McArthur v. Franklin

16 Ohio St. (N.S.) 192
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1865
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ohio St. (N.S.) 192 (McArthur v. Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McArthur v. Franklin, 16 Ohio St. (N.S.) 192 (Ohio 1865).

Opinion

White, J.

The petition in this case was filed by the plaintiff, to redeem her right of dower, as widow of Allen C. McArthur, deceased, from a mortgage executed by her husband and herself to secure a debt of the husband ; and, on payment of the debt, to have dower assigned in the mortgaged premises.

The answer of the defendant sets up, in bar, the fact of the foreclosure of the mortgage by a suit in chancery against the husband in his lifetime, to which the plaintiff was not made a party. To this answer the plaintiff demurred. At the last term of the court, this demurrer was sustained. 15 Ohio St. 485.

The case is now before us for directions as to the mode in which the account shall be taken between the parties; and the matters involved have been elaborately argued by the learned counsel representing the respective parties.

On the part of the defendant it is insisted that he is not liable to account, for the reason that the plaintiff has no right to redeem. It is said that error intervened in sustaining the demurrer; and we have been asked to reconsider our former conclusion. We have done so ; and the result is, that our opinion remains unshaken as to the correctness of the judgment rendered on the demurrer.

It would be impracticable, within any reasonable compass, to review the authorities cited in the argument of this case, or to notice in detail all the points made by counsel, which are supposed to have a bearing upon the determination of the questions involved.

In the former opinion, we endeavored to distinguish this case from the various classes of cases to which we did not regard it as belonging, and to state the conclusions of the majority of the court, and the equitable principles upon which these conclusions were then, and are still, supposed to rest. We will now, without again repeating what was then announced, endeavor, briefly, and in con[181]*181nection with some of *the propositions submitted on behalf of the defendant, to state with somewhat more particularity the application of these principles to the case.

The statute under which the plaintiff derives her right of dower provided: (1.) “That the widow of any person dying shall be endowed of one full equal third part of all the lands, tenements, and real estate of which her husband was seized as an estate of inheritance at any time during the coverture; and (2) she shall, in like manner, be endowed of one-third part of all the right, title, or interest that her husband, at the time of his decease, had in any lands and tenements held by bond, article, lease, or other evidence of claim.”

The statute gives dower in two classes of estates: by the first clause, in estates of inheritance of which the husband was seized at any time during coverture; by the second, in such equitable interests, or estates, as are therein described, and which he owned at the time of his decease.

The plaintiff can claiin nothing under the last clause of the statute; for her husband had no interest whatever in the land at the time of his death. Dower inchoate can not arise under this clause. The right given to the widow, under it, does not accrue to her in any form until the death of the husband. Ho instanti with his death the right attaches to the equitable estates of which he may die possessed. Before his death, such right has no existence, and, over such estates, while he lives, he has the absolute power of dis|>osition.

But the husband of the plaintiff was seized of an estate of inheritance during coverture; and under the first clause of the statute, on the concurrence of marriage and seizin, she became invested with dower inchoate; and had she not joined in the mortgage, her dower would have become consummate on the death of her husband.

The questions then arise: (1.) What was the legal effect of the mortgage upon the dower inchoate of the plaintiff? (2.) What were the equitable rights of the parties, under the mortgage, either before or after condition broken ?

The first questioh is answered by the second proposition in one of defendant’s printed briefs—(the first proposition having no reference to the matter now under consideration)—and is thus stated:

That plaintiff’s right to dower became and is barred and [182]*182released at law by her uniting with her husband in the mortgage, and the forfeiture of its conditions.”

We assent, fully, to this proposition; and will remark here, that this is the effect, as between the plaintiff and the mortgagee, and those claiming under him, with or without a foreclosure of the mortgage. This was the proposition involved in Stille v. Carroll (12 Peters, 203), to which our attention was specially invited at the last argument. No question as to the widow’s -right to redeem arose. It was an action of dower at law.

The third proposition of defendant is as follows:

“ That the plaintiff, during the life of her husband, was not, either before or after the execution of the mortgage, vested with any estate in the mortgaged premises.”

To this proposition we likewise assent. In this connection it is proper to remark that, although dower inchoate is not an estate. nevertheless, it is a right or interest in the land, created by the law for the wife’s benefit, and vested in her. It is a legal right, contingent, it is true, upon her surviving her husband, as to whether it will ripen into a right, in her, to have it assigned, and to enter upon its enjoyment, but not otherwise uncertain. It is a right valuable to the wife, and valuable in respect to the estate. Its existence diminishes, while its extinguishment enhances the value of the inheritance. Having once attached by the concurrence of seizin of the inheritance in the husband and coverture, its continued existence does not depend upon the continuance of the husband’s seizin. His alienation does not impair the right. It is inseparable from the inheritance, and attends it to whomsoever it may pass until discharged by her own deed, or in some other statutory mode. And while admitting that dower inchoate is not an estate, yet it may also be said that, strictly^ speaking, neither is dower, the title to which has become consummate, until after it is assigned in the land.

Conceding, then, that the plaintiff’s right to dower became barred at law, on the mortgage becoming absolute, and that she had not, 201] during the life of her husband, nor has now, any *estate in the mortgaged premises, the second question above stated remains, viz: What are the equitable rights of the parties uhder the mortgage?

The plaintiff’s claim is, not that she has a legal right to dower, but that she has in equity a right to redeem her dower from the forfeiture, by paying the mortgage debt, and, when the debt is paid, to nave her dower assigned.

[183]*183The defendant’s counsel deny the existence of any such right. Their claim is stated in the fourth proposition of their brief, as follows: “That the entire fee simple estate, before the forfeiture of the condition, was in the husband; and after the forfeiture, and before and at the time of the foreclosure and sale, the right, in equity, to redeem the premises from the effect of the forfeiture was vested in the husband—no such right, to any extent whatever, being then vested in the plaintiff; that her joining in the mortgage was ,not as mortgagor, but merely by way of release of her inchoate right of dower,

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Related

Stelle v. Carroll
37 U.S. 201 (Supreme Court, 1838)
Swaine v. Perine
5 Johns. Ch. 482 (New York Court of Chancery, 1821)
Harrington v. Heath
15 Ohio St. 483 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1846)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio St. (N.S.) 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcarthur-v-franklin-ohio-1865.