Dailey v. Benn

1921 OK 167, 198 P. 323, 81 Okla. 285, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 10, 1921
Docket9646
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1921 OK 167 (Dailey v. Benn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dailey v. Benn, 1921 OK 167, 198 P. 323, 81 Okla. 285, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 154 (Okla. 1921).

Opinion

PITCHFORD, J.

This is an appeal from the district court of Seminole county, Oklahoma ; the subject-matter being the title to 40 acres of land in said county, being the allotment of one William Bowlegs, a Seminole freedman.

The brief filed by plaintiffs in error contains the following stipulations:

“To avoid making this case-made unnecessarily long and tedious by incorporating in the same the evidence produced on the trial of the same in the district court and the rulings thereon by 'the court, we, the undersigned attorneys in said case, agree that no substantial good is to be accomplished by so incorporating the evidence, and that the findings of fact as made by the trial judge, the Hon. C. Guy Cutlip, are true and correct, and that the findings of fact made by him express the truth of the case.” ,

The findings of fact by the trial court are substantially as follows: That William Bowlegs, the allottee, died intestate -in the year of 1902, leaving, surviving him, his widow, Louisa Dailey, one of the plaintiffs in error. The deceased had no children or descendants of children. The father of the deceased was John Bowlegs, and his mother was Bess Bowlegs, both of whom were Seminole freedmen, and were dead at the time of the death of William Bowlegs. John Bowlegs, the father, left, surviving him, certain of his brothers and sisters and their descendants. Bess Bowlegs, the mother, died, leaving, surviving her, as her heirs at law, her brother, Freeman, and Betsy Ann, her sister. Pompey, the father of Bess, after the death of her mother, intermarried with one Hester, and was the father, by Hester, of a number of children.

It was further found by the court that on the 9th day of October, 1905, certain of the heirs interested in the allotment of the deceased, William Bowlegs, conveyed said land by warranty deed to J. W. Bolen, and that by mesne conveyance the interest of the grantors passed to defendant in error J. W. Lydick; that Polly Cyrus, a sister of *286 Jota Bowlegs, had conveyed all of her interest to N. B. Smith, and that Smith after-wards’ sold to Lydick; that Louisa Dailey, on the 28th day of June, 1906, executed to H. T. King and J. S. Barham her warranty deed to said land, and that King and Barham sold to Lydick, and J. D. Lydick conveyed a part of his interest in the land to Margaret R. Benn.

The court, after setting forth the interest of the various heirs in the estate, concluded that J. D. Lydick and Margaret B. Benn were the owners of the dower interest of Louisa Dailey, the widow, and that in equity this interest should be assigned to them, and that by purchase of the interests of a number of the heirs they were also, entitled to a twenty-three forty-eighths interest' in and to the remainder of the land; that, upon the death of William Bowlegs, his allotment descended one-half to the descendants of John Bowlegs, his father, and one-half to the descendants of Bess Bowlegs, his mother, and that, upon the death of Bess Bowlegs, her estate went to the heirs of her father, ¡Pompey; that is, to her full brother and sister, Freeman and Betsey Ann, and her half brothers and sisters, the children of her father ¡Pompey, by Hester.

On appeal, the plaintiffs in error argue three propositions: The first being that the dower interests of the widow, Louisa Dailey, in the allotment of her deceased husband were not assignable, except to the heirs, the remaindermen, or the owner of the fee; that the defendants in error secured no rights by reason of the deed executed by Louisa’ Dailey; second, that, if it should be held that Louisa Dailey by her deed did convey her dower, interest, this interest should not go to the ímrchasers alone, but that it would inure to the benefit of all the joint tenants by each paying his or her pro rata part of the purchase money of such interest, on the theory that one joint tenant purchasing an encumbrance upon the common property, this purchase inures to the benefit of all the joint tenants; and, third, that, upon the death of William Bowlegs, one-half of his estate descended to the heirs of his mother, Bess Bowlegs, and that the portion going to Bess Bowlegs would descend, one-half to the heirs of her mother, who would be Freedman and Betsey Ann, and the other one-half to the heirs of her father, Pompey; and, further, that, as Freeman and Betsey Ann w"ere the children of Pompey, they would be entitled not only to the one-half of Bess’ interest, but would also be entitled, in addition thereto, to share in the one-half interest going to the heirs of the father of Bess; that they were as much entitled to share in the distribution of their father’s estate as were their half brothers and sisters, who were the children of Hester.

The law in this jurisdiction appears to be well settled that' the widow’s right of dower, prior to assignment, is not an estate in the lands of her deceased husband, but is rather in the nature of a mere chose in action, and cannot be assigned to a person not vested with the fee, ^nd that a conveyance of dower to a stranger to. the title, prior to having the same assigned, confers no right enforceable at law.

By virtue of the stipulations, supra, we have no means of ascertaining from the evidence whether or not defendants in error were justified in claiming the entire interest of the heirs in the land at the time the deed was executed by the widow. We find in the pleadings, however, that the claim was made by the defendants in error to the entire interest. If the interest of all the heirs had been purchased, then the defendants in error would have owned the whole fee and there would then be no question as to the power of the widow to transfer her dower interest to them prior to having the same assigned. The court found that there '^ere other heirs whose interests had not been sold to the defendants. Therefore, we are confronted with this proposition; if a portion of the heirs transfer their interests, does this constitute the purchaser of these various interests such a holder of the legal title as to make effective the conveyance of the dower interest of the widow to such purchaser? W]e are of the opinion that it does. At the time Louisa Dailey executed the deed, her grantee was not a stranger to the title.

In the ease of Bpauchamp v. Bertig et al., 90 Ark. 351, 119 S. W. 75, the widow entitled to an unassigned dower interest joined with certain infants owning the balance of the fee in executing a deed to the land; the infants thereafter disaffirmed their act. It was there held that the deed was effective to pass the widow’s dower interest.

The rule is stated in Kodgers on Domestic Relations, page 360, sec. 410, as follows;

“And she may release her dower interest after death of her husband to the heirs or other in privity with them by deed so as to release same to them, though she could not. ordinarily, convey her dower interest before her assignment.”

In the case pf Dobberstein v. Murphy et al. (Minn.) 47 N. W. 171, it is said:

“A quitclaim deed to the heirs by a widow, when, by the law of the state, she was entitled to dower in the lands of her deceased husband, if it could not operate as a conveyance, did operate as a release of the dower right.”

*287

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Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 167, 198 P. 323, 81 Okla. 285, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dailey-v-benn-okla-1921.