Williams v. Dawson
Williams v. Dawson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
A petition was filed in the County Court oí Smith, by Antha Dawson, for dower in the land of her deceased husband, William Dawson, against his administrator and heirs, who made no resistance. An affidavit was filed by W. T. Williams, setting forth that he had purchased the land of the deceased, paid the consideration, and was put into possession, which he held at the time of the death, and still holds under his purchase. His contract, he says, was not reduced to writing, but rests in parol. Proof of the parol sale, and the payment of a part or all the consideration, and the possession for more than a year before, and at the death of Dawson, is proved by witnesses. The County Court dismissed the petition, but on appeal, it was granted by the Circuit Court, from which there is an appeal to this Court by Williams alone.
The only question is, does a parol sale, with the delivery of possession by the deceased, exclude the widow’s right to dower. We think clearly not. The sale is utterly void. It passes no title to the vendee, but it remains in the vendor as before. The latter was then the owner of the land at the time of his death, and his widow was entitled to dower.—Act of 1784, ch. 22, § 8, Car. & Nich., 262. The pretended vendee was a creditor toi the extent of the
Dawson was then “ seized” of the land, in the language of the statute; that is, he was the owner of it at the time of his death, and the petitioner is entitled to her dower.
There is no doubt of the jurisdiction of the County Court, and the propriety of ordering a writ of possession in favor of the widow when her dower is assigned.
The decree of the Circuit Court will be affirmed, and the case remanded for the execution of the decree.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- W. T. Williams v. Antha Dawson
- Status
- Published