Eliason v. Eliason

3 Del. Ch. 260
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Del. Ch. 260 (Eliason v. Eliason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eliason v. Eliason, 3 Del. Ch. 260 (Del. Ct. App. 1869).

Opinion

The Chancellor :—

If Mrs. Eliason’s right of dower was a common charge or burden on all the lands devised, then the residuary devisees, having borne, out of their lands, the charge to which the whole was liable, the case is already within the reason and equity of the doctrine of contribution, as that doctrine has been held from great antiquity. The principle is, that parties having a common interest in a subject-matter shall bear equally any burden affecting it. Qui sentit commodum sentire debit et onus. Equality is equity. One shall not bear a common burden in ease of the rest. Hence, if as often may be done, a lien, charge or burden of any kind, affecting several, is enforced at law against one only, he should receive from the rest what he has paid or discharged on their behalf. This is the doctrine of equitable contribution, resting upon as simple a principle of natural justice as can be put. Herberts case, 3 Coke's Repts. n b; Dering vs. Winchelsea, 1 Cox 318; 2 B. & P. 270; Campbell vs. Mesier, 4 Johns. Ch. 388; 1 Sto. Eq. 477-8 ; 1 White & Tudor's L. Cas. in Eq. 66. Its most common application is to sureties and to owners of several parcels of land, subject to a lien or charge for the payment of money. But as is declared by Lord Redesdale, in Sterling vs. Forrester, 3 Bligh, 59, the principle is universal.

[264]*264Adverting now to the present case, certainly it can make no difference as to the natural equity of the complainants to contribution, that the common charge here is a right of dower, and not, as in ordinary cases, a money demand, such as a judgment or mortgage. This difference goes, not to the principle of contribution, but only to the mode in which it is to be enforced. What is decreed contributed, will, of course, be of the same nature as the common charge borne, i. e., for money due from several and paid by one, a reimbursement in money, will be decreed ; if an interest is assigned out of lands of one only, of several whose lands were all liable, there should be contributed to him, as near as may be, a corresponding interest out of the lands of those who have been relieved. The powers of this Court are adequate to any mode of relief which justice between the parties may require.

The argument for the defense is that the right of dower against devisees of the husband, equally as against alienees of the husband in his lifetime, is not a common burden ; that it is not incumbrance upon the lands in solido, but is a charge upon each tract separately ; and being so, is assignable, not out of the whole,.but separately, out of each tract; so that, as the tract of each alienee or devisee, if the assignment is properly made, bears only its own burden, no ground for contribution exists ; and that, although, in point of fact, in this case, the dower has been assigned in the Orphans’ Court for the whole, out of the lands of the complainants only,yet,that such mode of assignment was irregular, and would have been set aside on application to that Court upon the return of the freeholders, that an application to the Orphans’ Court, or an appeal from its action, was the complainants’sole remedy, having waived which they have no claim to relief in equity.

It is undoubtedly true that at common law, dower was assignable, not out of the whole of the decedent’s lands in solido, but out of each tract or parcel separately, and [265]*265even out of each denomination of property, as a third of the arable land, a third of the meadow lands &c. ; and at common law this was the mode of assignment when made by the Sheriff, as well against the heir in a case of 'intestacy, as against the alienee of the husband in his lifetime, or the devisees under his will. The heir might, and usually did, voluntarily, and with the consent of the widow, assign her dower out of the whole, giving her one or ihore tracts instead of a third of each, but this rested wholly upon agreement, and was termed an assignment contrary to common right, the assignment out of each tract separarately, being, as was said, according to common right— Park on Dower, 251, 255, 262. Hence, as at common law, dower was not a charge upon all the lands, as a whole, but upon each tract separately, a burden which each alienee or devisee bore for himself alone ; dower, as assigned at common law, could not become a subject for contribution.

But under the statutes of this State, the mode of assigning dower rests in the discretion of the Orphans’ Court, which may adopt the one or the other mode, as in its judgment will best promote the interest of all the parties ; and such discretion has the Orphans’, Court as well in assigning dower against alienees or devisees of the husband, as against his heirs under the intestate law. The dower act of 1816, now embodied in Chapter 87 of the Revised Code, (being the Statute applicable to dower as against alienees and devisees,) directs that dower, under that Act, shall be assigned by the Orphans’ Court of the county where the land lies, upon her petition to the said Court, by the widow, or by any party interested by the like proceeding, and in the same manner as by law is provided in the case of intestate’s estates. Revised Code p. 292, Sec. 16. This provision has been judicially construed as giving to the Orphans’ Court, for the assignment of dower, under this Act, the same powers and discretion exercised by it under the intestate law. Upon a full [266]*266consideration of this whole subject in Coulter vs. Holland, 2 Harring. 334-5, it was held by the Superior Court on appeal, that the Orphans’ Court has authority, in all cases, whether under the intestate law or not, to assign dower, either altogether out of one tract, or in separate parcels out of several tracts, or a third part out of each tract. In the case cited the Court, exercising this very discretion, did approve an assignment of dower for the whole estate of the husband, made wholly out of land devised to his two sons, to the exemption of other land devised to his daughters. Generally, the mode of assigning dower, under the intestate law, and under the act of 1816, differs in practice, for the reason stated in Coulter vs. Holland, that in case of intestacy, the whole estate being in the same parties, it is more convenient to assign dower out of the whole, while, as against alienees and devisees holding in severalty, it is generally more convenient to assign dower out of the separate tracts. Nevertheless, if, in any case, from the nature of the property held by several alienees or devisees, an assignment out of each parcel is (as it may be) impracticable, or will be prejudicial to the interests of the parties, the Orphans’ Court have authority to order or approve an assignment out of the whole, leaving alienees or devisees to their remedies in equity. In the present case the Orphans’ Court, in assigning dower out of the whole real estate of the testator, and not separately out of the parcels devised, have exercised an authority conferred by the statute, not to be questioned except upon appeal. It is, in all respects, a legal and valid assignment. I lay no stress upon the terms of the will expressly charging the real estate with such dower as the widow would take under the intestate laws. That is a consideration addressed to the discretion of the Orphans’ Court, but adds nothing to the legal effect of the assignment as made.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Del. Ch. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eliason-v-eliason-delch-1869.