Hyatt v. Ackerson

14 N.J.L. 564
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1835
StatusPublished

This text of 14 N.J.L. 564 (Hyatt v. Ackerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hyatt v. Ackerson, 14 N.J.L. 564 (N.J. 1835).

Opinion

Hornblower, C. J.

The only question in this case is, whether it is competent for a defendant in dower, who holds under a title derived from the husband of the demandant, to deny [565]*565such, a seizin in the husband as entitles her to dower ? If this question is answered in the negative, then the rule to shew cause must be discharged.

What then are the facts ? Stating them briefly, and as the jury were fully authorized, from the evidence given at the trial, to find them, they were as follows. Sarah Peterson, in the year 1809, being in possession of the premises, and claiming a right to sell them, conveyed the premises in fee, by deed, to the husband of the demandant. He held and enjoyed the property as his own, under that deed, for sixteen or seventeen years, and died in possession of it; leaving his widow, the demandant, and her children, upon it, after his death. The defendant, previous to the commencement of this action, had entered upon and taken exclusive possession of the premises, claiming title thereto under and by virtue of a sheriff’s deed to him, on an execution which had been issued against the husband of the demandant in his life time.

Upon this evidence, the judge refused to nonsuit the demand-ant; and afterwards gave it in charge to the jury, as follows : “ In the year 1819, the defendant purchased (the property) by sheriff’s deed, and if he holds it under the sheriff’s deed, he cannot deny that deed, or that he acquired title by it. If he took possession under the husband, she is entitled to dower ; the defendant cannot deny her right. He is not called on to guarantee her dower.”

The judge was clearly right, both in refusing to nonsuit the demandant, and in charging the jury as he did.

The rule is well settled, that a defendant in dower, who claims title to the premises in question, by deed from or under the husband of the demandant, cannot be admitted to deny the seizin of the husband, so as to defeat the widow’s dower, she being in all other respects entitled to recover. This has been so frequently ruled as to render it unnecessary to enter into any argument in support of the doctrine, or to cite authorities ; except it be for the purpose of bringing a few of the cases together in this place, to which reference may hereafter be had.

In Taylor’s case, cited in Sir W. Jones, 317, it was held, that if a tenant at will, or for years, made a feoffment in fee, [566]*566and died, and his wife brought dower against the feoffee, he could not deny her husband’s seizin.

In English v. Wright, Coxe's Rep. 437, tried before Kinsey, chief justice, and Smith, justice, at the Burlington Nisi Prius, in 1793, this rule was applied under circumstances of peculiar hardship. The real owner of the premises in fee, by a valid and subsisting title, with a view to extinguish and put an end to a fraudulent title, set up against him by his brother, the husband of the demandant, purchased in all his right, at a sheriff’s sale, on an execution against him, and took the sheriff’s deed for the premises. The court held that the defendant’s receiving a deed under the demandant’s husband was a sufficient recognition of his seizin. That she was not bound to establish the merits of her husband’s title ; and that though the circumstances were hard, it would lead widows into great difficulties, if they were to be cut out by a prior title, after the person setting up such title had accepted a deed under the husband.

In Sheppard v. Wardell, Coxe’s Rep. 452, it was ruled by. Kinsey, chief justice, and his associate, at Nisi Prius, that under the plea of ne unques seizie, the demandant, is not bound to prove title in her husband, but only seizin of the estate during coverture. The plea of ne umques seizie, does not therefore put in issue the validity of the husband’s title. That must be tried in another form.

In Montgomery v. Bruere, 1 South. Rep. 260, 263, Kirkpatrick, chief justice, says, “ It is a clear principle, that he who comes in and holds under the husband, as heir or alienee, can never question his title, in order to defeat the dower of the widow. And it is also a clear principle, that such heir or alienee, can never set up a latent title, unaccompanied with possession purchased in for that purpose.” And he afterwards remarks, that though the husband may be seized of a defeasible estate, as by abatement, discontinuance, or even by disseisin, yet the wife is entitled to her dower, until such estate be defeated or avoided by due course of law. Southard, justice, in that case, expressed himself to the same effect. See 9 Vin. abr. tit. dower, 220, letter G. pl. 14, & 231, lett. H. pl. 1.

In Grriggs v. Smith, 7 Halst. Rep. 22, it was decided by this court, that a deed from a person in possession, conveying the [567]*567premises in fee simple to the husband of the demandant, and a possession by him for three years, under that deed, was prima facie evidence of the seizin of the husband, and sufficient to entitle the demandant to recover, unless repelled and overcome by the proofs of the defendant.

The same doctrine in its full extent, has been adopted by the Supreme Court of the State of New York, as may be seen by consulting- the cases of Bancroft v. White, 1 Caines Rep. 185, 190; Embree v. Ellis, 2 Johns. 119; Hitchcock v. Harrington, 6 Johns. Rep. 290, 293; Collins v. Torrey, 7 Johns. Rep. 278; Hitchcock v. Carpenter, 9 Johns. Rep. 344; Jackson v. Waltermire, 5 Cowen, Rep. 299; Same v. Same, 7 Cowen, 353.

As respects this question, there is no difference between a defendant in dower, who purchases by direct conveyance from the husband, and one who holds under a sheriff’s deed. For a purchaser at sheriffs sale, holds the premises as by deed from the defendant in execution ; the sheriff being merely the agent of the law to transfer the title. Per Southard, justice, in Montgomery v. Bruere, 1 South. Rep. 260, 273. Per Kirkpatrick, chief justice, in Den v. Camp, 2 Penn. Rep. 798, 800; Den v. Winans, 2 Green Rep. 1.

No injustice is done to the defendant in this case, by the application of the rule as above stated. From the evidence in the cause, it is manifest, that the premises in question, either belong to Hyatt in fee, or they now belong to the heirs of Peterson. But the defendant claims under Hyatt, and of course adverse to the heirs of Peterson. Shall he then be permitted, when the widow comes for dower, to deny her husband’s title; and when the heirs of Peterson, claim, to set up that title? It is true, he denied by his plea, that he was tenant of the freehold; but there was abundant evidence on the trial, that he was actually in possession, claiming title under the demandant’s husband. Let the rule be discharged with costs.

Ford, «I. This was an action by Sarah Hyatt, to recover dower in thirty-one acres of land, and she had to maintain two issues. First, that Caleb Hyatt, her husband, was seized of an estate of inheritance therein, during the coverture; and secondly, that the defendant, John G. Ackerson, was the tenant of the freehold.

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Related

Bancroft v. White
1 Cai. Cas. 185 (New York Supreme Court, 1803)
Embree v. Ellis
2 Johns. 119 (New York Supreme Court, 1807)

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.J.L. 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyatt-v-ackerson-nj-1835.