home, then I give, devise and bequeath the said house and land belonging thereto to my eldest son Thomas B. Bradford.”

Thomas B. Bradford married the plaintiff December 18, 1888.

On May 29, 1893, Dr. Thomas B. Bradford, together with his wife, Helen Rogers Bradford, the present plaintiff, executed and delivered to his sister, Lucinda Hall Bradford, an absolute deed conveying in fee simple all the right, title, interest, property, claim and demand of the said parties of the first part, which they now have or may hereafter acquire in any manner whatsoever in the premises as to which the present claim of dower is made.

On the same date an agreement was entered into between Lucinda Hall Bradford and Thomas B. Bradford, whereby Thomas B. Bradford agreed to transfer, assign [380]*380and deliver to Lucinda, within one year from the date, bonds of the Wilmington City Railway Co. having a par value of $1,500.00, bonds of Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company having a par value of $1,000.00 and bearing interest at 6%, and ten shares of the Pensylvania Railroad Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 A.2d 534, 40 Del. 373, 1 Terry 373, 1939 Del. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradford-v-culbreth-delsuperct-1939.