119 Ind. 560 | Ind. | 1889
William S. Lingle, of Tippecanoe county, died intestate, on the 2d day of September, 1884, leaving as his widow Frances E. Lingle. At the time of his death he was the owner and in the possession of eighteen hundred and eighty-three acres of land in this State, which he held under a written contract with the appellee White, for the purchase of the same. Said White holds a purchase-money lien on all of said land, amounting to seventeen
The controversy between the appellant, Bowen, and the appellee Frances E. Lingle is this : Can the said Bowen, in equity, require said White to first exhaust the land not covered by appellant’s mortgage before resorting to the lands included in it, or whether the said Frances E., as the widow, is entitled to have the land set off to her protected and preserved intact, in case the other lands will pay and discharge the debt of the said White, although not paying the said Bowen.
It is contended by the appellant that as the land in controversy was land which William S. Lingle held under a contract, the full purchase-price of which had not been paid, the appellee was not entitled to any part of the land itself, as the widow, but that she could only take an interest in the money remaining after sale to pay the vendor’s lien.
By section 2483, E. S. 1881, the wife, upon the death of
Under section 2491, she is entitled, with the exception above stated, to one-third of all the land of which the husband was seized in fee during the marital relation, in the conveyance of which she has not joined in due form of law, and also of all lands in which her husband had an equitable interest at the time of his death.
Section 2493 is as follows : “ If the husband shall have ■ made a contract for lands, and, at the time of his decease, the consideration in whole or in part shall not have been paid, but after his death the same shall be paid out of the proceeds of his estate, his widow shall have one-third of said lands in the same manner as if the legal estate had vested in the husband during coverture.”
Under the facts as above set out, we think that the appellee Frances E. Lingle, as the widow of William S. Lingle, was entitled to an interest in the lands purchased from White. It is true that the purchase-price has not yet been paid in full, but it is shown that the land not set off to her is sufficient to pay it, and we know of no rule of law which would keep her from the use of her interest in the land until by the slow process of law the debt due for the price of the land had been actually paid.
The most difficult question in the case arises out of the equities between the appellant and the appellee Frances E. Lingle, growing out of the execution of the mortgage to the appellant. If William S. Lingle were living, it can not be doubted that the appellant, as against him and White, could compel White to exhaust the property not covered by his mortgage before resorting to any portion of that land. Day v. Patterson, 18 Ind. 114; Cissna v. Haines, 18 Ind. 496; Aiken v. Bruen, 21 Ind. 137; Alsop v. Hutchings, 25 Ind. 347; Williams v. Perry, 20 Ind. 437; McCullum v. Turpie, 32 Ind. 146; McShirley v. Birt, 44 Ind. 382; Houston v.
It must be conceded, however, that the widow has many rights not possessed by the husband. It is the policy of the law to so administer the estate of the deceased, if it can be -done, as to secure to the widow her interest in the husband’s lands. To this end it is the duty of the administrator to apply all the personal assets in his hands, if necessary, to pay liens on the land, even to the exclusion of all general creditors ; not only is this his duty, but he is likewise bound to apply the proceeds of the sale of two-thirds of the deceased husband’s land, if necessary, to that purpose. Hunsucker v. Smith, 49 Ind. 114; Morgan v. Sackett, 57 Ind. 580; Sparrow v. Kelso, 92 Ind. 514.
It is the right of the widow, at any time when the administrator fails to perform this duty imposed upon him by law, to compel, by proper appeal to the courts, such performance. It will thus be seen that upon the death of William S. Lingle an equity intervened in favor of the appellee to have all the personal property, and the proceeds of all of his real estate to which she was not entitled under the law, applied to the payment of the liens on the land of which he died seized. The question now is, who has the superior equity ?
Had the appellee not signed the mortgage which the appellant holds, we do not think it would be contended by him that as against her he could compel White to exhaust the land to which she is entitled under the law before resorting to the land covered by his mortgage. It becomes important, therefore, to ascertain what effect the execution of said mortgage has upon her rights in the lands of her late husband.
In the case of Trentman v. Eldridge, 98 Ind. 525, this court, by Elliott, J., in speaking of the effect of a mortgage executed by a wife in connection with her husband upon his land, to secure his individual debt, says: “It did
If this statement of the law is correct, and that it is we have no doubt, it follows that the only effect of the mortgage executed by the appellee, in connection with her husband, to the appellant, so far as her rights are involved, was to bind the land therein described, and that it in no manner affects her rights in other land. The lands set off to appellee by the circuit court of Benton county, therefore, as they are not covered by the appellant’s mortgage, are in no way affected thereby. When the appellant took his mortgage he was chargeable with knowledge of the law, which required the administrator to pay off the liens against the land in such a manner as to save to the widow her interest therein, and that such right entered into and constituted a part of his contract with William S. Lingle. He was bound to know, also, that in the event Lingle should die before his mortgage debt was paid, his widow could compel White to exhaust all the other lands before resorting to that which descended to her. In our opinion t’he appellant has no right to compel White to resort to the land set off to the appellee before the sale of the lands covered by his mortgage. If the other lands are sufficient to pay the vendor’s lien held by White, we think the appellee is entitled to hold the land set off to her, as widow, free from the liens of both White and the appellant. This being the conclusion at which the cir
Judgment affirmed.