Magruder v. Magruder

141 F.2d 537, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 378, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3735
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 1944
DocketNo. 8426
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 141 F.2d 537 (Magruder v. Magruder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magruder v. Magruder, 141 F.2d 537, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 378, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3735 (D.C. Cir. 1944).

Opinion

MILLER, Associate Justice.

Appellants are the seven children of William M. Magruder, deceased. Under his will, they became owners in fee, as tenants in common, of certain real estate in Washington, D. C., being Lot 61, Square 4063, improved by a brick dwelling, numbered 1238 Neale Street, N. E.; subject to the dower right of appellee, their mother. On this appeal the facts are undisputed and the parties have submitted the following issue as being determinative of the case: “Did the Court below have the power to decree partition between the owners, as tenants in common, of the indivisible piece of real estate involved in this proceeding, and a sale thereof, free from the dower interest of the appellee, and a division of the proceeds thereof among the parties hereto according to their respective rights, without the consent of the appel[538]*538lee thereto?” This question the trial court answered in the negative. However, the court granted appellee’s motion for judgment on .the pleadings and assigned dower, as she requested, for one-third of the net rents, issues and profits arising out of the property.

The answer to the stipulated issue depends upon the proper interpretation of Section 1305, Title 16, of the District of Columbia Code, which reads as follows: "Whenever a decree is rendered for the sale of land, in the whole of which a widow is entitled to dower, if she will not consent to <a sale of the same free of her dower, the court may, if it appears advantageous to the parties, cause her dower to be laid off and assigned as aforesaid. If she will consent in writing to the sale of the property free from her dower, the court shall order the same to be sold free of her dower, and shall allow her, in commutation of her dower, such portion of the net proceeds of sale as may be just and equitable, not exceeding one-sixth nor less than one-twentieth, according to the age, health, and condition of the widow.” [Italics supplied] The second sentence of this Section is inapplicable to the present case. It is clear from the first sentence of the Section that in event the widow will not consent to a sale,’ free from dower, the court may, nevertheless, decree that the property be sold. This sale could presumably be made, at a sacrifice, subject to dower. However, there is another alternative, for in event of .the widow’s refusal, the court may—if it appears advantageous to the parties—cause the widow’s dower “to be laid off and assigned as aforesaid.” This, of course, without more, requires the exercise of discretion, and if the trial judge should decide that i,t were not advantageous to the parties he would not, for the purposes of this Section, assign dower. We assume, from the stipulated issue and from the fact that the widow, herself, asked judgment assigning dower, that no obstacle arose in the trial court upon this point and that the decision turned solely upon the extent of the court’s power.

The reference “as aforesaid,” in the first sentence of Section 16—1305 is to the third preceding Section of .the Code, 16—-1302; the applicable language of which reads as follows: “When an estate of which a woman is dowable is entire, and the dower can not be set off thereout by metes and bounds, it may be assigned by the court as of a third part of the net rents, issues, and profits thereof.” If this provision—thus incorporated by reference into Section 16—1305—meant no more than that the estate must remain entire and that the widow in - order, thereafter, to receive a third part of the net rents, issues and profits still retained her dower interest in the whole, it could have little purpose and less effect.

Instead, it is apparent that the provision is intended to facilitate a sale of the property, free of dower, in cases where the widow refuses to consent. But if, after assignment, it were still impossible to sell except subject to dower, the provision for assignment would be meaningless; as such a sale could be made without assignment, in any event. The situation would be no better if, following assignment, a sale were still impossible except subject to a widow’s right to receive, from the purchaser, during her lifetime, a third part of the net rents, issues and profits of the property. If, on the other hand, the result of assignment is to change the character of the widow’s interest and make it subject to sale, along with all other interests in the property, thus enabling a purchaser to acquire clear title and full, unrestricted enjoyment, the provision for assignment has effective meaning.

Upon the death of her husband a widow’s right to dower is in the nature of a chose in action,1 including the right [539]*539to have dower assigned.2 After assignment and entry into possession she becomes seised for her lifetime of a freehold estate.3 This is the reason for the requirement of the Code 4 that, in the situation of the present case, dower must be assigned before partition or sale and division can be ordered. After an assignment of dower has been made, under Section 16—1302, of “a third part of the net rents, issues, and profits * * ” the widow’s estate is of the nature of tenements and hereditaments,5 within the meaning of Section 16—1301; and is, then, just as divestible a property right as if the division had been by metes and bounds of the land itself.6

We conclude that the several sections of Chapter 13, Title 16 (§§ 1301— 1306, inclusive) were intended to achieve a comprehensive plan for partition and sale of property held in common, as in the present case, as well as in other situations of common and joint ownership. In order to accomplish this result, however, when the dower interest of a widow is involved, the court must first determine, in its discretion, whether “it appears advantageous to the parties * * * ”—including the widow, of course—to cause her dower to be laid off and assigned. Only after the assignment has been made, under Sections 16—1305 and 16—1302, does the procedure of Section 16—1301 become available. When, as in the present case, the widow requests assignment, there is no reason to question the propriety of the court’s action in this respect. But when, as in the present case, the assignment is made, the court then has power to proceed under Section 16—1301 to order a sale and a division of the proceeds.

Whether, strictly speaking, the result is a sale free from dower without the consent of the widow, or whether it should be described as a method of transforming her dower interest into a different property right which may be sold without her consent, is immaterial. That Congress intended such a result is plain. It provided for a single action in which the widow might be joined with the tenants in common, and in which a determination could be made as to the desirability of an assignment, preliminary to a sale of property to which—such an affirmative preliminary determination having been made—a dower interest would, thereafter, no longer attach. In doing so it merely availed itself of a procedure well known to equity, i. e., of administering complete relief between the parties.7 Properly read, even the cases relied upon by appellee support this conclusion.8

In making division of the proceeds of such a sale it would seem proper [540]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 F.2d 537, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 378, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magruder-v-magruder-cadc-1944.