Johnston v. Vandyke

13 F. Cas. 888, 6 McLean 422
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Michigan
DecidedJune 15, 1855
DocketCase No. 7,426
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 F. Cas. 888 (Johnston v. Vandyke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston v. Vandyke, 13 F. Cas. 888, 6 McLean 422 (circtdmi 1855).

Opinion

WILKINS. District Judge.

A special verdict was rendered in this case, finding that the George Johnston, mentioned in the declaration, was married to the plaintiff in the year 1810; that about that time they resided on the premises in question; that the husband was seized of the same on the 24th of Sept, 1816, and from that time continued so seized until the 28th of Oct., 1816, when he sold, and conveyed the same to one Stephen Mack, and that the defendant now owns and holds the same by mesne conveyances from said Mack. The verdict furthermore finds that the said Johnston and his wife removed and settled in the territory, and now state of, Wisconsin, in the year 1820, where they continued to reside until the year 1850, at which time the said George Johnston, the husband, died, and that the plaintiff removed to this state in the. fall of 1853, subsequent to the institution of this suit. The verdict further finds that the premises described were in October, 1816 — the time of alienation — worth the sum of $1,800, and embracing the improvements since made, are now worth the sum of $40,000; that the improvements made are worth $8.000; that dower was demanded on the 31st of March, 1851, and in May, 1852, according to the allegations in the declaration. Upon this verdict, the plaintiff now moves that judgment be entered in her favor, assigning her dower in the premises demanded, and declaring the defendant guilty of withholding the same: and that the court appoint three disinterested and respectable freeholders commissioners for the purpose of making the admeasurement of the dower of the plaintiff, out of the lands described in the record, according to the provisions of the fifty-fifth section, of part 3, tit. 3, and chapter 2 of the Revised Statutes of the state of Michigan of 1838, p. 479; and that, in making such admeasurement, the said commissioners be directed to admeasure the same to the plaintiff, irrespective of any improvements made by the defendant, and allowing to the widow all advances in the value of the said premises arising from extreme circumstances since the alienation.

In resisting this motion, two objections are urged: 1st. That the plaintiff, when this action was brought, was a non-resident widow; and, therefore, not entitled to recover dower, her husband not being seized of the same at the time of his death. 2d. That, conceding the existence of her right, j et her dower is to be set off according to the value of the premises when they “were aliened” by her husband, according to the provisions of the Revised Statutes of Michigan of 1846.

1. The Revised Statutes of Michigan of 1846, tit. 14, c. 66, pp. 267, 270, in relation to estates in dower and estates by the courtesy, provides:

“Section 1. 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 seized of an estate of inheritance at any time during the marriage, unless she is lawfully barred thereof” — and by section 21: “That, a woman being an alien, shall not on that account be barred of her dower; and any woman residing out of the state, shall be entitled to dower of the lands of her deceased husband, lying in this state, of which her husband died seized, and the same may be assigned to her or recovered by her. in like manner, as if she and her deceased husband had been residents within the state at the time of his death.” These provisions are not in conflict. They are parts of the same statute; and, while the first section is general, recognizing the right of “the widow' of every deceased person,” whether resident or non-resident, to dower of all lands whereof her husband was seized during marriage; the 21st section cannot be fairly construed as restrictive of or limiting such right to [889]*889any particular class of widows, or to a certain classification of lands. For this section ■(the 21st) must he considered in connection with the eight preceding sections, and as especially descriptive of those who shall not he barred of dower. The statute declares elsewhere that dower may be barred by voluntary conveyance or .iointure, and then, in this section further enacts, that an alien, ‘"on that account shall not be barredand, that a non-resident widow shall have dower assigned her, of the lands of which her husband died seized, in like manner, as if she had been a resident within the state at the time of her husband's decease. But the statute no where creates, as to the right of the widow, a distinction between lands aliened during the life-time of the husband, and lauds of which he died seized: her right of •dower, as to both the one and the other being clearly embraced within the general provisions of the statute. The 21st section certainly does not confine the alien widow to such limitation; and it is not to be reasonably inferred as the intention of the legislature, by the terms employed, to favor in this respect, the resident alien, more than the non-resident citizen. Wherefore should the legislature establish a distinction between the resident and the non-resident, which in the same section is repudiated as between the alien and the resident? But. as provision is made in the Sth section, that, “When a widow is entitled to dower in lands, of which her husband died seized, and when her right of dower is not disputed, that she may have it assigned to her, in whatever ■counties the lands may lie by judge of probate of the county in which the estate is settled:” it would seem that this 21st section was alone intended to extend to the nonresident and alien widows, the same privilege with the resident, of having dower assigned and recovered, and not to deprive her •of a right conferred by the contract of marriage. and not subsequently barred by any ■act on her part. It is true, that the statute •speaks of “a married woman, residing within the state barring her dower by deed of conveyance” according to a specified form; ■and “a woman” without defining her residence. accepting a jointure before marriage in lieu of dower; and “a woman residing out of the state, having dower assigned.” and also of “lands of which the husband died seized.” and lands held “during marriage;” but, it is not perceived how this difference of phraseology, in the connection in which the same is employed, marks any distinction with reference to whom the right of dower pertains, or, as to the estate to which it shall ■apply. The legislature never intended that .a non-resident widow, whose husband, during coverture, was seized of lands, and who ■sold the same without her consent, as required by the 13th section, should be barred •of her right of dower, merely by the fact of ber non-residence at the time of her husband's decease. If such was the intention, it would make the existence of the right of every married woman to dower in her husband’s lands, contingent upon his continued residence within the territorial limits of the state, defeat the beneficent policy of the law. by enabling him at all times capriciously to bar the wife’s dower by a removal, and consequently make this sacred right of the widow dependent upon his will. This would be inconsistent with the other provisions of the statute, which most carefully protect the interest of the wife, whether resident or nonresident, and requires that where she joins in any conveyance of lands by her husband, the acknowledgment of the act shall be before some public functionary — under certain prescribed solemnities, and with the evidence of the act being voluntary and without the coercion of the husband.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 888, 6 McLean 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-vandyke-circtdmi-1855.