Sellman v. Bowen
Sellman v. Bowen
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The complainant having recovered her dower at law, seeks by this bill the rents and profits from the death of her husband.
T.he seizin of the husband is denied; and the defendant puts the complainant to the proof, not only of the seizin, but the marriage.
The complainant anterior to the filing of this bill to recover rents' and profits, had instituted suit in Baltimore county court, for her dower. In this suit the seizin of the husband was directly in issue, and the marriage by not being denied, was admitted.- , The verdict and judgment in that cause, being between the same parties, where the same issue was in controversy must at all events, as to the seizin,' be considered in this controversy as conclusive ; and as the deman-dant in' the suit at law, could not have recovered without proof of marriage, or its admission, the effect of the record perhaps, ought to be considered as equally conclusive of the marriage as the seizin; the marriage not having been denied, but the cause being put to the. jury on the. issue of seizin. But without proceeding to any determination upon this branch of the subject, the proof of marriage in the record before us is abundant; if general reputation, cohabitation,, and acknowledgment, can in such a case be considered as evidence, and of this we have no doubt. Such evidence is sufficient in all cases except in actions for criminal conversation, and in
In ordinary applications to equity for a decree for dower, and rents and profits, wben the seizin of the husband is denied, it is the course of this court to send the parties to law, to litigate the legal question, while in the meantime they retain the bill.
Between these parties however, before the filing of this bill, the legal right had been tried and settled, and every question had been adjudicated by a court of common law, which in any shape the cause could assume, would fall within their peculiar cognizance.
The complainant therefore meets with but three difficulties in addition to those above adverted to, in the recovery of the rents and profits which have been withheld from her.
1. It is supposed that having sued for her dower at law, she might there have recovered her damages, and having failed to recover them at law, she has lost them every where. If there exist a right to recover damages at law, and the plaintiff at law failed to recover them, looking to the state of the record, it is probable that the matter must be considered as res adjudícala, and that it cannot form the subject of a new litigation, but the judgment already passed has foreclosed the plaintiff. It must be conceded, that in the case of Steiger and Hillen, 5 Gill and John. 133, countenance is given to the doctrine that at law, the widow may recover from an alienee of the husband her damages. The suggestion was not necessary to the determination of that case, and having been fully discussed in this case, and the doctrine more deliberately examined, we have brought our minds to the conclusion, that it is only in a court of equity that the rule. will apply, that a widow is entitled to her damages from the alienee of her husband, and that consequently, a court of equity is the only and peculiar forum for their recovery in such a case. The following authorities would appear conclusively to establish the doctrine. Doctor and Student, 140. 141. Roper on Prop. 435, 443. 2 John. Rep. 119. Jenkin’s Cent. 1 Ch. 85. Park, on Dower, 391.
3. It is supposed that the complainant is barred by limitations. Had she pursued her claim, both for dower, and for rents and profits in a court of equity,- she would not have been barred, and we understand this to have been conceded in the argument. But if it were not conceded, it is established by authority. Mesne profits as damages, are given at law under the statute of Merton, without restriction as to
Shah then the circumstance of her having sued at law for her dower, and in equity afterwards for her rents and profits make any difference in this respect? We think not. The character of the claim, and all the legal principles which might go to support or defeat it remain unchanged, and ought to be applied to it, when presented to the court in this isolated shape, as would attach to it, when combined with a claim for dower.
The decree of the Chancellor is reversed with costs, and this court, when an account shall be prepared by an auditor to be appointed by this court, will decree rents and profits from the time of the demand proven in the cause; which rents and profits are to be estimated according to the improved value of the premises, from the time the improvements were made.
DECREE REVERSED WITH COSTS IN ROTH COURTS,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Elizabeth Sellman v. Richard Bowen
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- 2 cases
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- Published