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Pollitt v. Kerr

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Oct 23, 1891
49 N.J. Eq. 65 (Ch. Div. 1891)

Summary

In Pollitt v. Kerr, 49 N.J. Eq. 65; 22 Atl. Rep. 800, Vice-Chancellor Van Fleet, after discussing the rule of law with reference to the rights of a widow to dower, said that a more liberal rule prevails in equity, and that rule is: "that where a widow files a bill in Chancery for dower, and dies pending the suit, her personal representative may revive the suit and recover mesne profits."

Summary of this case from Needles v. Dougherty

Opinion

10-23-1891

POLLITT v. KERR et al.

John F. Kerr, for petitioner. Francis Scott, for complainants.


(Syllabus by the Court)

Petition of Emeline H. Pollitt against Hugh Kerr and others. Dismissed.

John F. Kerr, for petitioner. Francis Scott, for complainants.

VAN FLEET, V. C. This case presents but a single disputed question, and that is: Can the personal representative of a widow who dies before dower is assigned, and without having sued for her dower, maintain a suit in equity for mesne profits from the time the widow's right to dower accrued up to the time of her death? The facts out of which this question arises are the following: Farmer Hobson, in May, 1880, made a conveyance of land to Josephine Kerr, without his wife. His wife refused to join in the execution of the deed. Simultaneously with the execution of the deed Hobson executed a mortgage, on other land, to indemnify his grantee against his wife's right to dower in the land conveyed in case she survived him. She did survive him; he died in 1885, and she in 1888. In 1885, after her husband's death, the widow made both a written and verbal demand of dower in the land conveyed. The grantee paid no attention to such demands. Dower was not assigned to the widow, nor did she, during her life, bring an action to recover it. The land covered by the mortgage given for indemnity has been sold under a decree made by this court in a suit for partition, free from the lien of the mortgage. The administrator of the widow now asks by petition that he be paid such sum out of the proceeds of sale of the land covered by the mortgage a sis equivalent to one-third of the mesne profits of the land conveyed in 1880, from the time the widow demanded dower therein up to the time of her death. Where a widow is deforced of her dower, or cannot have it without suit, the rule regulating the damages which she may recover for its detention prescribed by the statute is this: If he died seised, she is entitled to damages from the time of his death, but, if he did not die seised, then only from the time when she shall have demanded dower. The statute in regulating the measure of her damages says that she shall recover the value of the whole dower to her belonging from the time of her husband's death if he shall die seised, or from the time of demanding dower if he was seised but shall not die seised. He vision, p. 321, § 3. In this case the husband did not die seised, so that, if damages are recoverable at all, they can only be recovered from the time when dower was demanded. Until dower is assigned, the widow's right in the land of her husband is a mere chose in action. She has no seisin in law, nor can she exercise any net of ownership over the land. Her right cannot be levied upon and sold under execution, nor is it assignable at law. As was said, in substance, by Chief Justice Beasley in Wade v. Miller. 32 N. J. Law, 296, 306, all the authorities agree that, until dower has been assigned, the widow "has nothing in the land of which an estate can be predicated, and that her right is a mere chose in action." The widow in this case having died before dower was assigned, and without having brought an action to recover dower, it is clear that at law her right to damages for its detention died with her. All the authorities agree that this is so. In Parks v. McClellan, 44 N. J. Law, 552, 553, the supreme court, speaking by Mr. Justice Depue, said: "If she [the widow] dies before judgment of seisin is executed, her right to an estate in dower is determined; if before the damages are assessed, her right to damages is gone. "Judge Story says: "If the widow dies before her damages are assessed, her personal representative cannot claim any." 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 625. And in Park on Dower it is said: "If the demandant die before the damages are ascertained, the executor shall not ha ve them, for the damages are no duty till they are ascertained; and it makes no difference that the tenant, on bringing a writ of error, had entered into a recognizance to pay damages and costs if the judgment were affirmed." Park, Dower, 309. The reason given for the rule is that damages can only be given for the detention of the possession, and in writs of right, where the right itself is disputed, no damages are given, because no wrong is done until the right is determined. This is the rule at law. By force of it, it is clear that the petitioner, if he were in a court of law, would be without a right, and consequently without a remedy. A somewhat more liberal rule in favor of the widow prevails in equity. The rule in equity I understand to be this: that where a widow files a bill in chancery for dower, and dies pending the suit, her personal representative may revive the suit, and recover mesne profits. This is the rule that Lord Alvanley enforced in Curtis v. Curtis, 2 Brown, Ch. 620. In that case a widow filed a bill for dower against her husband's brother. The defendant denied the fact of marriage. The court thereupon directed that the bill be retained until the widow established her right by a judgment at law. She then brought an action at law, and had a recovery, and then died. On a bill of revivor and supplement Lord Alvanley held that the widow's personal representative was entitled to a decree for mesne profits. Park states the rule in equity as follows: "We have seen that at law the widow loses her damages if the tenant dies after judgment, and before they are assessed, and also that, if she herself dies before the damages are ascertained, her personal representative cannot claim them; but in equity a different rule prevails, and the court will decree an account of rents and profits against the persons who have been in possession since the death of the husband, provided that at the time when the bill is filed the legal right to damages was not gone. "Park, Dower, 330. Judge Story states the rule in almost precisely the same words. 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 625. The instances in which the courts have been called upon to apply the rule are but few in number, but in every instance where it was applicable, that has come under my observation, the rule has been enforced. The facts in Steiger's Adrn'r v. Hillen, 5 Gill & J. 121, were identical in substance with those found in the case under consideration, except that there the widow and her personal representative had both been guilty of great laches. The action wasby the widow's administrator for mesne profits. The widow had never brought a suit for dower, nor had her dower been set off, so that, when her administrator sued, the legal right to damages was gone. Chancellor Bland, who heard the case in the first instance, declared (page 129) that but for the great laches he should not have had much hesitation in pronouncing a decree in favor of the complainant; but the court of appeals, while agreeing with the chancellor that relief should be denied on the ground of laches, also said, (page 134:) "We are not aware of any case which has gone further than to entertain a bill for rents and profits where the widow dies pending her bill for dower." And in the subsequent case of Kiddall v. Trimble, 1 Md. Ch. 143, 147, Chancellor Johnson said that it seemed to be settled that, if the widow die without demanding her dower, her executor cannot recover rents and profits, the cases only having gone to the extent of entertaining a bill for mesne profits where the widow dies pending her bill for dower. And Chancellor Walworth, in Johnson v. Thomas, 2 Paige, 377, 383, said that the death of the widow pending a suit in equity for dower did not deprive her personal representative of the arrears of dower, but that he might revive the suit for the purpose of having the right to such arrears determined by the decree of the court. But in that case the chancellor refused to pronounce a decree nunc pro tunc in favor of the widow, and dismissed the application of her personal representative to revive the suit. These authorities make it plain, as I think, that the claim of the petitioner must be denied. The legal right on which his claim rests ceased to exist when the person whom he represents died, so that when he became her representative there was no legal right flowing from her right to dower which he could take. The petition will bed is missed.


Summaries of

Pollitt v. Kerr

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Oct 23, 1891
49 N.J. Eq. 65 (Ch. Div. 1891)

In Pollitt v. Kerr, 49 N.J. Eq. 65; 22 Atl. Rep. 800, Vice-Chancellor Van Fleet, after discussing the rule of law with reference to the rights of a widow to dower, said that a more liberal rule prevails in equity, and that rule is: "that where a widow files a bill in Chancery for dower, and dies pending the suit, her personal representative may revive the suit and recover mesne profits."

Summary of this case from Needles v. Dougherty
Case details for

Pollitt v. Kerr

Case Details

Full title:POLLITT v. KERR et al.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: Oct 23, 1891

Citations

49 N.J. Eq. 65 (Ch. Div. 1891)
49 N.J. Eq. 65

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