Pratt v. Tefft

14 Mich. 191, 1866 Mich. LEXIS 21
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 14 Mich. 191 (Pratt v. Tefft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pratt v. Tefft, 14 Mich. 191, 1866 Mich. LEXIS 21 (Mich. 1866).

Opinions

Christiancy J.

This was an action of ejectment brought by the plaintiff below, (also plaintiff in error,) for the recovery of her dower, as the widow of William A. Pratt.

The facts are found by special verdict,. and in legal effect may be stated briefly thus: The marriage took place in this State about the year 1844. The husband of the plaintiff became seized of the premises in question in 1857, and conveyed the same to the grantor of the defendant in 1858, the plaintiff not having-joined in the deed nor since released her dower. The residence of the husband and wife continued in this State until after the conveyance by the husband. They afterwards removed to the State of New York, where they continued to reside until 1861, when the husband died in the city of New York.

The only question is whether, upon these facts, she is entitled to dower in these lands. It is admitted that, at com[196]*196mon law as well as under the Revised Statutes of 1838, (had they continued in force,) her right would have been clear, and it would have been equally clear under the revision of 1846, had she continued to reside in this State until the death of her husband.

By the Revised Statutes of 1838, part 2, title 1, ch. 2, sec. 15, it was enacted;- “The alienage of a woman shall not bar her right of dower, and any woman residing oixt of the State shall be entitled to dower in the lands of her deceased husband lying within the State, and the same may be assigned to her or recovered by her in like manner as if she and her deceased husband had been residents within the State at the time of his death.”

In the Revised Statutes of 1846, ch. 66, section 21, we have the same provision as the section quoted above, with the single exception, that after the words “lying within the State,” and before the words “and the same maybe assigned,” &c., the following additional clause is inserted, viz.: “of which her husband died seized.”

We must presume that the legislature which adopted the revision of 1846 were not satisfied with the provision as it stood in the section above quoted from the revision of 1838, and that this clause was therefore added for some jouipose, and intended to have some effect; and it is our duty in construing the statute and interpreting this clause, to ascertain the purpose and intention of the legislature. It will be noticed that this clause occurs in a provision which is affirmative in form, purporting to give to a widow, though residing out of the State, a right to dower in lands lying within the State. But it is quite clear that this clause could add nothing to the affirmative effect of this jDrovision or of any other provision of the statute upon this subject. The first section of the chapter (66 of Rev. Stat. of 1846,) had already given the' right to dower, not only in the lands of which the husband died seized, but “ of all the lands whereof her husband was seized of an estate of inheritance at any time during the marriage, unless [197]*197she is lawfully barred thereof,” — or, substantially, dower at common law. The first part of this section fifteen, as it stood in the revision of 1838, and as it still stands in section 21 in the revision of 1846, where the clause under consideration is inserted, had already removed the disability of alienage; so that no affirmative provision was necessary to give dower in the lands of which the husband of a non-resident woman died seized. The restrictive clause, therefore, inserted in the section in 1846, can have no affirmative effect whatever. The only possible effect which it can have is by the negative implication which results from it. Why should the provision of which it forms a part be confined to cases where the husband died seized, if the intention was that the widow should have the same right, whether he died seized or not ? The negative implication is, we think, a necessary one, and therefore as much a part of the statute as if it had been expressed. The effect of the provision, as it now stands, is the same as if it had been expressly declared that a woman residing out of the State shall not be entitled to dower in any lands in this State of which her husband did not die seized; thus, in effect, operating as an exception to the general words of the first section of the chapter, unless the legislature can be considered as having treated such non-residence as one mode of barring dower, which may have been the view taken by the legislature; the provision in question following immediately after the provision that the woman should “ not be barred of her dower” on account of her alienage, which is found at the beginning of the section.

It has, however, been strenuously urged by the counsel for 'the plaintiff in error, that the whole provision in section twenty-one, as it now stands, with the restrictive words inserted, was intended to apply only to the mode provided in the eighth, ninth, and tenth sections for having dower assigned in the Probate Court. There may have been good reason for making a distinction between residents and non-residents as to this remedy. But no such distinction is intimated in the [198]*198sections providing this remedy, and, unfortunately for the argument, the words of section twenty-one clearly extend the effect of the restrictive clause, and of the whole provision, beyond the remedy in the Probate Court. The words immediately succeeding the restrictive clause are, “and the same may be assigned to her, or recovered,” <fcc.; so that the negative implication is just as strong against the right of recovery by action, as against the proceeding for assignment in the Probate Court.

But it still remains to be considered, whether it is the non-residence of the woman at the time of the alienation by the husband, or at the time of his death, which is to deprive her of dower. If the former, the plaintiff will be entitled to recover; if the latter, she will not.

Several states have by statute confined the widow’s right to dower, in all cases, to the lands of which her husband died seized. But nothing of this kind has been attempted by this chapter or any other statute in this State. And it is difficult to conceive any sound reason for denying the right to a woman on the sole ground that she happens to be residing in another state when her husband happiens to die, and when she was residing with him in this State at the time he conveyed the land, and would have been entitled to her dower by remaining here.

Upon principle, and as a matter of public policy, there would seem to be much better reason for making the right dejDend upon residence at the time of the conveyance by the husband, than upon her residence at the time of his death. And there are some provisions, as well as certain omissions and changes in the revision of 1846, when compared with that of 1888, which would seem to indicate that such might have been the intention.

The revision of 1888, in the chapter regulating dower (Chapter 2, Title 1, Part 2), section seven, provides a mode by which “ a married woman residing within this State, may bar her dower,” by joining in a deed with her husband, acknow[199]*199ledgecl as in that section provided.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Mich. 191, 1866 Mich. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pratt-v-tefft-mich-1866.