Parker v. Obear

48 Mass. 24
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 48 Mass. 24 (Parker v. Obear) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Obear, 48 Mass. 24 (Mass. 1843).

Opinion

Hubbard, J.

It is admitted in this case, that a much longer period than twenty years has elapsed, since the decease of the demandant’s husband, out of whose estate she claims to be endowed. The tenant, an alienee of the heir at law of a part of the estate of which the husband died seized, relies on the statute of limitations as a valid bar to this claim. The language of the statute is this: “ No person shall commence an action for the recovery of any lands, nor shall make an entry thereupon, unless within twenty years after the right to make such entry or bring such action first accrued, or within twenty years after he, or those from, by, or under whom he claims, shall have been seized or possessed of the premises, except as hereinafter provided.” Rev. Sts. c. 119, § 1. It is not necessary tc consider the exceptions mentioned; it is sufficient to say they do not affect the decision of the question now to be determined.

The language of the first section is very broad; and the argument of the tenant is, that a writ of dower is a writ for the [27]*27recovery of lands, and that the statute bars all actions for the recovery of lands, unless sued for within twenty years after the right commenced. The tenant’s position, that this is pn action to recover land, is correct; and taking the language of the statute without any qualification, it would appear to support the ground taken by the tenant. But in c. 60 of the Rev. Sts. which especially treats of estates in dower and by the curtesy, the various ways in which a woman may be barred of her dower are set forth, but no mention is made of a bar by the statute of limitations. In noticing this fact, the counsel for the tenant contends that this chapter, as well as certain others, relates to the tenure of estates, and not to the actions which may be brought to enforce rights ; and that we are therefore bound to apply the limitation contained in c. 119 to this as well as to other real actions. But in answer to this suggestion, it is to be observed that the 102d chapter of the Rev. Sts. treats especially of the writ of dower; and in the closing section of the chapter, (§ 9,) it is enacted that “ the provisions contained in the 60th chapter, as to the lands out of which dower may be claimed, the manner in which it may be barred, and the liability of the tenant for waste, shall be applied and enforced in all cases, when dower is demanded or recovered by force of this chapter; ” and this without any reference to the statute of limitations. But upon an examination of that statute, it is evident that it applies to those cases, and those only, where a right of entry existed in the party claiming the estate, or in the ancestor or predecessor of the person who claims the land. The bar applies to those persons whose right of entry is lost by their own laches, or by the laches of those under whom they claim. And the great distinction is this; that in regard to dower, at the common law, as established in this Commonwealth, the woman has no right of entry, on the decease of her husband. Her claim is to a third part of the real estate (having respect to the rents and profits) of which the husband was seized during coverture, to have the same set off to her by metes and bounds, where, in its nature, it is capable of such a division. She is not a joint tenant, nor tenant in common with the heir, devisee, or grantee. [28]*28Her entry, if she attempted to make it, would be unavailing, for it would not give her any right to any separate parcel of the estate which she might herself elect, nor any new interest in the entire estate. Her remedy is not by entry, but by demand upon the person who is seized of the freehold in which she is entitled to dower at the time of her demand. And if he refuses to assign it, to her satisfaction, she may then commence her action, after the expiration of one month, and within one year from the time of making her demand. But if that period passes, she is not precluded from a new demand and another right of action thereon. To this renewed claim on her part, there is no statute limitation; and as she never had a right of entry, it is not embraced in the general statute of limitations.

This question has arisen in other States. In South Carolina, in the case of Ramsay v. Dozier, 1 Const. Rep. 112, the court held that the statute of limitations of that State was a bar to the claim for dower, unless prosecuted within five years. But the decision was principally grounded on the express words of the statute, and the court were not unanimous in their opinion. And the English decisions there referred to do not relate to the statute of limitations of 32 Hen. VIII. c. 2, but to a case of alienation by fine with proclamations. St. 4 Hen. VII. c. 24. In Maryland, in the case of Wells v. Beall, 2 Gill & Johns. 468, the court decided that the statute of limitations is no bar, in equity, to a widow’s claim for dower. In New York, in the case of Hogle v. Stewart, 8 Johns. 104, which was an action of dower, the facts were shortly these : The writ was returnable November term 1808. The demandant was married to John Hogle before the revolutionary war. He was seized of the demanded premises when he died, in 1777, and the demandant had continued a widow ever since. Hogle was duly attainted for adhering to the enemies of the State; and in 1781 the premises were sold to one Henry, on the conviction of Hogle, and by Henry to the tenant; and one of the provisions of the act of attainder was, “ that no persons, &c., who now have, or shall or may hereafter have, any estate, right, title, claim, or demand, to any lands, &c , supposed to have been forfeited, &c., and which [29]*29have been heretofore granted or conveyed to any person, &c., shall, after the expiration of five years from and after the passing of this act, &c., prosecute, sue, or maintain any action or suit at law, for the recovery thereof, against the right and title so granted by the people of this State, as abovesaid”; and the court say, “ no action shall be prosecuted or maintained, after the expiration of five years, against the right and title granted by the commission ers. The right of dower is neither adverse to the estate for feited, nor is it against the right and title granted by the State, but is in concurrence with both. The seizin of the purchasei from the State is derived from the husband, and is a continuation of that seizin upon which the claim of dower is founded.” The teasoning in this case is applicable to the one at bar; and it is to be remarked also, that although more than thirty years had elapsed, from the death of the husband to the claim for dower, yet there is no intimation that the claim was barred or affected by the general statute of limitations. See also 4 Kent Com. (3d ed.) 70, in notes. In Connecticut, Chief Justice Swift says, the dower of the widow is not barred by lapse of time. 1 Swift’s Digest, (ed. of 1822,) 85. In New Hampshire also, Barnard v. Edwards, 4 N. Hamp. 109, it was held that a writ of dower was not within the statute of limitations. The court there say, “ it is clear that a limitation of dower cannot be dated from the seizin or possession of the demandant, because she cannot have either until dower has been assigned to her.” And the same doctrine is held in North Carolina and Tennessee. Spencer v. Weston, 1 Dev. & Bat. 213. Guthrie v. Owen, 10 Yerg. 339.

The statute of limitations of this Commonwealth is derived from the statute of 32 Hen. VIII. c.

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Related

Hogle v. Stewart
8 Johns. 104 (New York Supreme Court, 1811)

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Bluebook (online)
48 Mass. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-obear-mass-1843.