Stedman v. Fortune
This text of 5 Conn. 462 (Stedman v. Fortune) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
By the common law, a widow is entitled to dower in all the land, whereof her husband was seised in fee-simple or fee-tail, at any time during the coverture, and of which any issue she might have had, might, by possibility, be heir ; but she had no right of entry until her dower was assigned. Litt. sect. 36. 53. 2 Bla. Comm. 134. 139. Bac. Abr. tit. Dower. B. The same principle has been adopted in Massachusetts and in New-York. Windham v. Portland, 4 Mass. Rep. 384. Sheafe v. O’Neil, 9 Mass. Rep. 13. Jackson d. Clowe v. Vanderheyden, 17 Johns. Rep. 167. But, by our statute, “ every married woman living with her husband, at the time of his death, or absent from him by his consent, or by his default, or by inevitable accident, or in case of divorce when she is the innocent party, and no part of the estate of her husband was assigned to her for her support, shall have right of dower in one third part of the real estate of which her husband died possessed, in his own right, to be to her during her natural life." [465]*465Stat. 180. tit. Dower. The practical and judicial construction of this statute, sanctioned by at least one decision of this Court,
New trial to be granted,
Crocker v. Fox & ux. 1 Root 323.
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5 Conn. 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stedman-v-fortune-conn-1825.