Yarbrough v. Yarbrough

75 So. 932, 200 Ala. 184, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 360
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 10, 1917
Docket5 Div. 651.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 75 So. 932 (Yarbrough v. Yarbrough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yarbrough v. Yarbrough, 75 So. 932, 200 Ala. 184, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 360 (Ala. 1917).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.

The bill in this cause seeks to have the chancery court assign dower in lands alienated by the husband without relinquishment by the wife. The right of dower and the procedure for assignment thereof is dealt with in chapter 77, p. 554 et seq. of the Code of 1907.

When on March 3, 1912, A. B. Yarbrough died, leaving a wife (the appellee), she was entitled to have assigned to her dower in “a certain portion of the following real estate of her husband, to which she has [had] not relinquished her right during the marriage : (1) Of all lands of which the husband was seized in fee during the marriage. (2) Of all lands of which another was seized in fee to his use. (3) Of all lands to which, at the time of his death, he had a perfect equity, having paid all the purchase money therefor.” Code, § 3812. This right of dower, however, is dependent on the fact that the widow has no separate estate, exclusive of the rents, income, and profits, “equal to, or greater in value than her dower interest and distributive share in her husband’s estate.” If she has a separate estate of such relative value, she is not entitled to “dower in, or distribution of her husband’s estate.” Code, § 3814. Divorce likewise bars dower. Code, § 3816.

[1, 2] It is well established that the widow may retain possession, free from the payment of rents, of the dwelling house where her husband most usually resided next before his death, together with the offices and buildings appurtenant thereto, and the plantation connected therewith,. until her dower is assigned. Thus there is placed on him who is the owner of the fee the burden to have the dower assigned. Shelton v. Carrol, 16 Ala. 148; Callahan v. Nelson, 128 Ala. 671, 29 South. 555. Failure to have dower assigned, and permitting the widow to retain the possession of the homestead, without more, does not deprive the owner of the fee in the land.

[3] The evidence is practically without conflict: One F. Yarbrough died about 1900, leaving a widow, Mary E. Yarbrough, and four children, A. B. Yarbrough (husband of appellee), C. S. Yarbrough, respondent, and W. F. Yarbrough and J. T. Yarbrough. The estate of said F. Yarbrough was solvent, and embraced other lands than the homestead. Said widow of F. Yarbrough retained possession of the dwelling house and homestead tract now in question up to the time of her death, which occurred August 13, 1914. No dower or homestead was ever assigned or set apart to her by order of any court; nor was there ever had an administration of the estate of said decedent. Thus the fee to the real estate of F. Yarbrough, deceased, vested in his heirs at law, A. B., C. S., W. F., and J. T. Yarbrough, subject to the widow’s statutory right to an estate not greater than that for life, in a portion of her deceased husband’s lands.

On September 14, 1909, A. B. Yarbrough conveyed to his brother, C. S. Yarbrough, appellant here, his undivided one-fourth interest in the lands in question. In this conveyance the wife of A. B. Yarbrough did not join, and there was no subsequent relinquishment by the wife of her right of dower in said lands. The fact that said A. B. Yarbrough died before his mother (the widow of F. Yarbrough, deceased) did not affect the absolute right of his widow to dower in said lands, though, as we shall see, it did affect the time when the' enjoyment thereof might be entered upon under section 3836 of the Code. It was for the determination and allowance of this right of dower that the present suit was filed — which was on February 17, 1915, or within three years from the *186 death of the husband and within the time prescribed for the bringing of such suits. Code, § 3837; Vaughn v. Vaughn, 180 Ala. 212, 60 South. 872; Robertson v. Robertson, 191 Ala. 297, 68 South. 52.

[4] Had then the chancery court jurisdiction to determine the controverted question? That the statutory jurisdiction conferred on courts of probate, in the allotment of dower, does not take away the original jurisdiction prevailing in courts of chancery has been declared by the courts. Owen v. Slatter, 26 Ala. 547, 62 Am. Dec. 745; Brooks v. Woods, 40 Ala. 538; Irvine v. Armistead, 46 Ala. 363 ; Johnson v. Crutcher, 48 Ala. 368; Wood v. Morgan, 56 Ala. 397; Francis v. Garrard, 18 Ala. 794; Beavers v. Smith, 11 Ala. 20; Hale v. James, 6 Johns. Ch. (N. Y.) 258, 10 Am. Dec. 328; Story Eq. Jur. § 624; Coke, Litt. 32, a; Thomas, Coke, 671.

[5] That the power conferred on the probate court for the assignment of dower was intended to be concurrent with that of the chancery court and limited to cases where such estate might be justly assigned by metes and bounds is clearly implied by the limitation found in the statute. This limiting provision is to the effect that when land out of which dower has been demanded has been aliened by the husband, and, by reason of improvements made by the alienee, or any other cause, an assignment of dower by metes and bounds would be unjust, the court of probate must decline jurisdiction, and application must be made to the court of chancery. It has been incorporated in each of the Codes since that of 1852. In Sanders v. McMillian, 98 Ala. 144, 146, 11 South. 750, 18 L. R. A. 425, 39 Am. St. Rep. 19, and Wood v. Morgan, supra, it was held that the provisions now found in sections 3835 and 3836 of the Code were declaratory of the common law. Section 3836 is as follows:

“In such case the widow is dowable of the value of the land at the time of the voluntary or involuntary alienation, the interest on one* third part thereof from the death of the husband, to be paid to her annually, during her life, and secured, if necessary, by a lien on the land, unless the parties agree to a compensation in gross., which the court must give effect to.”

■ There is no question of the jurisdiction'of the chancery court to assign dower under the averred facts. The quantum, in such cases, has long been declared by the courts of the land (Hale v. James, supra; Coke, Litt. 32, a), and is the subject of statutory declaration (Code, § 3836; Sanders v. Mc-Millian, supra, 98 Ala. 149, 11 South. 750, 18 L. R. A. 425, 39 Am. St. Rep. 19). Dower having attached upon marriage, to every estate of inheritance of which complainant’s husband was seized during coverture (Sanders v. Wallace, 114 Ala. 259, 263, 21 South. 947), and not having been relinquished by his widow, the chancellor correctly referred to the register, for ascertainment, the reasonable value of the undivided interest in the lands of which dower is assignable to appellee. The cases of Shelton v. Carrol, supra, and Callahan v. Nelson, supra, to the effect that where the widow is in possession of the homestead which was occupied by the husband at the date of his death, she may retain the same until dower is assigned, and that it is not her duty to become the actor in securing the assignment of dower, but that the duty rests upon him who claims the fee to the premises to move for the assignment of dower, are no authority for the position that one who owns an interest in the fee has the right to alienate the same without ■the relinquishment of dower by his wife, and may thus defeat the inchoate right of dower therein of the wife.

[6] There would be a hardship in the allowance to appellee of dower from the date of the

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Bluebook (online)
75 So. 932, 200 Ala. 184, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yarbrough-v-yarbrough-ala-1917.