delivered the opinion of the court.
The learned counsel who argued this case have discussed very elaborately the question whether the devise to Anthony Shackelford is to be considered an estate-tail, which, under the laws then in force, was converted into a fee, or whether it is to be considered a fee simple estate, defeasible upon the said Shackelford’s dying
Tbe testator here having died after 1st of January, 1820, and tbe codicil having been executed also subsequent to that date, tbe will is to be governed by tbe provisions of the statutes then in force. These provisions may be found in tbe 25th and 26th sections of
Under the second assignment of error, it is claimed that whether the devise to Anthony Shackelford creates an estate-tail converted into a fee or a fee simple estate, defeasible upon a failure of issue, in either case, it is such an estate as confers upon the wife of the devisee, Anthony Shackelford, a right of dower in the lands in controversy, according to the decisions of this court in Jones & wife v. Hughes,
In the cases just cited and relied upon by defendant, the wife had not relinquished her dower, and having-survived her husband, asserted in her own behalf her right of dower. In the case before us, she united with her husband in the deed to the defendant, who seeks In her name to recover or hold the dower relinquished by her. A moment’s reflection will be sufficient to show that the claim cannot be sustained. During the life of the husband the wife has no estate or interest in his lands. She has a mere contingent right of dower which may be the subject of a conveyance or relinquishment under the statute. It may also constitute a valuable consideration for a post-nuptial settlement, because it is in the nature of a contingent lien or incumbrance upon the realty. Beyond this, however, it is not even a right in action. "When the wife unites with her husband in conveying the property to a purchaser, the effect is not to vest in the latter the dower interest or any estate separate and distinct from that of the husband, hut simply to relinquish a contingent
But if it be conceded that the effect of the wife’s-relinquishment is to vest in the purchaser a distinct interest capable of being enforced, the concession would not at all help the defendant. The case presented would then be one of the union of the dower estate with that of the fee in one and the same person, and the result would be a merger of the less in the greater estate, and the consequent extinction of the less.
Nemo potest esse dominus et tenens is an universally recognized maxim. There is, says Chancellor Kent, an absolute incompatibility in a person filling at the same time the character of tenant and reversioner in one and the same estate. 4 Kent’s Com. 99; 1 Lomax Big. 13.
If, therefore, the defendant acquired the dower interest of the wife, he being the owner of the fee also, the dower estate is merged in the fee, and no longer exists. These considerations are conclusive against the claim of the defendant to set up in himself a dower interest after the termination of his title as purchaser.
The statute under which these proceedings are had provides that the plaintiff, if judgment is rendered for him, may elect to relinquish his estate in the premises to the defendant at the value ascertained by the jury, and the defendant shall henceforth hold all the estate
Tbe next error assigned is tbe action of the court in allowing the same jury which tried the case on its merits to assess the value of the land in controversy, and also to fix the amount of the rents and profits for which the defendant was liable. This objection is based upon the decision of this court in Goodwyn v. Myers,
Judgment affirmed.
