Tuttle v. Willson
Tuttle v. Willson
Opinion of the Court
The issue made up, in this case, raises the question whether the act of 1810, in force when the husband of the complainant died, closes the door against relief, or whether the complainant is otherwise barred by lapse of time? In some of the states it has been decided, that their statutes of limitations are not to be applied to a suit for dower. 4 N. H. 107; 6 Johns. Ch. 194. But such adjudications appear to have grown out of the peculiar phraseology of their laws. In Jones v. Powell, 6 Johns. Ch. 194, the chancellor seems to place it entirely upon that ground, the statute of New York providing, that the widow may, at any time, during her life, demand her dower. To have limited the complainant to any number of years, therefore, for the exercise of that right, would have repealed both the letter and the spirit of the act. The statute of Ohio, however, contains no words of similar import. It enacts, “ That the widow shall be endowed of one full, equal third part of all lands, tenements, and real estate, of which her husband was seized, as an estate of inheritance, at any time during the coverture,” etc., but is silent as to the time within which the right shall be asserted. 1 Chase’s Laws, 472.
The act of 1810 provides, “ That no person or persons shall hereafter sue, have, or maintain any writ of ejectment, or other action for the recovery of the possession, title, or claim, of, to, or for any land, tenements, or other hereditaments, but within twenty-one years, next after the right of such action or suits shall have accrued,” etc. It will be seen, that it is not only an action 26] of ejectment which is barred *by this statute, but every other action for the recovery of the possession, title, or claim to any land.
But it is said by counsel for the complainant, that the case of the Bank of the United States v. Dunseth sustains them in the position, that time does not bar dower. We do not perceive the application of that ease to the one before us. In that, it was *de- [27 cided, that a dowress was not entitled to damages; nothing was raised, nor anything determined, growing out of the statute of limitations, or the lapse of time. Ante, 18.
In the case at bar, therefore, we have been led irresistibly to the conclusion, in both the aspects in which the defense has been considered, that the complainant’s bill should be dismissed with costs.
Bill dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Sarah Tuttle v. Newell Willson
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published