72 Tenn. 103 | Tenn. | 1879
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1845, complainant, then the wife of O. JSL Gillespie, being seized jointly with her tivo brothers, "3ST. G. Taylor and A. M. C. Taylor, of a tract of land in Giles county, united with her husband in a power of attorney to her two brothers, authorizing them, or either of them if they could not act jointly, to sell and convey her undivided share of the tract; and in 1846, they, on their own behalf, and R. G. Taylor, acting on behalf of complainant and her husband, under this power of attorney, sold and conveyed to John Black, with warranty of title, 92 acres of the tract.
In 1847, complainant and her husband and A. M. C. Taylor executed a power of attorney to R. G. Taylor, authorizing him to sell and convey the interests of complainant and A. M. C. Taylor in
In 1857, John Black conveyed the 92 acres he had purchased to R. C. Suttle, with warranty of title. After the death of It. C. Suttle, a tract of 508J acres belonging to his estate, containing 100 acres of the tract of 147 acres purchased by him in 1847, as stated, was sold under a decree, in settlement of his estate, according to the provisions of his will, and purchased by L. I). Suttle, who dying in 1873, the tract passed to his heirs, subject to his widow’s dower. The residue of this tract of 147 acres, together with the tract of 92 acres purchased of Black by R. C. Suttle, is held in common by the devisees of the latter, subject to Ms widow’s dower.
The defendants are the widow and the real representatives of R. 0. Suttle, and the widow and the real and personal representatives of L. I). Suttle.
In 1857, complainant, having lived with her husband for some twenty years, and borne him several children capable of inheriting, obtained a divorce from him upon the ground of his malicious desertion of her, the decree restoring to her all the rights of a feme sole. Afterwards she married
The bill, after setting forth these matters in minute detail, urges the invalidity as to complainant of these powers of attorney and conveyances, she having been a feme covert at the time of their execution, and prays to have them annulled, as a cloud upon her title in remainder, after the death of her former husband, C. K. Gillespie, to an undivided one-third of the lands conveyed.
The defendants concede the invalidity as to complainant of these instruments, but they insist that she had, at the commencement of this suit, in 1875, no interest in these lands, to have a cloud removed from. If her interest were conceded, there would be no controversy about the cloud. The case turns upon the question of her interest.
It is argued for the defendants that these instruments, invalid as to complainant, passed only her husband’s interest, as husband and tenant by the courtesy initiate, in her share of the lands in question, and that his conveyees took his interest subject to be defeated by any of the contingencies that would have ended it in his hands if he had retained it, and, among others, by the termination of the coverture by a divorce at the wife’s instance. That, therefore, upon the divorce, in 1857, complainant became entitled immediately to recover her share of these lands, just as if her husband had then died, and that not having sued until
This consequence certainly happened if complainant was entitled to reclaim her interest in these lands immediately after the divorce in 1857. The question is, whether she toas so entitled.
Many weighty authorities are cited in the affirmative of this question, and it is conceded by the counsel of complainant that it is the better view, if the matter were res integra. They point out that it is the view that was taken by complainant herself, who acted upon it in her suit against A. B. "Worford, reported in 6 Cold., 632, in which, however, this Court held that the divorce in 1857 did not affect the interest of her husband’s conveyees and their successors in interest in other lands similarly disposed of. They show also that complainant after-wards brought a second suit, in which, succumbing to the ruling of Gillespie v. Worford upon this point, success was sought through the supposed effect of the Act of 1849-50, chap. 86, sec. 1, but that the result was again adverse to the complainant, by the decision of this Court at Jackson, in 1871, the style of the ease being Aiken v. Mumford, the opinion having been delivered by Judge Turney. They insist that while the only point expressly passed upon in this case was as to the effect of the Act of 1849-50, yet, as the decision could not. have been adverse to her except upon the assump-! tion of the correctness of the ruling in Gillespie
Eor the defendant it is insisted, and this seems to have been the Chancellor’s opinion, that Aiken v. Mumford is an authority only upon the one point expressly passed upon by the Court therein, .and that Gillespie v. Worford is an isolated decision upon the point in question, which is glaringly erroneous, and ought to be overruled. Whether Gillespie v. Worford ought to be overruled upon this point, is what we have now to determine.
If the doctrine of this case be sound, that the rights of C. K. Gillespie’s conveyees and their successors in interest in the lands of his wife were unaffected by the subsequent divorce decree, then, complainant’s interest being only a remainder after the death of Q. K. Gillespie, who is yet alive, she has been guilty of no laches, and is not barred. Eor, in this view, the statute of limitations could not run against her until after the termination of the particular estate by the death of C. K. Gillespie: Miller v. Miller, Meigs, 484; McCorry v. King's Heirs, 3 Hum., 267. She was not bound to sue until her right to possession should have accrued.
Nevertheless, at any time prior thereto, she might sue to have a cloud removed from her remainder interest, and • to have her rights declared. A remainder-man is not obliged to wait until the right
In Gillespie v. Worford, it was conceded that the bill was properly filed, in so far as it sought only to have the deed set up by the defendant, as an. assurance in fee, removed, as a cloud upon complainant's title after the termination of the estate by courtesy.
A remainder is a present right, though the enjoyment is future, and the owner may desire to dispose of it, or in some way to make it available to his needs, and he is entitled to have it relieved from a cloud impairing its value, and perhaps rendering it wholly unavailable.
In the inquiry as to the effect of a divorce a vinculo, for a pause arising after the marriage, upon the rights of a purchaser during the coverture of the husband’s interest in the wife’s realty prior to the Act of 1849-50, no material aid is to be derived from the common law authorities, because in England divorces a vinculo were granted only for causes sufficient by the ecclesiastical law to avoid the marriage ah initio. Where the supposed husband had aliened the lands of the supposed wife, and a divorce was afterwards obtained, it was thereby adjudged that there never had been any valid marriage, and of course the woman’s rights remained unaffected by the abortive alienation.
Where the consequences were not expressly prescribed by legislation, they had, of course, to be determined according to the policy of the given State, as gathered from the legislation or otherwise; and where no rule could be thus deduced, then according to legal reason and analogy. Different views of policy might have been expected to obtain in different States. Our own legislation has, to some extent, regulated the consequences of such divorces. Code, secs. 2468, 2477.
Thus, where the divorce is obtained by the wife,, the Court may decree her maintenance by the husband, or out of his property, real or personal, as it may think proper. If at the time of the divorce the wife has any property accrued by her own industry, or by gift, devise, descent, or distribution, she is to have this absolutely, subject, however, to the rights of creditors who became such during the coverture
If the divorce is obtained by the husband, his interest in the wife’s lands is not to be affected thereby, and in ease she survives him, she is not to be entitled to dower, nor is she to take any
In Allen v. McCullough, 2 Heis., 174, it was held that the effect of the provision protecting the rights of creditors was to keep the husband liable after the divorce for the wife’s debts contracted dum sola, from which her death would have released him; and on page 188, Judge Nelson, who delivered the opinion of the Court, considered that the provision depriving the wife, divorced at her husband’s instance, of dower and of a distributive share in the event of his intestacy, manifested that, in the view of the Legislature, she would, in the absence of such a provision, have remained entitled to these rights of a wife, notwithstanding the divorce.
In Chunn v. Chunn, Meigs, 137, the Court independently of legislation, upon granting a divorce a vinculo, had due regard to the rights of creditors; and in McGhee v. McGhee, 2 Sneed, 221, it was said that, independently of legislation, “ upon well established general principles of law, the claims of the husband’s bona fide creditors, or liabilities properly incurred in his behalf, existing prior to the application for divorce, must prevail over the rights of the wife.” The property here was both real and personal, and most of it had come by the wife, and the divorce was obtained by her.
But in Ames v. Norman, 4 Sneed, 683, decided in 1857, the very year in which the complainant obtained her divorce, the point now under considera
“ The decree in this case would seem to take it for granted that, upon a dissolution of the marriage . by a divorce at the suit of the wife, the same legal consequences follow, in all respects, as if the marriage had been dissolved by the death of the husband. This is a very erroneous assumption, so far at least as relates to the question under consideration.” He added on pages 696-7:
“We are of the opinion that the subsequent divorce had no effect whatever upon the rights of such purchaser. It is true the purchaser at t execution sale succeeds merely to the right of the .husband in the estate; that is to say, he acquires no other or different right, either as regards the
This, and what follows, expresses the very pith of the ruling in Gillespie v. Worford upon this point:
“ The purchase in the present case was not made in view of the contingency of the wife’s divorce at some future period, and cannot he affected by i*.
“ The defendant, by his purchase, became invested with the right of the husband as it existed at the time of the sale; that is, a right to occupy and enjoy the profits of the land as owner during the joint lives of the husband and wife, subject to the contingency that, if the complainant survives her husband, his estate will then terminate, but, if the husband survives, he would then become absolute owner of the whole estate.”
The doctrine of this case, in the abstract, is, that the purchaser of the husband’s interest during-the coverture, takes it as the husband then holds it, and retains it unaffected by a subsequent divorce. The decision must, of course, have been the same
In Allen v. McCullough, 2 Heis., 189-90, Judge ÍTelson cited both of these cases approvingly, as equally authoritative to establish that the legal consequences of a divorce a vinculo are different from those of a termination of the coverture by the parties.
We have seen that Gillespie v. Worford was assumed to be the law upon the point in question, in the subsequent case of Aiken v. Mumford, brought by the same complainant, who had in the meantime became Mrs. Aiken, and who is the complainant in the present case.
The rule in question was not so devoid of considerations in its favor as seems to be conceded even by the counsel who now uphold it ■ upon the principle of stare decisis. We say was not, because, owing to the Act of 1849-50,' taking away from the husband and his creditors ■
The purchaser could not have intervened in the divorce suit, though aware that no defence was to be made, aiid possessed of evidence to defeat the bill if he were allowed to produce it. And then, the divorce might have been procured in a distant part of the State, without his knowledge, or even in a distant State, to which the parties might have removed. Ought the purchaser’s rights to be affected by the result of a suit between other parties, in which he could not appear?
But, whatever may be thought of the wisdom of the rule, weL cannot but regard it as the deliber-rate policy of our State upon the subject, however different it may be from that of our sister States, and however preferable the latter may appear to the text writers. And our disinclination to reverse it is powerfully augmented by the appeal that is now made to the principle of stare decisis in behalf of the present complainant, who has already twice suffered from the rule, but who might suffer perhaps even more from its reversal, which, by retroactively putting her in default, in not having seasonably enforced rights which this Court decided that she did not -have, would now estop and bar her absolutely; and thus she would have been misled by this Court to the loss of her property.
' We hold, then, that complainant is entitled to a remainder interest in her original share of the lands
It is, however, insisted that there are 192 acres of the original tract in question remaining undisposed of, and that complainant ought to be thrown upon this land before being allowed to disturb the defendants.
On the other hand, it is denied that any of this original tract remains unsold. The dispute here is as to the dimensions of the original tract. This is a rectangle. One of the sides is unquestionably 168 poles. The controversy is as to the length of the other. The language of the original deed conveying the tract, is, as ,to this side, “thence east 190 poles to the creek, crossing it, the same continued 540 poles to a stake, &c.” The question is whether the 540 poles are additional to, or inclusive of, the 190. If additional,- then this side of the rectangle is 730 poles; if inclusive, it is but 540. In the former case, the tract contains 766| acres, and the latter 567. The deed calls for 766 acres; moreover, this tract was one of six lots into which a larger tract was divided for partition. The other lots contained, respectively, 730, 757, 822, 766 and 766 acres. The dimensions of these lots corroborate the estimate of the deed making this equivalent lot contain 766 acres, rather
There appears to be no trace in the Register’s office of what has become of 192 acres of the tract. But, it by no means follows that they remain undisposed of by complainant and her brothers, and in view of the date of the latest of their registered deeds to other portions of the tract, March 25, 1850, some thirty years ago, this seems very un likely. If such were the fact it would doubtless have been clearly and affirmatively shown by the defendants, and not left to be inferred from the mere absence of records in the Register’s office, a very uncertain reliance, as we all know that gross carelessness in having deeds registered was formerly far from uncommon, especially “ out in the provinces.”
The 192 acres were, doubtless, disposed of by complainant, her husband, and brothers, and their deed or deeds left unregistered. Subsequent conveyances were probably duly recorded, while the lapse of time seemed to render the absence of the original ones unimportant. It was incumbent upon the defendants to establish the existence of this portion of the tract, undisposed of by the original owners. They have failed to do so. ¥e are, therefore, not called on to declare what figure it would have cut in the case if it had been made out.
The principle is none the less applicable where the transactions sought to be avoided are those of infants, lunatics, or married wpmen — persons under disability. Smith v. Evans, 5 Hum., 70; Alston v. Boyd, 6 Hum., 508; Pilcher v. Smith, 2 Head, 208; Hilton v. Duncan, 1 Cold., 320; Wright v. Dufield, 2 Baxter, 218.
It is well settled by these authorities that the purchase money received for land, where the . sale is avoided, may be made a lien on the land.
It is objected by complainant, that it is now impossible to say what part of the purchase money was paid for the wife’s remainder. But this is not difficult, in theory at least. Erom the one-third of the purchase money paid by Black and R. C. Suttle for the two tracts in question, as the price of the fee simple of complainant’s interest, deduct the life estate of C. K. Gillespie, as of the dates of the sales, and the residue will represent what was paid for 'complainaut’s remainder. The proportion of the value of. the husband’s life estate to that of the fee simple, can be ascertained with the aid' of the tables, his age being carried back duly. What is found to have been paid for complainant’s remainder, should be a charge upon her interest, as of the dates of the original sales. The proper amount can be ascertained by a reference.
Complainant cannot be charged with anything on account of any improvements that may have been made upon her lands. For the decisions upon the subject of an allowance for improvements to parties evicted, see Bristol v. Evans, 2 Tenn.,
The substance of the law upon this subject is embodied in sec. 3261 of the Code: “ Persons holding possession in good faith under color of title, are entitled to have the value of their permanent improvements set off against the rents and profits which the plaintiff' may recover.’
The claim for improvements may be asserted in equity (sec. 3259), Avent v. Hord, 3 Head, 462. But, whether asserted at law as a set-off against rents and profits, or in equity, the. extent of the claim is the enhancement of the land by reason of the improvements, not exceeding the amount of the rents and profits.
In the present case, as the possession of the defendants has been, and until the death of C. • K. Gillespie, will be, perfectly lawful, no rents and profits will be recoverable against them at the date to which the present decree will apply; and where there are no rents and profits, there can be no allowance for improvements.
The costs of the cause in both Courts will be borne by the defendants. The decree of the Chancellor will be reversed, and a decree entered here in conformity with this opinion.
Same v. Same.
The head-note of this opinion is incorporated with that of the preceding one, which see.
The opinion heretofore delivered in this case has not had the good fortune of pleasing either side. Complainant asks for a reconsideration of that part of it imposing upon her the duty of restitution of purchase money; and the defendants of that part of it denying to them compensation for improvements.
It is argued that complainant cannot he required to make any restitution of purchase money, because neither John Black, the original vendee of one of the two tracts in question, nor the personal representative of R. C. Suttle, the original vendee of the other tract, is before the Court, for which reason the equities between the parties involved cannot be comprehensively adjusted. But if a proper restitution of the purchase money is the condition of the relief sought by complainant, then if. for want of parties, the Court cannot impose the condition, it follows that, for want of parties, it cannot grant the relief. Complainant’s conten
Thus, in Hilton v. Duncan, 1 Cold., 321, it was said that it would be a fraud for a married woman to avoid her contract without restoring the purchase money, and that, “as an incident to the rescission,” the Court will order the repayment of the money, and will declare a lien to secure it.”
In Wright v. Dufield, 2 Baxter, 222, the following language was used:
“ On the rescission of the sale, it is the settled practice in this State to require the vendor,- as incident to the relief granted him, to restore the purchase money he has received, and the amount paid upon the purchase will be held a lien upon the land, even against a'lunatic or a married woman.” It was added: “ The vendor is bound, upon an immutable principle of natural justice, to refund the purchase money, before being entitled to dein and back the property sold.” And it was said that “ the mere effort to avoid the contract without restoring the purchase money, is itself a fraud which will not be permitted.”
In the next paragraph, the proper limitation is stated, that “ the contract on the part of the purchaser must be free from the imputation of fraud or imposition.” The sale there appeared to have been made through over-confidence of the wife in
Eor a case falling within the. limitation, see Rhea v. Martin, 1 Leg. Rep., 292, where the wife was moved hy undue influence of her husband, cooperating with the purchaser’s threat of depriving her of the land by a Chancery suit, unless she consented to sell it.
In Wiley v. Heidell, 12 Heis., 100, it was said that a party would not be allowed to avoid his contract without restoring the purchase money, and that the uniform practice had been to declare a lien upon the land to secure its payment. That this was to be done in the decree of rescission, and “ as an incident thereto.”
Eo shadow of unfairness rests upon the present case. The complainant’s attorneys in fact were her brothers, and her interest was sold at the same time with theirs in lands belonging to them jointly. She was privily examined as to the execution of her powers of attorney, and acknowledged that she acted freely, voluntarily, and understanding^, and without constraint from her husband. At that time, and indeed until the decision in Gillespie v. Worford, in 1865, it was generally supposed that such powers of attorney were valid. And lastly, E. G-. Taylor, one of these brothers, complainant’s witness, deposed that he paid over her share of the purchase money, partly to herself and partly to her husband by 'her consent and direction.
This being the condition of the relief sought, complainant’s objection to this condition is, in substance, an objection to her own bill for want of parties, which, if successful, would necessitate the dismissal of the bill, or its remanding, for the necessary new parties to be brought in by supplemental bill.
It is inadmissible for complainant to object to her own bill for want of parties. In 1 Dan. PL and Pr., 298, it is said: “ The objection for want of parties ought to proceed from a defendant; for it has been decided that the plaintiff bringing his cause to a hearing without proper parties cannot put it off without the consent of the defendant.”
Of course, if no decree can be made doing justice between the parties to the suit without affecting the interest of absent parties, the Court will- not proceed, but will itself take the exception, ana remand the case to have the necessary additional
If the Court can make a decree at the hearing that will do entire justice to all the parties, and not prejudice their rights, notwithstanding the non-joinder, it will not then allow the objection to prevail. Ib., sec. 287.
Our Code provides that a bill shall not be dismissed for want. of parties, unless the objection ■ be made by motion to dismiss or demurrer.
But we do not think that the bill in the present ease was originally objectionable, even at the instance of the defendants, for want of parties. Because if additional parties had been made, the decree might have been more comprehensive, it does not follow that these were necessary parties. Thus, a mortgagee may foreclose, or a vendor’s lien be enforced,, against the heir alone, without bringing in the administrator, though the personalty is the primary fund for the satisfaction of the debt. Story’s Eq. PL, see. 76J; High v. Batte, 10 Yer., 188; Edwards v. Edwards, 5 Heis., 123.
A mortgagor seeking to redeem, where the mortgage has been assigned, may proceed against the last assignee alone: Story’s Eq. PL, sec. 189. The status of the complainant here somewhat resembles
It is said that there is no privity between complainant and defendants, and that therefore she cannot be required to make any restitution directly to them, to be charged as a lien upon her lands in their favor. “The term privity denotes mutual and successive relationship to the same rights of property:” 1 Green. Ev., sec. 189. It is true that the defendants have not succeeded to any of the property rights of complainant in these lands. But this is because none of these rights passed to the original vendees, John Black and R. 0. Suttle. The hiatus in privity occurred upon the invalid sales to them. Yet, unquestionably they would have been entitled to restitution of purchase money,
How, the defendants are in perfect privity with them, and represent, as the present holders of these lands under them, all the rights as against complainant, and as against the lands themselves, which the original vendees would have had if they were still the holders of the lands.
The right of restitution clings to the lands themselves'. The restitution is to be made a lien on the lands. In the language of this Court in High v. Batte, 10 Yer., 188, with reference to the vendor’s lien, it “ attaches to the land, so that the land, so to speak, is debtor.” Its practical value consists, rather in the charge against the land itself than in a personal claim against the reclaim-ant, who is often a person under disabilities, exempt from personal liability. If the land is disposed of, this dormant lien, to be quickened into life by the exercise of the true owner’s right of reclamation, passes with it, and the holders who are finally evicted are entitled to the benefit of the lien. Hor does it matter that the last holders may have the warranties of their predecessors up to the original invalid sale. So much the better for them if • they have. But this no more interferes with their right to the benefit of the lien on the land itself, for restitution from the reclaimant, than the recourse which the holder of a vendor’s lien note
Suppose that a married woman’s laird is invalidly sold,' and then resold for cash, without warranty, and then reclaimed. Has the last purchaser no right to restitution? The first purchaser would have been entitled to this equity. Can his sale have annihilated it, so that now the woman may keep what she got for the land and take back the land too? Surely not. She must make' due restitution. The restitution must of course be made to the last purchaser, from whom the land is taken. It is to be charged on the land itself. The land is virtually the debtor for it. If the last ‘sale had been with a warranty, how could that have altered the case as to the lien upon the land itself?
It is said that the price, in the present case, may have been discounted on account of the contingency of reclamation. But, if so, the right to proper restitution upon the reclamation wilL have entered into the estimate. The amount of the restitution, presently to be considered, is something fixed, not requiring for its ascertainment, where, as in the present case, there is no question of rents and profits, any consideration of equities between intermediate parties, and the warrantor, if there was a warranty, will receive the benefit of it in reduction of his liability. The restitution will belong to the holders of the lands,
It is not perceived how the want of parties, if it existed, could avail complainant here, in any view of the ease. For, suppose that, for this reason, the Court had now only to declare complainant’s right to reclaim her lands at O. K. Gillespie’s death, without saying anything about the condition of restitution, yet this would not enable her ultimately to elude the restitution, any more than if she had waited until her right to possession had accrued and then brought ejectment for her lands. For what would have been the result of that line of action, see Pilcher v. Smith, 2 Head, 208. At most, the Court would now have to leave open the question of restitution, thereby only postponing it until the proceedings hereafter to be instituted by complainant to obtain possession of her lands. We think that the question can he passed upon now between the parties who are before the Court.
It would be strange if, in a case like this, where the original conveyee might have been dead, and his estate wound up, possibly for fifty years, and his administrator dead, and his estate long since wound up, the original administration had to be reconstituted merely to provide a technically regular conduit through whom the purchase money to be refunded upon reclamation of' the lands invalidly sold might reach the pockets of the parties ultimately entitled to it, all of these being before the Court.
If these sales had been made with reference to the separate values of the husband’s life estate and the wife’s remainder, then these values would have to be estimated as of the dates of the sales, according to the manner set forth in Carnes v. Polk, 5 Heis., 244. See also Scribner on Dower, 612, 655, treating of the assignment of a money equivalent for dower. But as there was no such separate reference, the understanding being that the entire fee simple of the three joint owners was purchased, and simply that being valued, we think that the valuation of the life estate of C. X. Gillespie at these dates ought to be made upon the basis of his actual length of life subsequently to the sales, and not upon the basis of such an estimate as must have been made at these dates if the sales had been made with reference to the life estate and the remainder. And as C. K. Gillespie is still alive, and the counsel of the complainant intimate that his days are likely to be indefinitely
This disposes of all that has been . suggested in behalf of complainant. But upon the further reflection that has been bestowed upon the subject since the application for a reconsideration, a question has occurred to us which has not been without difficulty, especially as it was not noticed by the counsel, who have discussed so ably and exhaustively the residue of the case. This question is, whether the restitution to be made upon reclamation of lands invalidly sold must always consist of the full amount of the purchase money and interest, however long ago the sale may have been, and however greatly the land may since have depreciated; or whether there should not be some limit short of this, and if so, what this should be.
When the former opinion was prepared, this was not recognized as a practical question in the case; and, as stated, it was not [raised by counsel. But it now appears to be not impossible that what will be found to have been paid for complainant’s remainder, with interest all the way down
Put an extreme case. Suppose an invalid sale of land by one then, and for many years, continuously thereafter, under disability, just before the termination of which the land is resold for a small portion of the original price, it having greatly depreciated, or valuable improvements thereon having been destroyed. Immediately after the termination of the disability, the land is reclaimed. Must the last purchaser receive the original purchase money with interest all the way down, amounting, possibly, to ten times what he paid for the land, with interest. Such a requirement would, of course, destroy the right of reclaiming the lands. And, in cases where it fell short of this, it might yet often considerably overpay the party evicted. The last purchaser, who is evicted, is the only party entitled to compensation. If he is indemnified, the requirements of equity are met. He ought not to be over-indemnified.
What, then, does the law regard as full indemnity upon an eviction? Our rule is, where there is a warranty of title, to give the purchase money and interest: Elliott v. Thompson, 4 Hum., 99. Some states give the value of the land at the time of" the eviction, but our rule is as stated: See 4 Kent, marg. pp. 475-7, and notes. This, then, in legal contemplation, is indemnity for the loss of the land.
John Black bought the tract of 92 acres from complainant, her husband, and brothers, in 1846, and R. 0. Suttle that of 147 acres in 1847. Black sold the 92 acres to R. C. Suttle in 1857. After the death of R. 0. Suttle, 100 acres of the 147 acres were, as part of the tract of 508J acres, purchased by L. D. Suttle, under the decree in settlement of the estate of the former. The time of this sale does not .appear. So that 47 acres of
It must not he forgotten that we are dealing with a remainder. It was only this remainder of which the original sales were invalid. We have first to ascertain what was paid on account of this remainder as included in the purchases of Black and B.. C. Suttle in 1846 and 1847. This, with interest from the dates of these sales, will be the maximum charge that can be made upon complainant’s interest in these lands, in favor of complainant.
Eor the purpose of applying the limitation that has been explained, the amounts as to the ■ two tracts in question must be kept distinct, and then the amount as to the tract of 147 acres must be-divided into two portions in the proportion of 47 to 100, as 47 acres of this tract- were not resold, while 100 acres of it were subsequently sold, as a part of the tract of 508J acres purchased by L. 3). Suttle under the decree in settlement of It. C. Suttle’s estate.
The portion applicable to the 47 acres cannot be reduced, there having been no subsequent sale of the 47 acres. But, it may be that what was paid on account of the remainder in an undivided third of the 100 acres, with interest from the time of L. X). Suttle’s said purchase, will be less than what was paid on account of this part
The time of L. D. Suttle’s purchase of the 508J acres being ascertained, it must then be determined what part of the purchase money therefor was applicable to the 100 acres (of the 147 acres,) included therein, and then the life estate (for C. K. Gillespie’s life) in one-third of this paA of the pur-' chase money being estimated as of that date, and deducted from this third, the residue will represent what was then paid on account of complainant’s remainder in an undivided one-third of the 100 acres; and this residue, with interest from that time, will be compared with what was paid for the remainder in this portion of the 147 acres in 1817, with interest from that date, which will not be allowed to exceed the subsequent amount with interest.
In the case of the 92 acres, the remainder therein, with interest from the date of the sale to John Black, in 1846, will be compared with the remainder therein as of 1857, the time of the last sale of the land, (by Black to R. C. Suttle), with interest from that date, the former amount not .to exceed the latter.
As to the matter of improvements, the defendant insists that in the partition of the lands hereafter, between them and complainant, the shares containing the improvements ought to be alotted to them, and that the shares ought to be so laid off as to produce this result, citing the case of Reeves v. Reeves, 11 Heis., 675.
We do not mean, in refusing to charge complainant’s interest in these lands with improvements, to intimate, still less to adjudge, that, in the future partition of the lands, no regard is to be paid to the fact that the improvements were made bj the defendants, or their predecessors under the sales avoided by complainant. We do not think that any adjudication of this matter can be made in the present suit. It will be time enough to deal with it in the partition suit, when that comes to be disposed of.
The question how the lands are, under all the circumstances, to be equitably partitioned, will belong to the partition suit.
We have now disposed of all that is properly before us in the present case. In the language of counsel — “Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.”
Dissenting Opinion
delivered the following dissenting, opinion •
Rever having assented to the correctness of the opinion in the case of Gillespie v. Worford, 2 Cold., 632, I take occasion to state a few of my objections to the ruling of the Court.
In the first place, I hold that where the married woman is authorized to convey by deed, as she is by our law beyond question, then she may as well make that deed by an agent or attorney in fact as in person. That authority to make the deed includes the usual and known methods and agencies by which such an act is done, and by an agent or attorney is, and was when she was authorized to make a deed, one of the well known and usual means by which all parties competent to make deeds were accustomed to perform such acts. In a word, I hold that what a party can do by himself he can do by another, or an agent. The maxim of our law, that what a man does by another is done by himself, I think strictly applicable to the question.
The fallacy of the argument of Judge Milligan in the opinion referred to, is in following authorities holding that a married woman could not make a valid power of attorney, which are based on the fact that, by reason of her coverture, she was incompetent to contract. The want of application of the principle to the case where she did have the power to make the contract, I think is clear, she
But the main question debated before us, and in which I cannot agree to the conclusion arrived at by a majority of the Court, following the opinion in 2 Cold., is, that the husband’s right by courtesy, or his vendee after the dissolution of the marriage by divorce, continues, and is not ended by the divorce.
The defendants in this case hold under a conveyance from the husband and wife. The wife’s deed is held void by reason of having been made under a power of attorney. She was divorced and freed from disability many years since, married again,' and is again discovert — the first husband remaining alive, the second husband being dead.
The statute of limitations, by reason of adverse possession of defendants, bars her right, in any
The opinion combatted holds that a purchaser from the husband takes an estate for life, that is, an estate by courtesy, for the life of the husband by reason of the marriage, seizin of lands during coverture,' birth of issue, independent of the continuance of the marriage relation. In other words, that though the woman does not die his wife, nor he survive her as her husband, still the same results follow, as if the facts were as stated. To this I cannot assent.
On marriage and birth of issue, the husband became tenant by courtesy initiate, but his estate is not consummate until death of the wife, which completes his title by the courtesy of England, is the language of all pur books defining this estate: 2 R . C., 128.
It is the death of his wife that consummates the estate, not the death of a woman who is not his wife, it may be the wife of another man, as in this case, one who has been the wife of another, and may again form that relation. The ease then being but initiate, and never consummate during the existence of the marriage relation, being dependent on, growing out of, and existing by means alone of the marriage relation must necessarily fail, when this relation ceases, as it seems to me. In fact, it never arises in completed form — it can
Suppose the case of marriage, birth of issue, seizin of lands, and a divorce, then the marriage of another husband by the wife, it may be three or four births of children by each, and divorce, and then the wife dies, leaving the four or five husbands, and fathers living, who shall have courtesy in her lands ? Shall their rights be fixed pro rata? If so, by what rule — the number of years they had her to wife or the number of children born to each? This is as troublesome a question, it seems to me, as the one propounded by the Sadducees on a certain occasion of the seven successive brothers who married the woman under the Mosaic law, and all died, and then the woman died. They said, “Whose wife shall she be in the resurrection ? ”
The question in the ease put is, which of the husbands surviving is entitled to the relation? Whose wife was she when she died? I would say, as a matter of course, the husband whose wife she was at her death takes the estate incident to the marital relation. The principle of the opinion gives it to the man who has ceased to be husband, and who is declared by the decree of a competent Court to have forfeited the rights to the position of husband for misconduct. Husbands could, under
It seems to be thought the rule is one beneficial to the wife, but this is a mistake as a general rule. If she is to be benefitted, generally it would be by being entitled to her estate at once, for ordinarily it may be assumed she will die as soon as the husband. In this case it happens she is still alive, but it may yet be that her husband will live as long as she does. So we may declare her right, and she not live to enjoy it.
I need but say, the argument that the husband’s vendee can possibly take an estate beyond that which the husband had to sell, stand higher or held by a broader title, is one that I am unable to comprehend. It may be supported by reason, but I am frank to say I have not been able to see the basis on which it can be rested. Until it can be shown that a man can convey what he has not himself^ that a stream can rise above its source, I shall never be able to see how the vendee of the husband can take an estate from the husband of greater dignity or duration than that of the husband himself. I need not cite or comment on authorities. I believe it is not claimed that any case
I can see no strong equity in favor of the rule contended for — no reason of public policy — and when a rule is totally inconsistent with sound reason and legal logic, I feel no hesitancy in overruling it, however often it may have been declared, unless it was because it was the basis of property titles, which public policy demands should not be disturbed
Here the only effect of adopting this illogical, and, as I think, unsound rule, is, not to sustain and quiet titles, but simply to destroy titles long acquiesced in for which a valuable consideration was paid, and on which the parties had rested with confidence for a quarter of a century.
I have felt the force of the argument drawn from the principle stare decisis. It is one always presented by ingenious counsel, and often referred to, and properly by Judges in support of their opinions. However, I must say my own observation is, that generally orthodoxy on this doctrine consists in adhering to it, when it supports the views of the particular Judge preparing the opinion, and disregarding its obligations when the decisions do not serve this useful end. For this reason, I do not
Believing the principles of the case of Gillespie v. Worford to be radically wrong, I think the case should be overruled, and dissent from the opinion of the majority holding the contrary