Price v. Price

48 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 486, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 25
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 48 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 486 (Price v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Price, 48 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 486, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 25 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Daniels, J.: '

The plaintiff has been held entitled in this action to recover dower in the real estate owned by Walter W. Price during the time of her intermarriage with him, and until the entry of a decree annulling that marriage. The controversy, as it was' then disposed of, is reported in 33 Hun, 76. Under that decision an interlocutory judgment was recovered directing the plaintiff’s dower to be admeasured in the real estate so owned by her husband, who departed this life on the 6th of June, 1876, and a referee was appointed to make such admeasurement of her dower. The property in which, under this decision, she is entitled to dower consisted of four separate and distinct parcels of land. Two parcels are still owned in severalty by two of the children of Walter W. Price. One, consisting of about fifteen acres, was conveyed by the deceased to his son, the defendant Walter J. Price, in July, 1875, and that has since been mortgaged to the Glens Palls Pire Insurance Company to secure the sum of $10,000. This property consists of about; fifteen acres of land having no substantial rental value. The deceased left a will by which he devised certain premises, consisting of a lot of land on Hammond street, in the city of New York, to his son, Charles G. Price. He sold and conveyed this property to the Rector Church Wardens, etc., of St. John the Evangelist Church. The church acquired the title for a valuable consideration without notice of the plaintiff’s right to dower therein. The testator also devised to two of his sons as tenants in common a house and lot known as No. 4 Tanness place, in the city of New York, which they conveyed to their sister, Mrs. Ashmead, and she afterwards sold and conveyed the same property to J osephine Little for the consideration of $11,000, and she afterwards conveyed it to Mr. Wedeland. The rental value of this property was found by the referee, upon evidence sustaining the conclusion, to be the sum of $776, after deducting taxes and water rents, and of the Hammond street lot to be about the sum of $790 after making the same deductions. The remaining property in which the plaintiff was entitled to be endowed consisted of two adjacent pieces of land on the westerly side of Lake George, containing together about seventy-three acres, and a small island situated near these premises in the lake. This land was divided by only a road running in a northerly and southerly direction, and upon [488]*488that portion of it situated westerly of the road valuable buildings had been erected prior to the decease of the testator. This piece consisted of thirty-three and seventy-five one-hundredth acres, and the two pieces together, including the island, produced an annual rental varying from, eight to thirteen hundred dollars. The dwelling upon it was designed for a summer residence, and the property had been improved to make it convenient, attractive and desirable for such a residence. But the referee considered it to be impractical to assign the plaintiff her dower in this property, and was of the opiuion that it should be sold and her dower estimated and paid to her out of the proceeds. It is true that no such express direction was given by him, but that was evidently the opinion upon which his final conclusions were founded. The court, upon the motion to confirm his report, dissented from his conclusion as to the inability to assign the plaintiff’s dower in this property, and ordered the case to be referred back to the referee to set-off to the plaintiff her dower in that property, and the plaintiff has appealed from that order, considering it to have been unauthorized and not within the power of the court to make it. And her counsel has endeavored to sustain this view in support of the appeal under the general statutory authority declaring that á widow shall be endowed in the third part of all the lands whereof her husband was seized of an estate of inheritance at any time during the marriage (2 R. S. [6th ed.], 1121, § 1), and the common-law rule maintaining her right to dower in each separate and distinct parcel of such lands.

But it was considered by the chancellor in Wood v. Keyes (6 Paige, 478) that this general direction should be subordinated to the equitable rights and interests of other parties in the property. And where it would be inequitable and unjust to assign dower in the lands conveyed by her husband during his lifetime with warranty, that her dower should be admeasured to her in other property affected by no such rights or interests. The authority of the court to make this decision has been drawn in question in support of the appeal, and the case of Schnebley v. Schnebley (26 Ill., 116), decided under a like statutory provision, has been relied upon as supporting this objection. And it is true that the court there announced and acted upon the common-law principle, which was held to be consistent with the statute, that the widow was entitled to be endowed [489]*489in each separate parcel of land which had been owned by her husband during the period of the marriage. And the case of Atkin v. Merrell (39 Ill., 62) followed this authority. But these cases require no departure to, be made from the doctrine of Wood v. Keyes, for the reason that the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, concerning the admeasurement of dower, have not only followed, but have enlarged the effect of this authority. For by subdivision 1 of section 1609, it has been in the most general manner directed that the referee or commissioners must, if it is practicable, and in their opinion for the best interests of all the parties concerned, admeasure and lay off as the dower of the plaintiff a “ distinct parcel,” constituting one-third of the real property of which dower is to be admeasured. And if that is not practicable, or for the best interests of all parties concerned, then that fact is to be reported to the court. This phraseology empowering the referee or the commissioners to set apart a distinct parcel of land for the dower of the plaintiff, was not contained in the provisions of the Revised Statutes concerning this subject. There the direction was that the commissioners should “ admeasure and lay off as speedily as possible the one-tliird part of the lands or premises embraced m the order.” (3 R. S. [6th ed.], 777, §13 ; Id., 578, § 51.) And this additional direction empowering the referee or commissioners to admeasure and lay off “ a distinct parcel” of the lands must have been designed to enlarge the authority of the court over this subject, for it has been employed by way of contrast to other parcels or portions of the real estate of the deceased husband. This significance of the phraseology is not only indicated by the language itself, but by the manner in which it has been employed in section 1599 of the Code of Civil Procedure, where a distinct parcel is distinguished from other real estate of which the husband may have died seized or alienated by one conveyance to one or more other persons. That the employment of these terms was designed and intended to have their appropriate office and effect in the proceedings, further appears from sections 1610 and 1613 of the Code. For care has been taken where that can-be done, and the rights and interests of other parties shall be promoted thereby, to restrict the property to be set-off as the dower of the widow, to a distinct parcel of that in which she may be entitled to be endowed.

[490]*490It has been urged that this construction should be limited to the class of cases in which the widow indicates her willingness to receive a gross sum in satisfaction and discharge of her right of dower.

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Related

Wood v. Keyes
6 Paige Ch. 478 (New York Court of Chancery, 1837)
Schnebly v. Schnebly
26 Ill. 116 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1861)
Atkin v. Merrell
39 Ill. 62 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1865)

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 486, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-price-nysupct-1886.