Hughes v. Watson
Hughes v. Watson
Opinion of the Court
A short history of this ease may not be uninteresting, and although it may not, and can not be necessary to a correct decision, still it will show the difficulties which this woman has had to encounter in order to get her dower.
The original bill was filed in the court of common pleas of Hamilton county, on March 24, 1827. The bill being answered, and evidence taken, the case came on for hearing at the August term of that court, 1829. On this hearing the court held that the deed of Bart and wife to D. E. Wade could not operate to bar her right of dower, as the acknowledgment was taken before the mayor of Cincinnati, who, it was claimed, under the law then in force, was not authorized to take the acknowledgment of deeds. And a decree was rendered in favor of the complainants, assigning dower, as of the value of the property at the time of alienation by the husband, in conformity with what was then supposed to be the law, and in accordance with the decisions of the Supreme Court in similar eases, previously made in the county of Hamilton. At the December term of this court, 1833, the case of Dunseth against the Bank of the United States was decided, in which it was held, that a widow should be.endowed according to the value of the 130] ground at the time of the assignment, *excluding increase of
The statement of the case shows that the complainants are entitled to the relief sought, unless barred by the deed of March 24,. 1807. The counsel for complainants insist, that the relinquishment of dower in this deed is no bar, because, at the time the deed was executed, the complainant, Sarah, was *an infant. On [131 the other hand, it is contended that if the deed was duly oxecuted,. it is a bar by the express terms of the statute, and that the age of the party executing is a matter of no moment. This presents the-first question for consideration. The position of the defendants’’
The law in force relative to dower, at the time this deed was executed, was the act of February 12, 1805. This act repealed all previous laws on the subject of dower, and it is, therefore, unnecessary to inquire what those previous laws were. In the first section it provides : “ That the widow of any person dying intestate, or otherwise, shall be endowed of one full and equal third part of all the lands, tenements, or other real estate of which her husband was seized as an estate of inheritance, at any time during the coverture, to which she shall not have relinquished her right of dower by deed daly executed.” It will be seen that in this provision nothing is said as to the age of the wife, or as to the manner of execution of a deed, or of its acknowledgment, so that it may be “duly executed and acknowledged.” From this omission the inference is drawn that the age is immaterial. It might as well be inferred that under this law a deed executed by the wife alone, and without witnesses, would be good and valid. And, by adopting this conclusion,-we should be led to this absurdity, that a feme covert, who, as a general principle of law, can make no contract, may, without the consent of her husband, convey an interest in land by deed at an age when a feme sole would be incapable of conveying by deed, or in any other manner. Such could not have been the intention of the law. True, the counsel insist that a feme covert has no interest in the lands of her husband during the ■coverture. But it is not so. She has an interest, of which the husband, by any act of his, can not deprive her. And it is an inderest which will be available to her, provided she survive her ’husband. During coverture she is under his protection, and he is bound to support her, and if he leave her a widow she is entitled to a support from his estate, so far as the use and occupation 182] of *one-third part of the lands of which he was possessed ■at anytime during the coverture will furnish such support.
Since the organization of a government northwest of the river ■Ohio, by the ordinauce of 1787, there has been no time that there has not been, within the present limits of Ohio, a law prescribing the manner of executing and acknowledging deeds. This law has been frequently, perhaps too frequently, changed. But still there has been some law in existence upon the subject. In order to ascertain whether a deed has been “duly executed and acknowl
The law in force at the time the deed now under consideration was executed, was the law of February 14, 1805, “ providing for the execution and acknowledgment of deeds.” 1 Chase’s L. 484. This law must have been under consideration by the^ legislature at the same time with the law relating to dower; one being passed on the 12th, the other on the 14th of February, and both taking effect on the 1st day of June then next. So far as they relate to the same subject matter, they must be taken together in construing. The one provides that a feme covert may relinquish her right of dower by deed “ duly executed and acknowledged.” The other prescribes the manner in which a deed, to be “ duly executed and acknowledged ” by a feme covert, shall be executed and acknowledged, and also the age at which the feme must have arrived to execute such deed. The law is as follows: “ Where any husband and wife shall incline to dispose of, or convey, the estate of the wife, or her right in or to any lands, tenements, *or [133 hereditaments whatsoever, it shall and maybe lawful for said husband and wife, she being not less than eighteen years of age, to make, seal, deliver, and execute, any grant, bargain and sale, lease, release, feoffment, deed, conveyance, or assurance, in the law whatsoever, for the lands, tenements, and hereditaments intended to be by them passed and conveyed, and, after such execution, to appear before a judge of the Supreme Court, or court of common ipleas, or a justice of the peace, and acknowledge the same, which 'judge or justice of the peace is hereby authorized and required to take such acknowledgment, in doing whereof he shall examine the wife separate and apai’t from her husband, and shall read, or otherwise make known, the full contents of such deed or conveyance, to the said wife, and if, upon such separate examination, she shall declare that she did voluntarily, and of her own free will and ac
The deed now under consideration appears to have been executed and acknowledged in conformity with the provisions of this law, so far as the manner of execution is concerned. But it was executed by complainant, Sarah, when she had no capacity to do it. She had no capacity except under the statute, because she was a feme covert, and she had no capacity-under the statute because she was not eighteen years of age. As to her, then, the deed is void, or at least voidable, and can not operate to bar her right of dower. .This opinion is sustained by the case of Bool and wife v. Mix, 17 Wend. 119, in which' it was held by the Supreme Court of New York, that “where a party is an infant as well as feme covert, the disability arising from infancy remains, although she execute and acknowledge a deed in the form prescribed by the statute.”
Another ground of defense is, that the deed, of an infant not being void, but voidable, the complainant, Sarah, should have 134] *done some act disaffirming the deed prior to the commencement of this suit.
This subject was fally considered by this court in the case of Drake v. Ramsay, 5 Ohio, 252; and it was finally decided that a deed made by an infant might be disaffirmed, whilst an'action of ejectment was not bound by the statute of limitations, and that no previous act of disaffirmance was necessary prior to the commencement of the suit. In the case before cited, 17 Wend. 119, the Supreme Court of New York seem to have considered some such previous act necessary. It is a question about which there is much contrariety of opinion, and with respect to which there have been contradictory decisions. As, however, it has been once decided by this court, we prefer to adhere to that decision. In the case before us, there is no bar under the stutute of limitations, and the filing the bill in chancery for dower is as clearly an act of disaffirmance of the deed made by the complainant, Sarah, while an infant, as would be the institution of an action of ejectment.
Another objection taken by the defendants’ counsel is, that here is a misjoinder of parties. Although at the time of alienation the
It is claimed that the complainant Sarah is entitled not only to he endowed in the premises, but that she is entitled to damages equivalent to one-third of the rents and profits of the premises since dower demanded, deducting therefrom one-third of *the taxes paid. It has been settled in the case of the [135 Bank of "United States v. Dunseth,
A decree may be taken for the complainants, allowing dower according to the value of the premises at the time of assignment excluding all increase of value from improvements made upon the premises by the alienees since alienation, but including all increase from other extrinsic and general causes.
Decree for the plaintiffs.
Ante, 18,
Reference
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- John Hughes and Sarah Hughes, his wife v. Luman Watson and others
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