Bush v. Peirsol
Bush v. Peirsol
Opinion of the Court
This is an action for the assignment of dower in certain real estate in Monroe county, Missouri.
The plaintiff is the widow of William P. Bush, who died in 1900. Plaintiff and William P. Bush were married October 15,1867. In 1873, William P. Bush owned large tracts of land in Monroe, Ralls and Marion counties of this State, and was largely indebted to various persons. On the twenty-ninth of October, 1873, William P. Bush and his wife, the plaintiff herein, executed a deed of trust to “Samuel Logan as trustee to secure certain of his creditors to the amount of $41,205, including all his lands and the property in which plaintiff now seeks to have dower assigned. When this deed of trust was filed certain unsecured creditors filed a petition in bankruptcy in the United States District Court for the eastern district of Missouri. He was adjudged a bankrupt and William Dudley was duly appointed as-signee and all the lands, including that in controversy in this suit, were duly assigned to him by Enos Claik, register in bankruptcy. The homestead of Mr. and Mrs Bush was duly set off to them. Afterwards on the sixth of February, 1882, the United States District Court, upon petition of said assignee and with the con
After said sale William P. Bush and wife asserted that said sale for some reason had not conveyed his title and that plaintiff still had her inchoate dower therein and said claim seriously impeding the sale of the lots in said addition, the said Jacob and John C. Pier sol negotiated through one James M. Johnson, the agent of William P. Bush and his wife, for the purchase of all their right, title and interest in and to all the lands bought bv said Peirsol at said assignee’s sale, and it was agreed that for the sum of $675 said William P. Bush and his wife would quitclaim all their interest in said lands to said Peirsols, and thereupon, at the request of said John C. Peirsol, said William P. Bush and his wife, the plaintiff "herein, did by their quitclaim deed of date November 14, 1887, convey said lands to one M. E. L. Peake, the sister-in-law of John C. Peirsol,
At the time of the purchase it was known to Johnson, the agent of Wm. P. Bush and wife, that John C. Peirsol was the purchaser and Mrs. Bush made no denial of Johnson’s testimony that she received the money for said property. Mrs. Bush stands upon the proposition that her dower rig'ht was not the subject of grant; that all that she could do was to release; that at the time she and her husband made the quitclaim to Peirsol, her husband had no estate and the deed passed no estate to Mrs. Peake, and Mrs. Peake had no estate in the land prior to the execution of the deed to her and was not in possession, and therefore plaintiff could not release her dower to her. The evidence is absolutely convincing that Mrs. Peake whs a mere conduit through whom the release of plaintiff’s dower was made to John C. Piersol. This is the testimony of Peirsol, and it is fully corroborated by the evidence of Johnson and the contemporary execution of the deed from Mrs. Peake to John C. Peirsol, so that without discussing other phases of this case, the question arises, did or did not Mrs. Bush’s joining in her husband’s deed of November 14, 1887, and relinquishing her dower in the lands in suit have the effect of barring her dower as against said John C. Peirsol and his co-defendants claiming under him?
The circuit court held that the foregoing facts operated as a relinquishment of plaintiff’s dower in audio the lands in controversy to John C. Peirsol, the owner
By sections 901 and 902, Eevised Statutes 1899, or sections 669 and 670, Eevised Statutes 1879, the laws in force at the time of the execution-and delivery of the deed of Mr. Bush and wife to Mrs. Peake, it was provided: “A husband and wife may convey the real estate of the wife, ‘and the wife may relinquish her dower in the real estate of her husband, by their joint deed, acknowledged and certified as herein provided;” and, ‘‘ A married woman may convey her real estate, or relinquish her dower in the real estate of her husband, by a power of attorney authorizing its conveyance, executed and acknowledged by her jointly with her husband, as deeds conveying such real estate by them are required to be executed and acknowledged. ’’
Whatever the common law was as to the wife’s incapacity to grant her inchoate dower, as distinguished from her right to release it to the owner of the fee, this statute clearly gives her the power by a joint deed with her husband to relinquish it. There can be no doubt that in this case she did join in a deed with her husband and did relinquish her dower to the real estate in controversy to the grantee Mrs. Peake.
Her husband was openly asserting title to the property and she, a dower in it, and they assumed the right to convey it and by their joint deed, executed in every particular as the statute required, did convey it to Mrs. Peake and the plaintiff relinquished her dower therein.
The grantee under that deed then immediately conveyed it to John C. Peirsol, the person in possession and claiming the fee simple interest by' the deed of the as-signee in bankruptcy. The quitclaim then contained operative words of conveyance, and whether it carried a good title to the land or not it is a complete estoppel by deed as to plaintiff’s dower. It does not lie in the mouth of her husband or herself to say that nothing
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BUSH v. PEIRSOL
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- Published