Henderson v. Chaires

25 Fla. 26
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 25 Fla. 26 (Henderson v. Chaires) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson v. Chaires, 25 Fla. 26 (Fla. 1889).

Opinion

Maxwell, C. J.:

Mrs. M. M. Chaires, the widow of Chas. P. Chaires, deceased, filed her petition in the Circuit Court of Leon county for dower in certain lands described in the petition, and for one-half share of the personal property of her said husband. Notice in compliance with the statute was served upon appellants, as executors of Chas. P. Chaires, and they filed a plea in the following words : “That in the lifetime of the said Chas. P. Chaires, and while the said Martha was his wife, she, the said Martha, willingly and without his consent, left the said Chas. P. of her own accord and went away and continued in adultery with one Benjamin C. Chaires, and that the said Charles P. Chaires was not at any time after such leaving or continuing in adultery reconciled to her; whereupon, and by .«means whereof, she is barred of her dower.” Issue was [29]*29joined on this plea and a hearing had on evidence, which-resulted in a decree for the petitioner, and the allotting of dower upon the report of commissioners. From that decree appeal was taken to this court.

The first error assigned is “ that the court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter of the suit as a court of law.”' This objection is made here for the first time, and but for the fact that it is a fatal objection, if true, which may be-made at any time, we would pass it by as a matter that was waived below.

But the question, though raised so late, must be met. The ground of the objection is that while the summary-remedy provided by the statute of 1828 for the recovery of dower was suited to the courts as then existing, the Circuit Court as organized under the Constitution of 1868 were not vested with jurisdiction which included that given by the statute to the corresponding court of 1828. As the statute was enacted and still stands, it gives concurrent jurisdiction to two courts, county and Circuit, (formerly Superior) to allot dower. The proceeding was to be by7 petition of the widow setting forth what she claimed of the reality and personality of her deceased husband, and thereupon the court shall issue a writ to the Sheriff to summon commissioners to make the allotment; but the petitioner is required to give ten days previous notice of the application to the executors or administrators of the deceased. McClellan, sections 7 and 8, pp. 476-7.

As it is not denied that the jurisdiction conferred by this statute on one of the territorial courts then standing in the place of the subsequent Circuit Courts, was at the time of its passage, within the scope of legislative authority, the enquiry is whether the jurisdiction conferred on the Circuit-Courts by the Constitution of 1868 was so narrowed as tQ' [30]*30exclude cases under this statute, and leave them entirely to the County Courts or to chancery. We think the answer must be in the negative.

This summary proceeding is a substitute for the common law writ to obtain dower, and was intended to relieve the widow of the delay and cumbrous machinery of that law. It is a proceeding at law, and therefore appropriate to a court of law, as distinguished from a court of chancery. The Supreme Court of the United States so held in Parish vs. Ellis, 16 Peters, 451, where it refused to entertain an appeal growing out of a case founded on this statute, be-cause writ of error, and not appeal, according to the practice of that court, was the proper mode of bringing before it a case at law. Looking to the Constitution of 1868, it will be found that Circuit Courts were invested with original jurisdiction “in all cases at law in which the demand or value of the property involved exceeds one hundred dollars.” Under this we think it beyond doubt that the jurisdiction given to the Circuit Courts by the statute is fully sustained and perpetuated.

The extent of that jurisdiction is another question. Neither the county nor the Circuit Court can go beyond the authority expressly conferred. And in view of this, it is contended for appellants that the court cannot try the title to dower, but should confine itself to simple admeasurement of the same when the title is undisputed. This, then, would be the attitude of things. The widow came into court claiming her dower in strict accordance with the statute. The executors of the deceased husband also brought into court as the statute directs, plead that she is barred of her dower by reason of the adultery alleged. According to appellants"' contention this ends the case, for if the charge bars her clower, and the court cannot try the [31]*31charge, there is nothing more to be done. Is the statute so defective as to require action of the court, hut at the same time leave it so impotent that it cannot, act ? The cases in Massachusetts and New York cited by appellants were under statutes essentially different from ours, and have no application here. This was held in Barney vs. Frowner and wife, 9 Ala., 901 — our statute and that of Alabama being in precisely the same words. And in that case the right to try the title to dower was sustained, the court saying: “We can see no reason, where au allotment can be made by metes and bounds, why the right of dower cannot be as well tried under the statute remedy as by the common law mode ot procedure.” But the court, while maintaining this view, says afterwards that there are cases “ in which the statute remedy would be either inadequate or improper ” as was the one before it, where the husbaud had aliened the lands and they were in the possession of several different persons, who might have several distinct de. fences. In a previous Alabama case (executors of Green vs. Green, 7 Porter, 19,) the court gave its opinion in favor of the right to try title to dower under the statute, but held that the heirs and terre-tenants, as well as the executor or administrator, should be made parties, although there was nothing in the statute to require this. From the date ot that, decision, the practice in Alabama conforms to its doctrine as to parties, and the right to try title to dower was not afterwards questioned, except where the remedy was inadequate or improper.

The practice in Mississippi, where the same statute substantially was adopted in 1822, was different. The petitioner was not required to give notice except that provided for in the statute, viz: to the executors or administrators. The effect of that was that the court would proceed to ad[32]*32judge dower, if in the controversy between the parties thus before it, the petitioner was found to be entitled to dower. But this did not bind parties not before the court nor conclude their rights. Holloman vs. Holloman, 5, Smedes & Marshall, 559; James vs. Rowan, 6 Ibid, 393; S. P. Ware vs. Washington, Ibid, 737; Bisland vs. Bisland, 11 Ibid, 164.

It appears, therefore, that in the two States having a statutory remedy like ours, the jurisdiction of the court is not ousted because a question is made in regard to the title to dower. In Alabama the question was tried, on bringing into court all parties interested, for a final adjudication between them and the claimants ; while in Mississippi the rial was limited to the claimant and representatives of the deceased husband, leaving the rights of others intested to be determined in some other appropriate tribunal.

In this State, so far as we are advised, there has never been any decision as to the proper practice under the statute; but we think the uniform course, upou filing a petition for dower, has been to give notice only to the executors or administrators, and that the courts have proceeded to act in the case with no other parties before them.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Fla. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-chaires-fla-1889.