Rogers v. Potter
Rogers v. Potter
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plea which has provoked a demurrer in this case is so obviously bad, that it will be passed without further notice, the only question in the case worthy of consideration being, whether the declaration discloses any legal ground of action.
The proposition upon which the sustainability of this suit depends is, that in case a husband die seized of dowable lands in this state, his widow can maintain an action on the ease against any person entering upon and doing damage to such lands, between the death of the husband and the assignment of her dower.
Regarding this problem in the light of general principles, and as a matter to be settled upon considerations of convenience and justice, we are led, I think, irresistibly to the conclusion that the right of action in this form should be maintained. It is not denied that an act has been done which injuriously affects the interests of the dowress. The only question which has been, or which can be raised, is the narrow and altogether technical one, whether, in seeking compensation for such loss, she is confined to her remedy by
The view which denies to the widow the right of redress in the mode adopted in this case will, if sanctioned, leave the law in a state of evident imperfection; for there will be some instances, not of infrequent occurrence, in which a dowress, for any invasion of her rights, will be remediless. For example: suppose, after the death of her husband, a stranger enter upon the land and waste it, and the heir-at-law be insolvent; as her writ for dower must proceed against the latter, her claim for damages, if a mere adjunct to such suit, would be practically, of no value. So again: by force of the statute of this state, either the heir-at-law or th°e dowress can apply to the Orphans Court to have dower assigned; and, in this method, no compensation can be awarded to the widow, either for the detention of her dower or for waste committed upon the estate. It is, therefore, obvious, that if the recovery of damages is incident only to the suit at law for dower, such recovery can be in all cases frustrated by the initiation of proceedings in the Orphans Court by the owner of the land. The language of this statute is, that “ it shall be lawful for any widow entitled to dower in any lands or real estate of which her husband died seized, or for any heir or heirs, or guardian of any minor child or children, entitled to any estate in the said lands or real estate, or for any purchaser thereof, to apply by petition to the Orphans Court, &c.; whereupon the said court shall appoint three discreet and disinterested freeholders in the said county, commissioners to admeasure and set off,” &c. From this quotation, it manifestly appears that the Orphans Court, in proceedings to assign dower, has a concurrent jurisdiction with the other tribunals, and, therefore, when that jurisdiction has attached, it is difficult to perceive how, upon ordinary principles, it is to be defeated. The admitted rule of law is, that in case of co-ordinate judicatures, it is priority of cognizance alone which gives a paramount right to retain and decide the case. By the petition of the heir or his
Nor are the evils above suggested the only ones which are inherent in the doctrine that the only remedy for damages done to the interests of the dowress belongs, as an inseparable part, to the action of unde nihil habet. Many others could be adduced; the two following, however, will suffice to show incontestably how impotent the law would be, on the hypothesis of the defence, to protect the just claims of the widow, and which claims, the books tell us, are so highly favored. Thus, if the heir commit waste, and then convey away the premises; or in case of a term for years, creáted before coverture, and unexpired at the death of the husband, the lessee, after such death, destroy the property; in’ each of such events the widow would be remediless, for the action unde nihil habet must be brought against the tenant of the freehold, and consequently would not lie against the lessee
Such being the incontestable right of the dowress, upon what principle is it that it can be claimed that she cannot enforce such right, except in connection with her suit for dower? In any attempt to answer this inquiry, it should be noted that there is no analogy between the right to damages for the detention of dower, and those recoverable for waste committed, the claim to the former being the creature of statute; the claim to the latter being an incident of the estate of the dowress. According to the rules of the common law, however long a widow was kept out of the enjoyment of her dower, the loss thus occasioned, she was obliged to bear; and this was upon the feudal principle, that as the
It is true that the situation of the widow, with regard to the land before dower assigned, is altogether anomalous. It is clear that she cannot, at this stage of her rights, enter upon the estate nor maintain ejectment; nor can her interest be seized on execution; nor can she transfer it at law, except by release to the terre tenant, by way of extinguishment. In short, in view of these incapacities, it is sometimes said that this interest of the widow is a mere chose in action. But then, it is to be remembered, that after the assignment of her dower, her seizin relates back to the death of her husband, and that thenceforth the antecedent seizin of the heir, which took effect on the death of the husband, is superseded and considered as never having had an existence. Nor does the widow take the estate from the heir or his alienee, but she is in by appointment of law. Possessed of a perfect title, then, to her share of the lands, and with a seizin which, when obtained, extends back, in contemplation of law, to the moment of the inception of such title, it is certainly not to be wondered at that the law has always declared that for any injurious invasion of such interest, the dowress was entitled to enforce, by a proceeding in court, compensation from the wrong-doer.
How, then, under such conditions, can it be maintained that this remedy for a violation of a right of this character is but an appendage to the action for dower ? Such a doctrine certainly has no foundation in legal analogies. Nor can it be said to be established by any course of precedents; for after a careful examination, I have not found a single instance in which damages for waste have been incorporated
The subject above discussed appears to have received but little judicial attention. But I find no case in antagonism, in any degree, with the view above expressed, while in Sellman v. Bowen, 8 Gill. & Johns. 50, the notion of the inseparability of the damages for the detention of dower from the action for the dower was the point of the case, and was expressly disallowed, the widow being permitted to recover in equity her damages, after an assignment of her dower by suit at law.
Justices Haines and Bedle concurred.
Cited in Jacobus v. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., 12 C. E. Gr. 608.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The widow’s right of dower, until it is legally assigned, is a right of action only. Upon the death of the husband, the freehold is cast immediately on the heir, and although she has a right to remain in, hold and enjoy the mansion-house and messuage or plantation thereto belonging, until her dower is assigned to her in all the real estate of which her husband was seized during the coverture, to which she has not relinquished her right, without paying any rent, until such assignment is made, she has no estate in any other part of the real estate, and no right of entry. Nix. Dig. 227 :
Eor the purpose of protecting her right against the acts of her husband, her title, when the assignment is made, is held to relate back to the time of the marriage, and her seizin becomes that of the husband; but as even the heir cannot maintain trespass until he has entered, neither can the widow, and as she has no estate in the land, the law gives her no right of action for any injury done to it before her right accrues. At the common law, she had no remedy to recover damages for the detention of her dower. By the ancient statute, called the statute of Merton, enacted in England, in the reign of Henry III., it was provided, that in the action of dower, unde nihil habet, she might recover damages for the value of her dower, from the time of the death of her husband, if he died seized; and this statute has been re-enacted and enlarged in this state, so that it is held now that she may also recover such damages, from the death of the husband, if he died seized, without any previous demand, and from the time of such demand, if he did not die seized. Hopper v. Hopper, 2 Zab. 715.
Whether, besides the annual value of the dower, she may, in the action, also recover damages for waste done to the land after her husband’s death, seems to have been questioned and never formally decided. Plowd. Quer. 46. Upon principle, however, I think she undoubtedly has this right. It was held in the case of Walker v. Nevil, 1 Leon.
It has been suggested that the provisions of our act, authorizing dower to be set off by commissioners appointed by the Orphans Court, make it necessary to protect the widow by allowing such an action as the present. In my opinion, if this was so, the remedy should be afforded by appropriate legislation, and not by the judicial sanction of an unprecedented action. I am not able, however, to perceive that she needs any other remedy than that open to her by her action of dower, as prescribed by our statute. In the case before us, it appears that she, herself, applied to the Orphans Court; but whether the waste complained of was committed before or after this application, does not appear. If before, the difficulty of obtaining redress was occasioned by her own mistake in not resorting to her action at law. If the waste was committed between the time of her application and the confirmation, by the Orphans Court, of the report of the commissioners, she should have objected to the confirmation, for the plain reason that an assignment of wasted laud did not do her justice. It is the duty of the heir, or his assignee, to set off the dower; and although either party may apply to the Orphans Court to appoint commissioners to do it, and their assignment, when confirmed, becomes binding, these proceedings are not in the nature of an action any more than similar proceedings to partition land, and are not •binding until confirmed; and if the confirmation be appealed from, until it is sanctioned by the Prerogative Court. In a
In my opinion, the declaration in this case discloses no legal ground of action, and therefore our judgment upon this demurrer must be for the defendant.
Rev., p. 320.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- REBECCA F. ROGERS v. REUBEN POTTER
- Status
- Published