Powell v. Calvert
Powell v. Calvert
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
These two actions involving similar questions will be heard together. The appellee, who is the widow of William H. Calvert, instituted the two actions against the appellants claiming dower in certain real estate that had been purchased by them under a decretal sale made in favor of the creditors of her husband, who' had mortgaged to them the property to secure certain debts. It appears that the husband of the appellee and his brother, R. Calvert, owned jointly certain houses and lots in the town of Princeton, and in 1876 made a division of the same by which their joint interest was severed and conveyances made from one to the other. It at least appears that R. Calvert conveyed to William H. Calvert the lots in controversy, thereby vesting him with the absolute title ; that William then mortgaged the property to creditors and the
It is argued by counsel for the appellants that there is no sufficient evidence of the existence of the marriage relation between Calvert and his wife as authorized the judgment in her favor. The fact of the marriage between the two is placed in issue by the pleadings and the burden was on the appellee to establish her claim, and in order to do this it was essential for her to prove that she was the wife of W. H. Calvert. This we think she has satisfactorily done. The husband was living in Princeton at the time of the marriage, or if not he married the appellee in Plardin county, Illinois, and removed to Princeton, where he lived with the appellee as his wife for the period of fifteen or sixteen years prior to the sale of his property. He had by her one child, and the marriage relation was recognized by the parties and by all with whom they had any intercourse during this entire period. The husband and wife stood high in social life, and no question was ever made or suggested by any one of the community in which they lived affecting in any manner the validity of their marriage. The appellee was about eighteen years of age when the marriage took place, and files with this record the license from the clerk of the court authorizing the marriage ceremony and the certificate of the minister who performed it. The appellee swears that the marriage took place and produced the written evidences of the authority on the part of the minister to make them man and wife. The wife, it is said, is incompetent as a witness. This can not be. She is not testifying against or for her husband, but against one in possession of property to which she claims she is entitled; but,
It is argued for error also that the court failed to make the widow account for the $1,000, the value of the homestead that, had been paid to the husband, or that had been directed to be paid by the judgment selling the property. ' The statute provides that the homestead shall continue after the husband’s death for the benefit of his widow and children, but shall be estimated in allowing dower. Gen. Stat. 1883, ch. 38, art. 13, § 13. That is, where the husband dies the owner of the homestead and it passes to his widow, she can not claim both homestead and dower, or if she does it (the value of the homestead) shall be estimated in allotting dower. Here no homestead right passed to the widow and children. The husband was not living in the state at the time of his death, and the fact that he was allowed the value of the homestead in these lots during his life can not affect the right of the widow to dower. The purchasers of the lots paid the value of the homestead out of the purchase-money, and held the property subject to the wife’s potential right.
The wife may have receipted for the money in conjunction with her husband; still it was his money, and what disposition he made
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.