Mock v. Watson

41 Iowa 241
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 23, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 41 Iowa 241 (Mock v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mock v. Watson, 41 Iowa 241 (iowa 1875).

Opinion

Beck, J. —

The sole question presented by the record before us for our determination is this: Is the interest of a widow in the lands of her deceased husband subject to debts against the estate, or is it to be set apart before the payment of debts and held by her free therefrom?

power : debts widow>sSin-e: terest. The question involves the consideration and interpretation of certain statutory provisions. We can obtain no assistance reaching a conclusion upon the question from *be books, as the rules and principles applicable to the estate in dower are inapplicable here. Our statute expressly abolishes the estate of dower, and creates another estate to take its place. Code, § 2440. Eor the newly created estate the legislature has supplied no name. The widow takes “one-third in value of all the legal or equitable estates in real property, possessed by the husband at any time during the marriage, which have not been sold on execution, or any other judicial sale, and to which the wife has made no relinquishment of her right.” § 2440. Though no name be given this estate, the profession, finding it inconvenient to speak or write about a thing without a name, will discover a fit term by which to designate it. The learned counsel in this case quite naturally unite in calling the statutory interest of a widow in the lands of her deceased husband an estate of dower. It is probably beyond the power of the legislature to change the language of the people, or to control the legal profession in the use of words. Before the statute in question, dower, as to the quantity and duration of the estate, as well as to' other matters, was wholly regulated by statute. In these matters little, if any, change has been made affecting the estate of the widow, by the Code, further than the [244]*244attempted abolition of the use of tbe term dower, and the suspension of the application of certain principles peculiar to the estate of dower, to the newly created estate of the widow. Whatever effect the legislation abolishing the estate may have had upon the interpretation of the different provisions relating thereto, it is quite certain that the use of the word will not be dispensed with.

For a better understanding of the provisions of the statute bearing upon the question before us, we will quote them here in the order in which they are found in the Code:

“Sec. 2387, If the personal.effects are found inadequate to satisfy such debts and charges [against the estate], a sufficient portion of the real estate may be sold for that'purpose.”
“Sec.- 2391. When a part cannot be sold without material prejudice to the general interests of the estate, the court may order the sale for the whole, or of such parts as can be sold advantageously.”
“Sec. 2440. One-third in value of all the legal or equitable estates in real property, possessed by the husband at any time during the marriage, which have not been sold- on execution, or any other judicial sale, and to which the wife has made no relinquishment of her right, shall be set apart as her property in fee simple, if she survive him. * * * * * The estates of dower and curtesy are hereby abolished.”
“Sec. 2441. The distributive share of the widow shall be so set off as to include the ordinary dwelling house given by law to the homestead, or so much thereof as will be equal to1 the share allotted to her by the last section, unless she prefers a different arrangement. But no different arrangement shall be permitted where it would have the effect of prejudicing the rights of creditors.”
Sec. 2444 provides that application for the admeasurement of the widow’s interest- “may be-made at any time after twenty days and within ten years after the death of the husband.
“Sec. 2453. Subject to the rights and changes [charges] hereinbefore contemplated, the remaining estate of which the decedent died seized shall, in the absence of other arrangements by will, descend in equal shares to his children.”

[245]*245I. At common law upon the concurrence of seizin of lands in the husband and coverture of the wife, she acquired a right in such lands which was only defeated by her voluntary act or by her death. This right, until the death of her husband, was inchoate; upon that event, it became perfect and effective, developing into the estate of dower. We should have no trouble, were the interest of the widow in lands of her deceased husband under our code a dower estate, to determine that her interest attached upon coverture and ripened into an estate upon widowhood. But the estate of dower no longer exists here, and we are left to determine, by a construction of the several provisions above quoted, when her interest attached, whether upon her coverture or after the death of her husband. We shall find that in this respect the statutory and common law estate do not differ.

Code, section 2440, provides that the wife shall have her interest in lands “possessed by the husband at any time during the marriage,” which have not been sold on execution, or to which she has made no relinquishment of her right.

Upon the death of the husband she may recover her interest in lands which he had conveyed without her relinquishment. Such lands would, however, be no part of the assets of the estate for the payment of debts; nor would they descend to the heirs. It is very plain that her interest in such lands attached before the husband’s death — at the concurrence of seizin by the husband and coverture of the wife. The interest that then attached was beyond the husband’s control, for his conveyance of the land did not, without her act, defeat her interest.' If the wife’s interest attached to lands which the husband subsequently alienated, it is evident that it attached equally to all lands of which he died seized. It could never have been.the intention of the legislature to secure to the wife an interest in lands conveyed by the husband during her coverture and deny to her an interest in real estate of which he died seized. The conclusion is reached .that under the statute the interest of the wife in this respect lias the same character as the estate of dower, viz: it attaches upon the concurrence of seizin of the husband and coverture [246]*246of the wife. So far the legislature gained nothing and no change is made by abolishing the estate of dower. The attempt to abolish the use of the familiar word, heretofore used to designate the widow’s estate in her husband’s land, will probably fail.

In support of the conclusion we reach other considerations may be stated. One, only, will we mention. The interest of the wife is not, as that of the heirs by § 2453, made subject to the rights of others, and to charges against the estate. It is secured by absolute words and no conditions -or limitations are affixed to it. These cannot be engrafted on the statute upon presumption of legislative intention.

II. Support for the views of appellants is sought in Secs. 2387, 2391, on the ground that they contemplate the sale of the whole of the lands of the estate when necessary to discharge debts established against it. As we have shown, the wife’s interest upon its attaching was free of the husband’s contol. It became no part of the estate upon the decease of the husband. The heirs and wife became tenants in common of the land.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Iowa 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mock-v-watson-iowa-1875.