Perrine's Executors v. Perrine

35 Ala. 644
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 35 Ala. 644 (Perrine's Executors v. Perrine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perrine's Executors v. Perrine, 35 Ala. 644 (Ala. 1860).

Opinion

R. W. WALKER, J.

The only question in this case is, whether the widow of an intestate, who, after his death, and until the assignment of her dower, occupied the place of his last residence, is, when her dower is assigned her, entitled to a third of the rents and profits, which, during the continuance of her possession of the mansion-house, accrued from the other lands subject to her dower.

Lord Coke said, that “ three things be favored in law— life, liberty, and dower,” (Coke’s Litt. 124 b); and Lord Bacon speaks of this as “the common by-word in the law.” — Reading on Uses, 37. The same idea is thus expressed in Kennedy v. Nedson, 1 Dall. 417: “Dower is a legal, equitable, and moral right, favored in a high degree by the law, and next to life and liberty, held sacred.” The language of all the authorities is, that the husband is bound, by the law of God and man, to provide for his wife; and that it is the legal, as well as the moral right of the widow, to derive her support for life out of the husband’s estate. — 1 Cruise’s Digest, title Dower, § 6; 1 Story’s Eq. 682.

It is not dower itself, however, but the purpose of dower — namely, the support of the widow — which the law favors. And statutes which have for their design the support of the widow out of the estate of the husband, “must be regarded with the same favor, and administered with the same liberality extended to dower; and for the same reason, that the widow is a favorite of the law.” — Noel v. Ewing, 9 Indiana, 38.

[648]*648By the law of England, as it was before the conquest, the widow was permitted to continue a whole year in her husband’s house, within which time, if dower was not assigned, she might recover it. — 1 Coke’s Litt. 32 (b.); 4 Kent, 63, note (6.); Den v. Dodd, 1 Halsted, 368. It does not seem to be certain whether or not this continued to be the law after the conquest. But by Magna Charta it was provided, that “a widow, after the death of her husband, incontinent, and without any difficulty, shall have her marriage, and her inheritance, and shall give nothing for her dower, her marriage or her inheritance, which her husband and she held the day of the death of her husband ; and she shall tarry in the chief house of her husband by forty days after the death of her husband, within which days her dower shall be assigned her, (if it were not assigned her before.) or that the house be a castle; and if she depart from the castle, then a competent house shall be forthwith provided for her, in .the which she may honestly dwell, until her dower be to her assigned, as it is aforesaid; and she shall have in the meantime her reasonable estovers of the common.” — 1 Statutes at large, p. 4; Coke’s 2d Institute, vol. 1, p. 16. The word estover, as here employed, according to Lord Coke’s explanation of this part of Magna Charta, is to be taken for sustenance, and comprehends “things that concern the nourishment, or maintenance of man in victu et veslitu, wherein is contained meat, drink, garments and habitation.” — Coke’s 2d Institute, vol. 2, p. 17. See, also, Park on Dower, 250, note (a.)

If during the forty days, or quarantine, as it was called, the heir or tenant of the land put her out, the widow might have her writ de guar entina habenda. — 1 Coke’s Litt. 34 (6.); Park, 250, note (b.) But, although it was the duty of the heir to assign her dower, the widow had no right to tarry in her husband’s house, beyond the forty days; and after the expiration of her quarantine, the heir might put her out of possession, and drive her to her suit for dower. — 1 Coke’s Litt. 34 (b.); 4 Kent, 61-2. The true construction of this part of Magna Charta, therefore, was, that the widow shall enjoy her quarantine for forty [649]*649days, unless within that time her dower be assigned her. 7 Johns. 249. Although Magna Gharta declared, that within forty days after the death of her husband, the widow’s “dower- shall be assigned unto her”; yet Lord Coke says, and very truly, too, “ of little effect was that act, for that no penáltie was thereby provided, if it were not done.” — 1 Coke’s Litt. 32 (6.), 34 (b.) “And, therefore, to the end that widowes might have certaiutie of estate, and that they might enter, and not be driven to suit, the law hath provided dower ad ostium ecdesice and dower ex assensu patris.” — 1 Coke’s Litt. 34 (6); Jackson v. O’Donaghy, 7 Johns. 249.

If the widow’s dower .was not assigned her during her quarantine, she had her right of action to recover it, and was entitled (when her husband died seized) to have her damages from the day of his death. — 1 Coke’s Litt. 32 (6.); Jackson v. O’Douaghy, 7 Johns. 249; 4 Kent, 63.

In the English law, the right to quarantine, as secured by Magna Charla, and the statute of Merton, which gave the widow her damages, from the day of her husband’s death, have never been supposed to conflict with each other; and no abatement of her damages was allowed, by reason of her having enjoyed her quarantine, except that in that case the account for rents did not include the rents of the dwelling-house during the time she had occupied the same under her privilege. — See Swain v. Perrine, 5 Johns. Ch. 492-3.

Except where it has been repealed, or superseded by legislation designed as a substitute for it, the provision of Magna Gharta, securing to the widow her quarantine, is doubtless the law in the several States of the Union, and was in force in Alabama until the passage of the act of 1826, the 5th section of which was obviously meant to take the place of the quarantine privilege as secured by Magna Gharta. — See 19 Ala. 828.

The right of the widow, as against the heir or devisee, to damages, or mesne profits from the death of her husband, has long been a settled principle of our law. Whether that right exists among us by virtue of the statute of Merton, or by analogy to it, or rests upon the [650]*650widow’s title, we need not inquire: it is enough that its existence is well established. — 11 Ala. 32; 13 Ala. 334.

When, therefore, the act of 1826 was passed, the state of our law upon this subject was this: The widow had the right to remain in the mansion-house of her husband, for forty days after his death, and the law made it the duty of the heir to assign her dower within that time; but it imposed no penalty on him, if he failed to do so. The widow’s right of possession terminated at the expiration of the forty days, whether her dower had or had not been assigned her; and the heir might then expel her, and drive her to her suit for dower, which, if he were disposed to contest, might result in her being homeless, and without means of support, for a long time before her dower was secured to her. When, however, she did recover her dower, she was entitled to the mesne profits of the same, from the death of her husband, and not simply from the expiration of her quarantine.

By the 5th section of the act of 1826, it was provided, that “ It shall be lawful for the widow to retain the full possession of the dwelling-house in which her husband most usually dwelt next before his death, together with the out-houses, offices, or improvements, and plantation thereunto belonging, free from molestation and rent, until she shall have her dower assigned her.” — Clay’s Digest, 173, § 7. The section of the Code upon the same subject is not materially different. — Code, § 1359.

When we consider the antecedent state of the law, the object of these statutes seems clear.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ala. 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perrines-executors-v-perrine-ala-1860.