C. M. SMITH BROTHERS LAND & INVESTMENT COMPANY, Appellant, v. MARTHA C. PHILLIPS et al.
SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI, Division One
July 23, 1921
289 Mo. 579
MARCH TERM, 1922.
Division One, July 23, 1921.
- 1. HOMESTEAD: Greater Than Dower: Conveyance: Re-marriage: Assignment. Where the homestead was worth less than the statutory value and was all the land in which the widow was entitled to dower and she conveyed her “life interest” therein, her grantee became clothed with all her interest in the homestead, and of her alternate right to dower when shе re-married, and of her right to quarantine until dower is assigned; and upon her re-marriage and the consequent extinguishment of her homestead, her rights of dower and quarantine remained unaffected, and her grantee may have dower assigned to him; but her homestead became extinguished upon her re-marriage, and the special statute of limitations began to run from that date, and her grantee must bring suit for the recovery of her dower within ten years or be barred.
- 2. ———: Duration as to Minors: Re-marriage of Widow. Under the Homestead Act of 1895 the homestead estate of minor children is limited to the joint right of oсcupancy with the widow, and at her death or re-marriage it passes to them by descent as if no homestead law existed.
3. ———: ———: ———: Limitations. The right of the widow to dower being assignable, and her homestead right being extinguished by her re-marriage, and the right to have dower assigned reviving upon the extinguishment of her homestead right, and the homestead estate of the minor children being limited to the joint right of occupancy with the widow, they are in possession after her re-marriage by right of inheritance from their father and not under the Homestead Act, and it is upon the date of her re-marriage that the right accrues tо her or her assignee to have her dower admeasured and assigned, and the grantee in her deed, made after her husband‘s death and before her re-marriage, must bring his suit to have assigned and to recover her dower within ten years after her re-marriage, under the statute ( Sec. 391, R. S. 1909 ) which declares that “all actions for the recovery of dower in real estate, which shall not be commenced within ten years after the death of the husband, through or under whom such dower is claimed or demanded, shall be forever barred.”- 4. ———: Assignment of Dower: Limitations. Where the homestead is all the real estate of which the husband died seized and does not exceed the statutory value or quantity, it is unnecessary to appoint commissioners to assign dower to his widow; but her deed conveys her dower and her re-marriage extinguishes her homestead right, and the right of her grantee to have her dower admeasured to him accrues on date of re-marriage, and becomes extinct in ten years thereafter.
- 5. ———: ———: ———: Quarantine: Limitations. The widow‘s quarantine, which is her right to remain in and enjoy the mansion house and the messuages and plantation thereto belonging, is an incident to the right to have dower assigned, and when that right ceаses quarantine also ceases, and where her grantee is barred by limitations to recover her dower he is also barred to recover any supposed quarantine right.
Appeal from Mississippi Circuit Court.—Hon. Frank Kelly, Judge.
AFFIRMED.
R. L. Ward and Russell & Joslyn for plaintiffs.
(1) Immediately upon the death of James J. Phillips on the 24th day of November, 1895, the land in controversy, which did not exceed in value the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, passed to and vested in his widow, Martha C. Phillips, and his children, Ollie, Florence, James, Thomas Milas, and Jessie, who was yet unborn,
Haw & Brown for defendants.
(1) In so far as the replies of appellant to the separate answers of respondents apply to the plea that plaintiff‘s cause of action is barred, said replies merely deny “each and every allegation, averment and statement of new matter” in said answers contained. Such
BROWN, C.
Ejectment to recover eighty acres of land in Mississippi County described as the east half of the northwest quarter of Section Nine, Township Twenty-five of Range Fifteen. The defendants are Martha C. Phillips and Thomas Milas Phillips. The common source of title is James J. Phillips, who died in-
The defendants filed separate answers, both denying generally the allegations of the petition, and pleading the general Statutes of Limitations of ten years. Thomas Milas also pleaded the special Statute of Limitations of ten years with reference to proceedings for the recovery of dower. Martha C. denied this, and pleaded that the deed of April 8, 1898, under which plaintiff claims, was obtained from her by fraud on the part of the grantees, and asked that it be cancelled and set aside. The new matter in both answers was denied by replication. Reply to the answer of Martha C. also pleaded the Statute of Limitations to the equitable relief asked by her.
The defendant Martha C. Phillips was married to one Taylor August 8, 1903. They continued to live together as husband and wife until April 5 1907, when she obtained a divorce from him. Jessie, the youngest child of James J. and Martha C. Phillips, was the last to reach her majority, which occurred in 1914.
The three Smith brothers entered upon the land under their deed from Martha, and the plaintiff corporation, under its deed from them, cоntinued in possession. On August 21, 1899, Martha C., the widow, being duly qualified as guardian of her children, brought ejectment in their name against the Smith Brothers and one Pres-
No dower has ever been admeasured or assigned to Mrs. Phillips or to any person representing her dower estate; nor has any proceeding been had to set off the homestead to the widow or children, unless that was the effeсt of the ejectment determined in this court in 1902.
On August 24, 1899, Mrs. Phillips brought suit in equity to cancel her deed to the Smith Brothers, which was dismissed at the following October term.
The judgment was for the defendants on the ejectment issue, from which the plaintiff has prosecuted this appeal. The court also, by the same judgment, found the issue tendered by the cross petition of Mrs. Phillips for the plaintiff, and refused the equitable relief asked, from which she has appealed.
These appeals have been separately docketed and argued in this court and are therefore separately considered.
I. The only question arising upon this appeal is whether by the deed of Mrs. Phillips to the Smith brothers, dated August 8, 1898, and their deed to the plaintiff corporation, the latter had, on August 16, 1917, the date of the beginning of this action, any possessory interest in the land, which it might recover thereby. The converse of the same proposition is whether, but for that conveyance, Mrs. Phillips, the grantor, would now have any possessory interest in the land recoverable in any form of action she might bring.
The land was the homestead of her deceased husband. In 1895 she and her six children were, by his death, left on the land, and it was then their family homestead. By virtuе of this statute a freehold estate to the whole immediately vested in her under the Home-
The appellant‘s sole claim оf title is founded upon the deed from the widow made in April, 1898, purporting to convey her life interest. We will assume that through this deed it became clothed with all her interest in the homestead, and her alternative right of dower should she re-marry, and also, in that event, her right to quarantine until dower should be admeasured and assigned to her. [Chrisman v. Linderman, 202 Mo. 605.] This deed gave, so far as she was concerned, an immediate possessory right jointly with her children, and immediately upon its execution the grantees made an arrangement with her by which she not only vacated the homestead herself, but took her children with her to a farm in New Madrid County owned by the grantees, who entered upon the homestead themselves, and remained in exclusive possession thereof by themselves, their grantee the plaintiff corporation, and its tenant until ousted by the children in pursuance of the judgment of this court in Phillips v. Presson, 172 Mo. 24. It thus happened that on August 8, 1903, while the minor children were, by their mother duly qualified as their guardian, in possession, the homestead title was extinguished by the marriage of Mrs. Phillips. The question thus presented is whether this plaintiff, upon the title acquired through the deed of Mrs. Phillips to the Smith brothers, being out of possession, are now entitled to recover the possessiоn of the land or any interest therein in this suit. It does not claim the homestead interest vested in Mrs. Phillips by the death of her husband, but plants itself upon the proposition that by her re-marriage in 1903 she would, but for her
In these cases it was held, in substance, that notwithstanding the fact that by the provisions of the Homestead Act of 1895 the widow might forfeit her homestead by re-marriage, her rights of quarantine and dower remained unaffected by the intervention of the homestead estate. In the Jordan Case we held that the assignment of the homestead under the Act of 1895 “carried with it the primary right of possession, so that if the homestead exceeded in extent the amount of land to which she would be entitled as dower in the absence of a homestead right, nothing was left to be assigned as dower unless and until a subsequent marriage should divest her homestead estate with its right to the possession of the whole” (p. 137). In that case the heirs had, after the death of the husband and before thе re-marriage of the widow, brought a suit in partition to which she was made a party, and in which the homestead was assigned to her to an extent greater than the amount to which, upon her subsequent re-marriage, she was entitled as dower. After her re-marriage the heirs, who were children and grandchildren of the deceased husband, entered upon the homestead, deforcing her, as she alleged, of her dower, and the action then before us was instituted to recover it out of the land included in the homestead and to have damages for the deforcement. In sustaining her right to the remedy, we alsо held that as a party to the partition she had been entitled to have her interest ascertained and declared by the court the same as would any other party to the proceeding having a contingent interest that might at sometime develop into a possessory right, and her homestead having been already set out in the partition suit and adjudicated to be greater in extent than her dower she was entitled by statute to recover it when de-
II. The law relating to the transmission of the homestead of a deceased housekeeper or head of a family for a long time previous to 1895 was embodied in
“If any such housekeeper or head of a family shall die, leaving a widow or any minor children, his homestead to the value aforesaid shall pass to and vest in such widow or children, or if there be both, to such widow and children, and shall continue for their benefit without being subject to the payment of the debts of the deceased, unless legally charged thereon in his lifetime, until the youngest child shall attain its legal majority, and until the death of such widow; and such homestead shall, upon the death of such housekeeper or head of a family, be limited to that period.”
The most striking feature of this section lies in its indefiniteness as to the estate of the children of an intestate homesteader succeeding the death of the widow who naturally becomes the head of the family by his death. In the absence of statutory provisions on that subject the children, irresрective of their age, would take the entire
This amendment was not an inadvertence, but exhibits a deliberate purpose, in well chosen words, to limit the estate of minor children to the joint right оf occupation with the widow who has become the natural head of the family, and at her death or re-marriage to pass it by descent as if no homestead law existed.
By the operation of this amendment the homestead estate was extinguished by the remarriage of the widow in 1903 and the six children, or their assigns, were clothed with the entire estate of their ancestor, subject to the dower estate of his erstwhile widow held by plaintiff through the conveyance from her to the Smith brothers, whose right, as well as the right of the plaintiff corporation, is only co-extensive with hers. The question is whether the plaintiff in that capacity may maintain a suit for the recovery of her dower in the premises, notwithstanding the provisions of
III. In the recent case of McFarland v. McFarland, 278 Mo. 1, l. c. 12, we said that this statute “exhibits the intention to limit the quarantine of the widow to ten years and such further time as is nеcessary to perfect the judicial assignment of her dower, and also to put an end to the uncertainty which hangs over every title in which a deed appears which does not contain a release of dower.” This evident intention affords valuable aid in its application to the facts of each particular case involving its application. Since its enactment in 1887, legislative changes have been made affecting the recovery of dower which present questions not within the contemplation of the Legislature at that time, and it may become the duty of the court to determine whether they come within the reason or the enactment and call for its remedial application.
The section quoted requires actions for the recovery of dower to be commenced within ten years after the death of the husband under whom it is claimed. After its enactment, and in 1895, another act was passed by which the widow who remarried after the death of the husband under whom she claimed and enjoyed a homestead forfeited it, and was remitted to her action for dower in the same premises. This leads us necessarily to inquire as to the effect, if any, of the special limitation imposed by the Act of 1887 as finаlly incorporated, with amendment, in
In Investment Co. v. Curry, 264 Mo. 483, this court held directly that
In Jordan v. Rudluff, supra, reported in the same vоlume, we held with equal distinctness that the possession of the homestead by the widow and minor children under the provisions of the Act of 1895, was equivalent to the enjoyment by the widow of her dower in the lands of her husband where the homestead exceeded in extent the dower to which she would have been entitled but for the existence of the homestead right. This decision proceeded upon the principle that upon the extinguishment of the homestead by the marriage of the widow her right arose to have her dower in all the lands assigned out of the lands which she had theretofore possessed by her right of homestead, the entire homestead, subject to her dower, having descended to the heirs under the provisions of the Act of 1895. It was upon her death or remarriage that the act devolved the title upon the heirs of the husband. [
This subject was before us in McFarland v. McFarland, supra. In that case the widow upon the death of the husband made an arrangement with the heirs by which the lands of the deceased husband wеre to be held and managed for the benefit of all, she receiving one-third of the value of the rents and profits annually. This arrangement was carried out for ten years, at the end of which the heirs refused to recognize her right under the agreement by paying her the agreed share of the rentals. We held that the heirs were estopped from
We hold upon the authority of these cases construing the Act of 1895 from which we have quoted, that the homestead created and vested in the widow and minor children of the deceased Phillips ceased as to all of them upon the re-marriage of the widow; that thereupon and thereafter the children were in possession by right of inheritance from thеir father and not under the Homestead Act, and that the right then accrued to the widow or her assignee to sue for and have her dower in the same lands admeasured and assigned to her. It only remains to determine whether the plaintiff as such assignee has lost this right by lapse of time under the provisions of this or any other statute of limitations of this State.
IV.
V. In this State the right of quarantine depends upon the provisions of
It follows that the judgment of the Circuit Court for Mississippi County denying the plaintiff the relief asked in its petition is right, and it is therefore affirmed. Ragland and Small, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion of
BROWN, C.
, is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur; James T. Blair, J., in the result.