Gore v. . Townsend

11 S.E. 160, 105 N.C. 228
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 11 S.E. 160 (Gore v. . Townsend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gore v. . Townsend, 11 S.E. 160, 105 N.C. 228 (N.C. 1890).

Opinion

Avery, J.

after stating the facts: “ In all cases where the wife executes a mortgage on her property for her husband’s debts, or for money loaned to him, it is well settled that she occcupies the position of, and is entitled to all the rights and privileges of surety for her husband.” Kelly, Contracts of Married Women, p. 105. “She assumes, in the eye of a Court of Equity, the character of a surety for the husband. Properly speaking, she is not a surety, but she is so called by analogy. She has a title to call upon her husband to exonerate her estate from the debt.” 1 Bish. Married Women, §604; Purvis v. Carstaphan, 73 N. C., 575.

It is true that the inchoate right of dower was never considered an estate of interest in a court of law, which did not even concede the power of the widow to convey her unassigned dower after the right had become consummate by the husband’s death, but she might make a contract for the sale that would be enforced in a Court of Equity. Potter v. Everett, 7 Ired. Eq., 152; Boyles v. Commissioners, 40 Pa. St., 37. It must be remembered, however, that the discussion of the nature of the wife’s interest in her husband’s land has *231 assumed a new phase since the enactment of the law restoring the common law right of dower in North Carolina.

In Gwathmey v. Pearce, 74 N. C., 399, Justice Rkade, after citing Purvis v. Carstaphan, as establishing the doctrine that the wife, when she joins her husband in a mortgage of her separate property to secure his debt, sustains the relation of his surety in that transaction, says, in reference to the former case: “Here the wife joined her husband in the conveyance of his land to pay his debt, in which land she had, under our dower statute, a vested, right to dower, to be allotted after her husband’s death, and she joined in the deed for the purpose of binding her dower. After her husband's death the whole land, her dower included^ was sold under the trust deed to pay the debt. This made the wife a creditor of her husband’s estate, to the amount of the value of her dower in the land.”

The dower statute referred to by the Court was the Act of 1868-69, ch. 93, §§ 32 to 37, and was substantially the same as §§2102, 2104, 2106 and 2107 of The Code, and, therefore, if the inchoate right to dower was a “ vested right,” then it is of equal dignity and importance now, and the mortgage in which the defendant’s wife joined in the present case passed an interest that imparted additional present value to the mortgagee’s security in proportion to the worth of her ' life estate in one-third of the land estimated according to the life-tables or certainly to a sum that an expert could ascertain, having as data for his calculation the value of the laud and the chances of survivorship on her part after the husband’s death. Although in Gwathmey v. Pearce, supra, the wife was declared a creditor of the husband’s estate after his death'to the value of her dower, the ruling could have been sustained only on the principle upon which it is explicitly made to rest that the wife was a surety, and she did not sustain that relation to the original contract because her husband died, but because she signed a deed that sub *232 jected her interest in the land conveyed. It would seem, therefore, that this Court has settled the principle that the wife, by joining in a mortgage of the husband’s land to secure his debt, becomes then a surety, and in case she survive him, and the land is sold to satisfy the debt, she becomes also a creditor to the value of the life estate. The language of §§ 2106 and 2107 of The Code seems to recognize the right during the husband’s life as a valuable interest that may pass by a conveyance rather than a naked right that the claimant may be barred by the estoppel of her deed from enforcing, and this interpretation follows in the line of more modern legislation in making every valuable interest transferable and convertible into money, while it is in accord with the older idea that the claim of the wife to dower is favored by the law.

While there is conflict of opinion as to the nature and qualities of the wife’s inchoate interest, there is much authority that, either directly or indirectty, sustains the view advanced by this Court, apart from anj^ peculiarity in the language of our statute, and it is also strongly supported by analogy. The right of exoneration in equity grows out of the suretyship, and must exist so soon as the interest conveyed is about to be subjected to sale, and it appears that there is a fund or property belonging to the principal debtor, equally liable with such interest for the debt. The contract of suretyship, or the conveyance of one’s property to secure the debt of another, is a transaction primarily between, not the principal and the surety, but the surety and the third person. 2 Bishop, M. W., § 370. In Bullorld v. Briggs, 7 Pick. (Mass.), 533, it was held that the relinquishment of the right of dower was a válid consideration for the conveyance of the equity of redemption, even as against the claim of creditors; and Parker, Chief Justice, in discussing the nature of the wife’s interest during the husband’s life, says: “The consideration for this intended settlement on the wife *233 was her right of dower in the estate, which the husband was about to mortgage. Without her relinquishment, he could not raise the money wanted for his support and his debts. Iiis days were numbered by intemperance and disease. Though she had no actual estate in the dower during the life of the husband, yet she had an interest and a right of which she could not be divested but b}r her consent, or crime, or her dying before her husband. It was a valuable interest, which is frequently the subject of contract and bargain. It is an interest which the law recognizes as the subject of conveyance by fine in England, and by deed with us.” In Vartie v. Underwood, 18 Barb. (N. Y.), 561, the Court held that “the wife’s inchoate right in the husband’s land follows the surplus moneys raised by a sale in virtue of the power of sale in a mortgage executed by her with her husband, and will be protected against the claims of the husband’s creditors by directing one-third of such surplus moneys to be invested, and the interest only to be paid to the creditors during the joint lives of husband and wife.” See also Denton v. Nowny, 8 Barb., 618. In the latter case of Wedge v. Moore, 6 Cush., 8, Chief Justice Shaw, delivering the opinion of the Court, it was held that, where the husband executed three mortgages upon his land, his wife joining only in the second one, she was entitled, after his death, to dower against the third mortgagee, who had paid the debts secured by the two first mortgages. In the case of Kelly v. Harrison, 2 Johnson, 29, the Court held that a wife who remained a subject of Great Britain, while her husband took part with the Colonies in the Revolution, was entitled to dower, after the death of the husband, in all land acquired by the husband up to the beginning of the war.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E. 160, 105 N.C. 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gore-v-townsend-nc-1890.