Greiner v. Klein

28 Mich. 12, 1873 Mich. LEXIS 160
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 28 Mich. 12 (Greiner v. Klein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greiner v. Klein, 28 Mich. 12, 1873 Mich. LEXIS 160 (Mich. 1873).

Opinion

Graves J.

This was ejectment by defendant in error to recover ber dower in certain lands which her late husband, Philip Klein, inherited from his father, Jacob Klein.

Jacob Klein, the ancestor, died in September, 1845, seized of the premises and leaving a widow, Mina- Klein, and a son, the before mentioned Philip Klein. After the ■death of Jacob, the ancestor, and in 1846, another son was born, who received the name of Jacob. These sons inherited the land subject to the dower right of their mother, Mina Klein, and the three were tenants in common. In 1849 the widow, Mina Klein, intermarried with one Charles Wenks, and is still his wife. Philip, her eldest son,, married the plaintiff below, and died at East Saginaw, in June, 1871.

[13]*13These facts were proved on the trial and were not disputed, and they made a prima facie ease for judgment in favor of Mrs. Klein. This is not questioned. The subject-for discussion arose upon the ground taken on the part of the defense. The plaintiff in error who was defendant-below, proved by himself, that he bought the tract left by the elder Klein, of Charles Wenks in 1867, for $6,400,. which was a fair price; that he made the purchase in good faith, in ignorance of any claim against the land, and still holds as such purchaser. He then proved, by Wenks,. that he bought the tract in 1867, at a sale by a circuit-court commissioner, under a decree of the circuit court for the county of Wayne in chancery, for something over-16,400, and that he sold to Griener as stated by him, and that the price was a fair one. Griener also submitted evidence of guardian accounts against Philip and Jacob Klein,, as allowed in the probate court for Wayne county, which represented an unpaid balance on the 8th of August, 1866,. against Philip of $2,813 58, and against Jacob of $3,473 58..

He then offered in evidence certain proceedings in partition-under the statute, taken in the circuit court for the county of Wayne in chancery, by Philip Klein as complainant, against Jacob Klein and Mina Wenks, defendants,, to partition the tract, and in which case the whole land was sold under a decree therefor. The defendant in error, Mrs. Klein, was not a party to that case, and the evidence-appears to have been offered to establish that the decree.- and sale barred her right.

The evidence was excluded on objection, and this ruling-is the only matter complained of. There is nothing in the record to indicate that this rejected proof was proffered with any other view than to make out by it that Mrs.. Klein’s dower in the land was extinguished by the decree and sale in partition, and no suggestion has been made here by counsel that it was intended or supposed to be available for any thing else. As there is nothing in the character of' the controversy, or any thing relating to jurisdiction, to jus[14]*14tify our departure from the usual course of deciding according to the view taken of the points actually made, rather than upon a ground not presented below or claimed on review, I think we are not warranted in seeking to convict the judgment of error, by supposing some ground for the admission of the excluded evidence which the complaining party does not seem to have suggested, or to have thought proper or consistent with the real facts when he made his offer, and a ground, moreover, which was not passed on by the court below, and is not put forward here.

Hence, if it be now said that the statute (Comp. L., § 4275) makes an alienation by the husband during coverture a circumstance affecting the allowance of dower, and that the evidence was admissible in the aspect of the ease shown by that provision; or if it be said that it is possible in carrying out partition proceedings to set money proceeds from one portion against lands allotted for another, to produce equality of division, and that the evidence was consequently admissible, the answer is that the evidence was not offered on any such ground, and that no question of the kind upon its propriety is introduced into the case.

Moreover, the circumstances, as exhibited, show, I think, that the true state of facts afforded no basis for the admission of the evidence on any such theory. The sale in partition was of. the entire tract, and for a round sum, and there was no allotment of land against money, and the provision regulating the allowance of dower in case of alienation by the husband provides simply that the lands shall be estimated, in setting out dower, according to the value at the time of alienation, if they have been enhanced in value subsequent to such alienation. It was not claimed, and it does not appear, that any such enhancement had occurred here. There was, then, no basis for the evidence on this hypothesis. It is not unworthy of notice in this connection that this statute regulating the allowance of dower in case of alienation by the husband during coverture was intended to give a rule to govern the commissioners in set[15]*15ting out the dower, and not to affect the trial of the right to dower.

Whether the inquiry might not be proper at some stage, before the court trying the right, in a case appearing to involve or alleged to involve the conditions specified in the statute, in order, and simply in order, to obtain a right basis for the frame of the commission to be issued to the commissioners, it is quite unnecessary to decide, until some case is presented which requires it. It may be that the inquiry would regularly be for the court after verdict establishing the right, and not earlier. The Federal court in this state decided in 1855 that the jury had nothing to do with this question of value on the trial of the right' in ejectment, and that it was for the commissioners to admeasure the value. — Johnston v. Vandyke, 6 McLean, 422.

If we were permitted to indulge in conjecture, either to impugn or to sustain the exclusion of the evidence of sale in partition, there would be no difficulty in supporting the exclusion. But we are not at liberty to suppose something not hinted at by the record, to sustain or overturn the judgment.

Passing these considerations, we come to the point actually presented by the case, and it is this: Was Mrs. Klein’s dower right extinguished by the judicial sale in the ease in which she was not a party F

The affirmative of this proposition must be supported by those who maintain that the offered evidence was wrongly excluded, and it can be supported only by establishing that the legislature intended that her. right should be cut off through a sale in partition proceedings carried on without' her being a party, or being represented in any way. And if the result indicated was meditated by the legislature, the design must be looked for in the law respecting partition, since it must be admitted that there is no other law favoring such a consequence. And if the law regulating partition is required to operate in that manner, it must be admitted to be a law of an exceptional and unusual chárac[16]*16fcer, and in opposition to the general spirit of our legislation.

What is it in legal contemplation that a married woman has relative to lands of which her husband is seized during the continuance of the matrimonial union? The law is positive that “ the widow of every deceased person shall be entitled to dower, or the use during her natural life of one-third part of all the lands whereof her husband was séized of an estate of inheritance at any time during the marriage, unless she is lawfully barred thereof.” — Comp.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Mich. 12, 1873 Mich. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greiner-v-klein-mich-1873.