Thompson v. Egbert

17 N.J.L. 459
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 15, 1840
StatusPublished

This text of 17 N.J.L. 459 (Thompson v. Egbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Egbert, 17 N.J.L. 459 (N.J. 1840).

Opinion

Dayton, J.

By the first section of the act, Rev. L. 677, it is enacted, If a husband shall hereafter devise to his wife, by a will duly executed to pass real estate, any lands or real estate for her life or otherwise, and without expressing whether sucii devise to her, is intended to be in lieu or bar of dower, or not, and the said wife shall survive her said husband, that then the said wife so surviving, shall not be entitled to dower in any lands or real estate devised by her said husband, unless she shall in writing express her dissent to receive the said lands or real estate so devised to her, in satisfaction and bar of her right of dower in the other lands and real estate devised in and by the said will,” and file the same Ac., within six months &c.

Had the demandant continued it) possession of the lands devised, she would of course have been barred of dower by the section above recited; but she has been evicted. She has nothing now under the will. If by her temporary continuance in possession, she is deprived of her claim for dower, it is most manifestly against right. Whatever-may be the literal signification of the words of the statute, it is contrary to the spirit and intent of the act, to make it embrace this case, in reference to jointures, if the widow be evicted of any part, it is expressly provided that sise he endowed of a proportionate amount of the residue of her [462]*462husband’s lands. So in reference to other testamentary provision in money, or other chattel interest in satisfaction of dower; the court of Chancery, even after an acceptance and enjoyment thereof, by the widow, will allow her to refuse it and claim her dower, if it appear that she acted without full knowledge of the facts, and particularly of the situation of the estate. 4 Kent C. 57, Note a. This shows only the general leaning of our legislation and courts in favor of the rights of the widow. Lord Coke has told us that dower was one of the favorites of the law, but if the construction contended for by the defendant’s counsel, be adopted, it certainly would be otherwise in the state of New Jersey.

The effect of that construction in all similar cases, will be either to compel the widow to refuse the testamentary provision which is made in lieu of dower, at once, or take the hazard of the insolvency of the estate. Although there is no mode known to the law, by which she can acquire any precise knowledge of the outstanding debts, yet she must make her election in six months, and if the lands be afterwards sold for payment of debts, she is entirely stripped not only of the testamentary provision made for her, but of her common law right of dower. Nothing short of a manifestation of intent upon the part of the legislature, so clear as to leave no doubts, would justify a construction so harsh and unjust.

The defendant’s counsel say that the demandant must hayc relief in equity, if at all; but there is nothing in tin's. If the construction contended for, be tire true one, there is no help in a court of Equity. There is but one rule of construction for statutes, and that must be applied as well in a court of Equity, as in a court of Law. There is no relief against the provisions of a statute any where.

There is nothing plainer than that the general scope and intent of our legislation, lias been to carry into effect, the will of the testator. This general intent characterizes the whole course of our legislation and judicial decisions. If w’e now declare that the widow has in this case, lost not only the testamentary provision made for her by her husband, but likewise her right of dower, we violate the intent of the testator clearly expressed in the will, as well as the wise and benevolent intent of [463]*463‘the law which has in general so carefully protected the rights oí the widow.

I-cannot doubt that when the legislature said “if a husband shall hereafter devise to his wife, by a will duly executed to pass real estate, any lands or real estate for life or otherwise/’ &c. it should be a bar to any claim for dower, unless &c. it was meant and intended that such devise should take effect according to Us terms. No other construction can be put upon the section, consistent with the general scope and end of onr legislation upon this subject. If the widow had continued to possess and enjoy the lands devised, according to the intent of the testator, she would have been barred by the statute, but having been ejected by title paramount, (without fault of her own, and in ignorance, as we must suppose, of the facts,) the devise has not taken effect according to the intent of the testator; the provisions of the will for her support, have failed, and clearly it was not the intent of the testator himself, nor of the statute to debar her of downr in such a case. And it is the intent of the testator, and the intent of (he -statute, be it remembered, which we are to carry into effect by our constructions.

It has been suggested that difficulties may grow out of this construction oí the statute, which a court of law cannot conveniently settle; as where the widow shall be evicted of only h part of her testamentary provision. It is enough for the purposes of this case, that no such difficulty exists here; acid should any such arise in a future case, it will only be another of the many instances growing out of this question of election, the cliSIciilties of which have made it necessary that the same be referred to a court of equity, to meet the general justice of the caso. No inconveniences, however, should deter us from giving such a construction to the statute, as is manifestly just in itself, and calculated to carry into effect, the intent of the testator, as well as the -general object and intent of the law.

The demurrer must be over-ruled with costs.

[464]*464Nevius, J.

To tho declaration or count in dower filed in this case, the defendant has pleaded that the husband of the demand-ant, by his will duly executed to pass real estate, devised to his wife the demandant, the use of all his real estate not otherwise disposed of in said will, until his youngest son attained the age of twenty-one years, without expressing whether such devise was intended to be in lieu of dower. That the demandant survived her husband, and entered upon the lands so devised, and did not express her dissent in writing to receive the said lands in satisfaction and bar of her dower in the other lands and real estate “devised in and by said will, and file the same with the surrogate of the county wherein she resided, or in which the lands so devised were situate, within six months after the probate of said will, according to the statute in such case provided: and averring that the said lands in which the demandant claims dower, is part of the lands so devised to her.”

To this plea, the demandant has replied, admitting the will, the devise, and that the lands in question are part of the lands devised to her; yet she says that the lands in which she claims dower, together with all other lands devised to her for life or otherwise by said will, were after her husband’s death, and before the commencement of this suit, and without her consent, on the 5th of June, 1833, sold and conveyed by the executors of Robert Thompson, dec., her husband, by virtue of certain orders and decrees of the Orphans’ Court of the county of Warren, for the payment of the testator’s debts, pursuant to the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.J.L. 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-egbert-nj-1840.