Roetzel v. Beal

116 S.W.2d 591, 196 Ark. 5, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 11, 1938
Docket4-5030
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 116 S.W.2d 591 (Roetzel v. Beal) 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
Roetzel v. Beal, 116 S.W.2d 591, 196 Ark. 5, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 152 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Smith, J.

On December 26, 1928, T. E. Beal and Walker Ladd became ' sureties on the bond of Otis "Wheeler as administrator of the estate of L. H. Wheeler. The administrator failed to account for and pay over assets which had come into his hands as administrator, and on January 14, 1932, the probate court entered judgment against the administrator and his sureties for $1,-022.41. On appeal, judgment was rendered on December 12, 1932, for the same amount against the administrator and his sureties.

On July 30, 1932, Beal executed a warranty deed to his wife conveying the lands here in question for the recited consideration of $3,003.

The administrator had paid all the probated demands except that of the Bald Knob Fruit Exchange, Inc. That company .became insolvent and John Q. Adams was appointed receiver. Adams, as receiver, filed suit to set aside the deed from Beal to his wife on the ground that the deed had been executed in fraud of the Fruit Exchange Company, and that relief was granted. Thereafter an execution was levied upon the lands thus uncovered,,, and Adams, as receiver, became the purchaser at the execution sale and received an execution deed from the sheriff, whereupon he satisfied the judgment and decree upon which the execution had issued. On May 9, 1936, Adams, as receiver, conveyed the lands purchased at the execution sale to J. A. Roetzel, who, on "March 27, 1937, conveyed them to J. A. McKamey.

Beal died October 3, 1936, leaving no issue, but survived by his wife, who brought suit, making all persons interested parties, to have dower assigned her in the lands which had been sold under the execution. These were not ancestral lands, but were a new acquisition. There were no creditors, and from a decree awarding Mrs. Beal a one-lialf interest in fee simple as dower is this appeal.

It is apparent, from the facts stated, that the controlling question in this case is whether the sale of the husband’s land, under a judgment and execution against him, bars the wife’s right of dower therein, upon the husband’s death.

There are a large number of cases bearing upon this question, but it would be a work of supererogation to attempt to review them and to point out the distinctions between them. The value of any case from another jurisdiction would depend upon the similarity of the statutes construed to our dower statutes.

Many cases are cited in the note to § 174 of the chapter on Dower in 19 C. J. 520. That section reads as follows: “The wife’s dower right is barred by sale on execution where the common-law right of dower is limited by statute to lands of which her husband died seized or possessed, or where by statute the right of dower does not attach for the purpose of enjoyment until all his debts are paid. Under a statute providing, that no judgment against the husband shall prejudice the wife’s right to dower, her dower right is not divested by sale under a judgment on .a creditor’s bill against the husband to which the wife was not a party, even though a person having a right to a vendor’s lien was made a defendant and was preferred by the judgment.”

Appellant says this appeal presents three questions, which are stated to be: First, Is appellee entitled to dower; Second, If so, will she take one-third for life under § 4396, or one-half in fee simple under § 4421 of Pope’s Digest; Third, Is she not estopped and barred by her conduct and by law from claiming dower at this time?

Discussing first the third question raised, it may be said that the widow, if entitled to dower, is not estopped from claiming it now through failure to claim it when the conveyance to her from her husband was uncovered. She could not have claimed dower then, for her husband was alive, and it could not be then known that she would survive him. The purchaser at the execution sale bought subject to the rule caveat, emptor, and took only such title as the judgment debtor owned. Pate v. Peace, 182 Ark. 618, 32 S. W. 2d 621; Citizens Bank & Trust Co. v. Garrott, 192 Ark. 599, 93 S. W. 2d 319.

The other two questions will be considered together. One of the cases relied upon for the reversal of the decree is that of Murphy v. Booker, 139 Ark. 469, 214 S. W. 63. In this case the wife of Booker was denied dower, because her husband; who had lost his title, was not thereafter seized of an estate of inheritance, and it was said that to give a right of dower there must be such a right of immediate possession on the part of the husband as to constitute seizin in law. That opinion quotes from the case of Tate v. Jay, 31 Ark. 576, as follows: “ ‘Seizin is either in deed, or in law; seizin in deed, is actual possession ; seizin in law, the right to immediate possession. Unless such seizin existed during coverture there can be no dower, because it is an indispensable requisite to her right to dower, so declared by statute. ’ ” It will be observed that the indispensable requisite is that “seizin existed during coverture.”

Another ease cited in the brief of appellant and strongly urged in our consultation as requiring the reversal of the decree here appealed from is that of McGuire v. Cook, 98 Ark. 118, 135 S. W. 840, Ann. Cas. 1912D, 776. The facts in that case, as stated in the opinion, are as follows: Mrs. Ewing survived her first husband, Thomas Cox, and dower was assigned to her in his estate. The lands thus assigned her were sold by the administrator of Cox’s estate to pay his debts. D. C. Ewing became the purchaser at this sale, and upon confirmation thereof received an administrator’s deed. Mrs. Cox was also widow of Ewing at the time of Ewing’s death, and claimed dower in his reversionary interest in the lands which she held as dower. Ewing had never had seizin of these lands, for the reason that the possession and the right thereto was in Mrs. Ewing as the dowager of her former husband. It is true Ewing and wife occupied these dower lands during their marriage as their homestead, but this possession was referable to the dower interest of Mrs. Ewing as the Avidow of Cox. It was she Avho had possession and the right thereto. Ewing had purchased only the reversionary interest, and his right of possession Avas postponed until the termination of his Arife’s doAver interest in the estate of her former husband. The claim of Mrs. EAving to doAver in those lands was disallowed for the reason that Ewing only had a reversionary interest in the lands. His right to occupy the lands as owner was postponed until the death of his wife, and she survived him, so that never during his lifetime was he seized of the lands. In so holding Judge Frauenthal said: “The same character of seizin that was required by the common law in the husband is required by our statute in order to entitle the widow to dower” . . . “The statute in this state, on the other hand, provides that the widow ‘shall be endowed in fee simple ’ of a portion of the real estate, and also expressly limits same to the real estate ‘of which the husband shall die seized.’ ” Ewing was not only not seized of these lands at the time of his death, but he was never seized of them during his life. His wife could not, therefore, have dower. The point decided in that case was that the wife was not entitled to dower in the reversionary estate of her husband, for the reason that he was not seized thereof.

The question there involved was not alone that of the character or extent of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W.2d 591, 196 Ark. 5, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roetzel-v-beal-ark-1938.