Carter v. Walker
Carter v. Walker
Opinion of the Court
The defendant sets up the deed of Carter and wife, and the proceedings and sale of the property under the decree of the court, as a bar to the claim of dower. To this it is replied, that that conveyance and those proceedings created no privity between Gassaway and the defendant.
That Gassaway, by his deed from Carter and wife, had a title to the land freed from the claim of dower, and subject only to the incumbrance of the mortgage to Lawler, can not be doubted. ■Gassaway, as part of the consideration of the purchase, as expressed both in the deed from Carter and wife to Gassaway and in the mortgage from Gassaway to Carter, had agreed to pay off the Lawler mortgage.
It is not necessary that we shall determine precisely what was the effect of the sale of the property by Davis B. Lawler, under the authority contained in the mortgage. That sale is alleged in the bill setting up the mortgage, to have been merely to obtain possession of the property without interfering with the right of redemption, and the court so find the fact to be.
*That sale invested Thomas B. Walker, by virtue of the transfers made under it, at least with all the rights of Matthew Lawler, the original mortgagee. Now, what was the character and effect of the judicial proceeding under which the property was sold? Walker held the legal title, and Gassaway held the
It is said, however, that the complainant was not a party to the judicial proceedings nor to the mortgage, and is therefore not barred by the decree.
It is not by the force of the judicial proceedings that she can be deprived of her right of dower, but by her release to *Gassaway. She would not have been a proper party to the proceeding. Grantors are never necessary parties to a suit seeking to-charge the lands of their grantees, unless it appear that they have, or may have, some remaining interest.
It is said, however, that the title of Gassaway still remains in his heirs. The bill asserting the mortgage under which the property was sold, was filed during the lifetime of Gassaway. He was made a party defendant. During the pendency of the suit he died ; his heirs were not made parties, and the answer was filed by his administrator. It was clearly error in the court to j>roceed to decree without making the heirs of Gassaway parties after his
I speak merely for myself, and not for the majority of the court, when I say, that I do not see why, when dower has boon absolutely released, it can ever be reasserted, merely because the tenant in possession does not connect himself in privity with the person to whom the release was given. It would appear to me reasonable, that where a person by conveyance has a complete title vested in him, he has a right to *hold the property, or to abandon it at his pleasure; and that, whilst he has the title thus vested in him, he is the only person that can assert any valid claim to it. And this principle, in my opinion, would apply as well to the right of dower as any other interest in land. For, although it be an inchoate and contingent interest, yet it can be as completely released as any other. And whether we call the act of divesting, the release of an interest, or the extinguishment of a right, can have no-effect upon this question. The doctrine requiring privity between the releasee and the tenant in possession to bar dower, might be-attended with singular results in its application. Under this rule, if the person holding the title were to get out of possession, and the land come to the possession of another, all the dower interest that had existed would revive against it. In this way, a dozen dower interests might at once light upon the land, all to be divested the moment the person holding the title should assert his-right.
The bill will therefore be dismissed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.