Pillow v. Wade

31 Ark. 678
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 31 Ark. 678 (Pillow v. Wade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pillow v. Wade, 31 Ark. 678 (Ark. 1877).

Opinion

Harrison, J.:

This was a suit in equity by Gideon J. Pillow against D. F. Wade and Anna P. Wade, his wife, H. M. Williams and Sallie P. Williams, his wife, John D. Mitchell and Narcissa P. Mitchell, his wife, and Jerome B. Pillow.

The complaint alleges, that the plaintiff being, at the close of the civil war, much in debt, and wishing to use his lands, in settlement with his creditors and discharge of his liabilities, owning at the time five plantations in Phillips County, and three large unimproved tracts in St. Francis, to effect such purpose, deemed it advisable to procure a release of the dower of his wife, Mary E. Pillow, but feeling that it would not be just or prudent to ask such release, without an equivalent consideration, he proposed, to which she assented, to dissever, by release, her dower in several plantations and tracts, and to consolidate the same in one body; and with that view, he had her dower in all the several plantations and tracts valued by two disinterested and competent persons, who estimated the whole at $60,000; and thereafter, on the 15th day of July, 1865, his wife, by deed, released to him her dower in all, and he, at the same time, conveyed to the defendant, Jerome B. Pillow, his plantation known as the Mound place, and which is in Lee County, now, in trust for her, and as a separate estate and property, for her support, both of which deeds were duly acknowledged and recorded.

That the sole object of the conveyance was to secure to his wife, in case she should survive him, an estate in the Mound place, equal in value to the dower in the lands she released; but that, through mistake or inadvertence, the deed was so drawn as to acknowledge an indebtedness to her of $60,000, and to make the same a charge upon the plantation.

That Mrs. Pillow died in 1869, leaving surviving her the following children, her heirs at law: Robert G. Pillow, Gertrude S. Pillow, Mary Amanda Brown, intermarried with Thomas J. Brown, Lizzie P. Johnson, intermarried with Wilber P. Johnson, Alice P. Fargason, intermarried with D. B. Fargason, Anna P. Wade, intermarried with D. F. Wade, Sallie P. Williams, intermarried with H. M. Williams, and Narcissa P. Mitchell, intermarried with John D. Mitchell; and that he had administered upon her estate in Arkansas.

That when the said deed of trust was made, the plaintiff and Mrs. Pillow were residents of the State of Tennessee, and continued to be so until her death, and that tjje plantation had remained, and was still, in his possession.

That Robert G. Pillow, Gertrude S. Pillow, Mary Amanda Brown, Lizzie P. Johnson and Alice P. Fargason disclaimed, as heirs of their mother, any interest in the plantation, and, with the said Wilber F. Johnson and D. P. Fargason, had released to the plaintiff whatever estate or interest they might claim under the deed of trust, but that Anna P. Wade and her husband, Sallie P. Williams and her husband, and Narcissa P. Mitchell and her husband, assert and claim that the transaction was a purchase by the plaintiff' of his wife's dower, and that a debt of $60,000 therefor was secured to her on the plantation by the deed of trust.

And that the said deed of trust, though the estate conveyed is terminated, is a cloud upon the plaintiff's title, and it prays that the deed may be canceled and the cloud upon his title removed.

Copies of both the deed of trust and the release of dower were filed as exhibits with and made part of the complaint.

The release, after reciting that the value of the dower in all the plantations and lands, naming them, had been ascertained to be $60,000, and that the payment of that sum had been secured to her by a mortgage on the Mound place, proceeds thus: “Now, therefore, I, Mary E. Pillow, wife of the said Gid. J. Pillow, do hereby and in consideration of the sum of money above named and secured to be paid, release and relinquish to my said husband, the said Gid. J. Pillow, his heirs and assigns, all my right of dower in and to his above named eight tracts of land situated in Phillips and St. Francis counties, and the State of Arkansas.”

The deed of trust commences thus: “This indentuure of mortgage made and entered into this 15th day of July, 1865, between,” etc., and, after reciting that his wife had released her dower in his several plantations and tracts of land, to enable him to pay his debts, and that the value of the same had been estimated at $60,000, proceeds as follows: “Now, therefore, I, the said Gid. J. Pillow, in consideration of said several relinquishments made, by my wife aforesaid, do hereby acknowledge myself indebted to my said wife in the sum of $60,000 to secure the payment of which said sum I.do hereby bargain, sell, convey and confirm to the said Jerome B. Pillow, in trust for my said wife, the following tract of land, viz.: My Mound plantation (more particularly describing it) situated in Phillips County, Arkansas; to have and to hold said tracts of land and bargained premises, to the said Jerome B. Pillow, his heirs and assigns forever, but in trust, nevertheless, for the use and benefit of said Mary E. Pillow, as a separate estate and property for her support.

“The said Gid. J. Pillow binds himself, his heirs, executors and administrators to warrant and defend the right of said bargained premises to the said Jerome B. Pillow, his heirs and assigns, in trust, etc., but to secure payment to the said Mary E. Pillow of the sum of $60,000 aforesaid. Upon payment of said sum, this obligation to be null and void, otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”

Wade and wife, Williams and wife, and Mitchell and wife, 'demurred to the complaint for the want of equity. The court sustained the demurrer, and dismissed the complaint, and the plaintiff appealed.

The attempted release of her dower by Mrs. Pillow was a nullity. A married woman can relinquish dower, only, by joining with her husband in a deed of conveyance to a third person. Gantt’s Digest, sec. 839; Witter v. Biscoe, 13 Ark., 423; Stidham v. Matthews, 29 ib., 658; Countz v. Markling, 30 ib., 18; Carson v. Murray, 3 Paige 503; Rowe v. Hamilton, 3 Greenl., 63; Shaw v. Reese, 14 Maine, 432.

But not for that reason only, could there be no liability of the plaintiff to pay Mrs. Pillow the sum mentioned in the deed of trust. As husband and wife they were incapable of contracting with each other. It is apparent, therefore, that no lien for the payment of a debt was created by the deed of trust on the plantation, and that so much of the deed as . related to a debt was nugatory and without effect.

It is not, however, insisted here by the appellees that there was a lien or that any such debt existed, but they contend that the plaintiff, by the deed, made a voluntary settlement of the plantation on Mrs. Pillow and her heirs.

Passing unnoticed the averment in the complaint that the sole object of the conveyance was to secure to Mrs. Pillow, for her life, in case she survived the plaintiff, an estate in the plantation equal in value to the dower she attempted to relinquish, which the demurrer admits, we will look to the language of the deed declaring the trust, upon which the trust was made, which is as follows: “In trust, nevertheless,, for the use and benefit of said Mary E. Pillow, as a separate estate and property for her support.”

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ark. 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pillow-v-wade-ark-1877.