Pickett v. Buckner, Newman & Co.

45 Miss. 226
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 45 Miss. 226 (Pickett v. Buckner, Newman & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pickett v. Buckner, Newman & Co., 45 Miss. 226 (Mich. 1871).

Opinion

Simrall, J.:

The important question is presented, for the first time in this court, whether a mortgage in fee, made by the husband during coverture, bars his widow of dower.

Dower, at common law, is a right institutional in character, arising in law, and not out of the pact or consent of the parties. Marriage and seizin are the facts from which it springs, and at once fastens upon the land by a right paramount to that of any person claiming upon the husband by a subsequent act. 2 Coke Litt. 32. It results, therefore, [240]*240that neither the alienation of the husband, nor any act suffered or done by him, such as bankruptcy, confers a title upon the alienee, or the assignee, which will defeat dower, if the right of the dowress becomes consummate by survivorship. All incumbrances and derivative interests created by the husband subsequent to the occurrence of the facts upon which the inchoate right of the wife arises, are subordinate to her claim, and will be postponed and displaced, in so far as they conflict with her right, when it becomes complete and consummate.

The right of the dowress is dependant upon, and grows out of the title of the husband. It is a derivative; and offshoot from it. If, therefore, the husband loses the land by title paramount, the inchoate interest of the wife falls with it. It is' the same thing in law, as if the husband never had seizin. If the dower has been assigned, it necessarily terminates upon an eviction under a title superior to that of the husband.

It follows also, from the nature of this inceptive right, that it takes hold of the land subject to all the incumbrances and charges placed upon it by the husband prior to the marriage and seizin. Nor does it matter how these charges were created; they may be the result of contract, as a mortgage, or an incident of the law, as a statute staple or judgment lien.

Much as the marital rights of the wife, chief of which is dower, are favored, they are not so highly esteemed as to curtail or impair any estate or charge upon the land, older than the marriage and seizin, and which upon foreclosure or enforcement would divest the freehold title of the husband. Chancellor Kent (4 Comm. 50), says the wife’s estate is part of the husband’s, derived from him, and must be subject to all the incumbrances existing against it at the time of the marriage, or its inception.’ ’ This right is liable to be destroyed by any claim or incumbrance existing before its inception, and which would defeat the husband’s [241]*241seizin. Scott v. How, 3 Barb. 319; Trustees v. Pratt, 10 Md. 11. Such were the rules of the common law.

Prior to the adoption of the Revised Code of 1857, dower here was very much the same as at the common law. The Code made some important changes. Prior to that time, the wife was dowable of all the lands of which the husband was seized of an estate of inheritance, at any time during the coverture, and of which she has not made relinquishment. The specific change made by the Code is, that she is dowable of all the lands of which the husband “died seized and possessed,” and those conveyed during the coverture mala fide, and not upon a valuable consideration.

Bringing the principles of the old law into juxtaposition to these changes, we can the more distinctly mark and observe their scope and extent. As we have seen, when once the inchoate contingent right of the wife vested in possibility, the husband had no power, by any thing that he could do or suffer, to defeat it. The right of taking hold of the land, as part of the husband’s title, instantly, upon, a beneficial seizin in him, it followed that any mortgage or other conveyance made by him, after the seizin, was inoperative to affect her right. It would vest absolutely upon the contingency of her surviving the husband.

Under the statute, the inceptive interest of the wife is contingent and defeasable upon another event than survivor-ship of her husband. If the husband, in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, conveys the land, then her inchoate right ceases to exist, and is defeated. If he make a voluntary conveyance or a devise, her right in possibility goes along with the land to the donee or devisee. In either of these cases, survivorship is the only contingency to consummate her title.

The wife has no claim upon any land conveyed by her husband, in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, during the coverture. Upon all other lands of which he had beneficial seizin during coverture, or of which he died seized and possessed, she may be endowed.

[242]*242Is a mortgage in fee simple a conveyance for a valuable consideration, within the intendment of the statute ?

Much of the doubt and difficulty which environs the subject arises from not analyzing the instrument, and closely observing its two fold character, looking at it both in its legal and equitable aspects.

A mortgage in fee serves a complex purpose; it is a security for a debt, and at the same time a conveyance of the estate. In strictness it creates a conditional estate, oían estate upon defeasance. It transfers the estate to the mortgagee upon the condition, that, if the debt is paid on the day named, it shall be void. If default is made, the estate which before was conditional, has become absolute. The mortgagee has a right of entry, and the land has gone from the mortgagor forever. Payment after the day did not restore the title to the mortgagor. Litt. 338. Breach of the condition made the title absolute in the mortgagee. Hill v. Robertson, 24 Miss. 375. Compliance with the defeasance by performance or offer to perform, defeats the title of mortgagee. But if the estate becomes absolute by forfeiture of the condition, the wife of the mortgagee is entitled to dower, and the estate is subject to any incumbrance, the husband may impose upon it. Litt., § 332; 2 Black Com. 158; Powell on Mort. 9, 10; Parsons v. Wells et al., 17 Mass. 421. This doctrine is vindicated by. the principles, which regulate estates upon condition. The ■seizin of the mortgagor was gone the moment the estate became absolute, and the mortgagee could enter, or could recover the possession upon the strength of his title. This seizin must be beneficial, though but for an instant of time. Therefore, if the husband is the mere conduit to pass the title, as where the same act which gives the estate, transfers it to another, there is not such seizin as will support the claim of dower. As also where the vendee, when he accepts a deed, mortgages the land back to the vendor for a part or the whole of the purchase-money, the right to dower is subordinate to the vendor’s security, for these are treated [243]*243as one transaction, as much as if both were incorporated into the same instrument. 4 Kent, 38; Park on Dower, 43; Co. Litt. 31.

The doctrine of the English courts was well settled before the passage of the statute 3 & 4 Wm. IV, chap. 105; that the widow was not dowable of equitable estates, hence she had no right of dower in the equity of redemption. Important modifications were made by the courts of equity, as its principles became more expanded, and its jurisdiction fully established. The court of law treated the title as absolute in the mortgagee after forfeiture, and could afford no remedy. Courts of equity, however, on the basis of relieving from forfeiture, where substantial justice could be done, interfered, after breach of condition, and allowed the mortgagee within a reasonable time to redeem. The legal title was still recognized to be in the mortgagee.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Miss. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickett-v-buckner-newman-co-miss-1871.