Ex Parte Clark

126 S.E. 137, 130 S.C. 501, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 13, 1925
Docket11660
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 126 S.E. 137 (Ex Parte Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Clark, 126 S.E. 137, 130 S.C. 501, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 19 (S.C. 1925).

Opinion

January 13, 1925. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This case has been before this Court several times. The present case is an appeal from the order as to the allotment of dower made by Circuit Judge Townsend.

Both the plaintiffs and Mrs. Clark appealed from this order, but at the hearing it was announced that all the exceptions of the plaintiffs were withdrawn, and that only the exceptions of Mrs. Clark were to be considered and decided by the Court.

The questions presented by Mrs. Clark's exceptions are: First. Is Mrs. Clark's dower to be one-sixth of the surplus after deducting the face of the mortgage, or is it to be one-sixth of the entire sale price? Second. Is Mrs. Clark estopped to claim dower on the $7,000 mortgage to her?

There is no question but that dower is a highly favored right; there are decisions from different States to this effect as well as from this State.

The practical effect of the present case is a contest between creditors and the widow; she is claiming her dower out of the proceeds of real estate sold for the payment of debts.Grube v. Lilienthal, 51 S.C. 442, 29 S.E., 230, decided, as has been held frequently before and since, that, where a married woman renounces her dower, she has no right in the balance of the proceeds of sale, where the foreclosure and sale are made in her husband's lifetime. Her inchoate right of dower will not be protected in the lifetime of her husband. In that respect our law differs from that of Ohio, as will be readily seen by reference to Mandel v. McClave,46 Ohio St., 407; 22 N.E., 290; 5 L.R.A., 519; 15 Am St. Rep., 627 *Page 505

In the Grube Case Circuit Judge Gary says, at page 446 (29 S.E., 231):

"It must be remembered that the mortgagor, Mr. Lilienthal, is living. * * * The husband living, the wife's dower is an inchoate right. It would be impracticable to set aside a portion of the surplus and to keep it as a sort of trust estate, unknown to the law, upon the contingency of the wife's surviving the husband."

But again, at pages 447, 448 (29 S.E., 231, 232), the same Judge, speaking, says:

"Of course, the renunciation of dower only inures to the benefit of the mortgage upon which she renounced, and, if the mortgage be satisfied, the dower revives. In such case it is the same as if the mortgage had never existed, and cases cited on that subject have no application. * * * Of course, a very different status is presented if the foreclosure takes place after the death of the husband, and when thereby the wife's right is no longer inchoate, but has become vested."

The case of Miller v. Bank, 49 S.C. 427; 27 S.E., 514; 61 Am. St. Rep., 821, cited by counsel, was likewise a foreclosure in the lifetime of the husband, and the same principles were held by Circuit Judge Watts and by Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) Gary. This was a contest with the purchaser who had bought at a foreclosure sale in which there were some mortgages on which no dower was renounced, and one on which dower was renounced, and the Court held that the purchaser obtained a good title, and that "whatever rights she [the widow] may have are transferred to the surplus proceeds of sale after payment of the incumbrances." And in that case there was not only no surplus, but an actual deficiency, and her husband was living. In Moon v.Bruce, 63 S.C. 129; 40 S.E., 1031, this Court says:

"The claim of dower did not and never could exist against A.H. Moon, her husband, since it could not arise until his death, nor could such claim ever exist against the *Page 506 heirs, executors and administrators of A.H. Moon as such. Such cause of action depending upon coverture, seizin and death of the husband before the wife, is not against the husband's heirs, executors or administrators as such, but against the party in possession."

In Cunningham v. Shannon, 4 Rich. Eq., 140, it is said by the Court:

"Dower is a right, which, inchoate during the coverture, becomes absolutely vested in the wife as an estate, on the death of her husband; and is as much beyond his control or power of disposition as her own inheritance."

See, also, Tibbetts v. Langley, 12 S.C. 481. Lewis v.Lewis, 5 Rich. 12.

After Clark's death, his widow in her claim for dower had an estate outside and apart from the estate of her deceased husband. Geiger v. Geiger, 57 S.C. 525;35 S.E., 1031.

As to the law in reference to the right of dower of a widow who has renounced on a mortgage, Judge O'Neall says in Klinck v. Keckley, 2 Hill Eq., 252:

"Under this provision, the mortgagees were entitled in their order to be paid out of the personal estate; and, if they had attempted to collect their debts by a sale of the real estate under a decree of the foreclosure, I think the widow would have been entitled to the application of the personal assets in exoneration of the land; for the other creditors have no right, either in law or equity, to the aid of her dower for the payment of their debts. According to the common law, dower is preferred to purchasers or creditors. The latter are not prejudiced by allowing the dower; it neither increases nor diminishes the fund, out of which they had a right to expect payment — the intestate's real and personal estate, for the widow's dower is no part thereof. But I have said that the renunciation of dower cannot have effect beyond the estate conveyed. When that ceases, the renunciation must also cease. The deed of a *Page 507 feme covert executed under and agreeable to law ought to be strictly construed so as not to deprive her of any right beyond that actually conveyed. Here the legal effect of her renunciation must be controlled by the terms of the deed on which it is made, to which it has reference, and of which it is a part. That sets apart the land to secure the payment of a debt; the dower is forever renounced if the land is sold under the mortgage to pay that debt. This makes the renunciation in the nature of a collateral mortgage. If the husband's mortgage is not foreclosed, the wife is most clearly not barred of her dower; she could demand it of any one except the mortgagee, and no one but the mortgagee could plead her renunciation in bar to her demand. When the mortgage is paid off by the assets of the husband, none of his creditors have any equity to set it up against the wife, for she has generally a prior equity to be allowed her dower, and in this case there is nothing to take it out of the general rule, for the legal effect of her renunciation is removed, and when that is done, she stands as if she had never renounced her dower."

The widow is also entitled to have her dower exonerated out of the personal estate. Wilson v.McConnell's Adm'rs, 9 Rich. Eq., 513. Henagan v.Harlle, 10 Rich. Eq., 287. Klinck v. Keckley, 2 Hill Eq., 252. Ebaugh v. Mullinax, 34 S.C. 376; 13 S.E., 613.Agnew v. Renwick, 27 S.C. 574; 4 S.E., 223.

The husband can do nothing which will bar or preclude the widow of this right of dower; dower not in privity with the husband. Miller v. Bank, 49 S.C.

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Related

Estate of Kennedy v. United States
302 F. Supp. 343 (D. South Carolina, 1969)
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83 S.E.2d 176 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1954)
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123 F.2d 392 (Fourth Circuit, 1941)
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Bluebook (online)
126 S.E. 137, 130 S.C. 501, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-clark-sc-1925.