George v. Hess

37 S.E. 564, 48 W. Va. 534, 1900 W. Va. LEXIS 83
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 37 S.E. 564 (George v. Hess) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George v. Hess, 37 S.E. 564, 48 W. Va. 534, 1900 W. Va. LEXIS 83 (W. Va. 1900).

Opinion

Brannon, Judge:

This is a chancery suit brought in the circuit court of Jefferson County by Samuel K. George and the Jefferson Building Association No. 9 against Joseph T. Hess and others, having for its purpose the subjection of land owned by Hess to the payment of various liens on it. The bill states the existence of a deed of trust in favor of George, another deed of trust in favor of Burr, executor, and ataother in favor of said association, and also states the existence of various judgments against Hess constituting liens on his land. The bill was treated as a .creditor’s bill, and there was a convention of lienors, and a decree settling the respective rights of those lienors and directing a sale of the land for their payment, and sales were made, reported and Confirmed by the court. After all this Mary Agnes Hess, wife of [535]*535J oseph T. Hess, filed her petition in the case setting up that she had united with her husband in the two deeds of trust to secure George and the said association, and that she was entitled to a contingent dower interest in her husband’s land, and that there was a surplus from the sale after payment of those two deeds of trust, and that she was entitled to dower in such surplus, and prayed that a part of it be set apart for such dower, to be paid to her in case she should survive her husband. The circuit court held that she was not entitled to the relief asked in her petition, and dismissed it, and she appeals to this Court.

The husband of Mrs. Hess being yet alive, her dower was inchoate only, and could become consummate only upon her husband’s death. It seems to me that in order to enable her to claim any part of the fund, or to have any part of it set apart and taken from creditors, temporarily or permanently, we must be able to say that by law she had a vested estate in the land. That valuable work in its greatly improved second edition, American & English Encyclopaedia of Law, Yol. 10, page 142, contains a very satisfactory statement of the law and collection of authorities upon this subject. It says: “Property interest in inchoate dower — not an estate in land. During coverture, dower has been denominated by many of the authorities as a mere tangible, inchoate, contingent expectancy, and is not, strictly speaking, an estate in land, and does not even rise to the dignity of a vested right.”

This Court has said in Thornburg v. Thornburg, 18 W. Va. 522, that dower, so long as it remains inchoate, is not a vested estate, but becomes vested only on the death of the husband. The Yirginia supreme court in Corr v. Porter, 33 Grat. 285, said: “During the life of the husband the wife has no estate or interest in his land. She has a mere contingent right of dower.’f Justice Swayne in Randall v. Kreiger, 23 Wall. 148, very aptly said, “During the life of the husband the right is a mere expectancy or possibility.” Most of the authorities, practically all, hold the view that the wife’s dower is a mere potential, contingent, possible estate, not vested so as to be deemed an existing property right, but to take effect upon a condition in the future. Indeed, the authorities say that it is no estate until it is assigned. Scribner on Dower, 5-8; Ligon v. Spencer, 58 Miss. 37; Pennington v. Yell, 11 Ark. 212; 52 Am. Dec. 262; McGee v. Young, 40 Miss. 164, 90 Am. Dec. 322. [536]*536As going to show strongly that it is no vested estate this Court has held in Thornburg v. Thornburg, 18 W. Va. 522, that the legislature may impair or even destroy a dower right while it is yet only inchoate, holding that, “A wife’s right of dower, so long as it remains inchoate, is subject absolutely to the control of the legislature, which may modify or destroy it at will without exceeding its constitutional limits; and this right of dower becomes consummate and vested only by the death of the husband.” Now, if it were a vested property or right, the legislature would have no power to impair or destroy it; for to do so would be contrary to the Constitution declaring that no one shall be deprived of property without due procees of law. This power of the legislature has been again and again asserted by the highest authorities. Randall v. Kreiger, 23 Wall. 137; 10 Am. & Eng. Ency. L. (2 Ed.) 145; McNeer v. McNeer, 19 L. R. A. 256 and notes. But those authorities show that the case is different with curtesy initiate, because it is a vested estate, and though but initiate, a common law estate by curtesy initiate could not be affected by such legislation. I say common curtesy, there being no curtesy initiate in a wife’s separate estate, only a curtesy consummate.

But it will be asked, if inchoate dower is no estate, why does our statute provide for a wife’s joining her husband in conveyance of his land? This is merely to bar the wife in claiming dower against a purchaser if and when it becomes consummate. Her signature to the deed and her acknowledgment pass no estate from her in the land separate and distinct from that of the husband, but the deed simply relinquishes a contingent right in the nature of a possible incumbrance upon the land, which, if not so relinquished, would attach and be consummate on the death of the husband. (Separate estate is different). This is distinctly held in Corr v. Porter, 33 Grat. 278. Such a deed does not vest any title from the wife, as she has no vested title to convey; but the deed simply operates upon her by way of estoppel. French v. Lord, 65 Me. 537; Pixley v. Bennett, 11 Mass. 298; 1 Washburn R. Prop, side page 250; Witthaus v. Scheck, 105 N. Y. 332. This last case also holds that inchoate dower is not a vested estate.

Another consideration that shows that the wife, not yet a widow, has no vested estate is, that the wife cannot transfer or convey this inchoate dower. “It is a mere chose in action, in[537]*537capable of transfer by grant or conveyance/’ says 10 Ana. & Eng. Ency. (2 Ed.) 144. In fact, that work, page 147, says that until actual assignment of dower the widow cannot alien or subject her dower to the payments of debts, and that neither process of law nor her own act can transfer her right to a stranger so as to confer on him a right of action at law for the dower. She cannot convey her contingent dower. 1 Shinn on Attach-. ments s. 52. Her contingent dower is said to be a chose in action. After it is consummate it is, after assignment, a vested estate; but until the death of the husband it is not a vested estate. On his death it is clearly a chose in action, if we could say that a claim to a freehold is a chose in action; prior to the husband’s death "She has not, in. this stage of her right, even a chose in action in respect to the estate; nor can she protect it in any way from waste or deterioration by her husband or his alienee; nor is her right, in any sense, an interest in real estate, nor property of which value can be predicated. She cannot convey it, nor is it a thing to be assigned by her during the life of the husband. But immediately upon the death of her husband her right becomes consummate and perfect, and if the heir then waste or deteriorate the estate, she may have a remedy for the loss thereby occasioned to her. But as her right is still a mere chose in action, she has nothing of which estate, at this stage of her interest, can be predicated. She is not seized of any part of the land, on the death of her husband, by any right of dower, until it is assigned to her.” 1 Washb. R. Prop side p. 250.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 S.E. 564, 48 W. Va. 534, 1900 W. Va. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-hess-wva-1900.