11 Mo. App. 304 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit' in equity by a widow to have dower set apart to her out of land alleged to have been purchased by her husband during the existence of their marriage relation, but with such a vestiture of the legal title as to defraud her of her right of dower therein.
The case was before this court in 4 Mo. App. 419, and it was there held, that the plaintiff’s election to take a child’s part of the lands whereof her husband stood seised in fee at the time of his death, did not deprive her of her right to maintain this action. We are now asked to review that decision. This we decline to do.
The facts on which the plaintiff claims to recover are these: She married William Crecelius iu 1860. At that time he was a widower with three children living, two sons and the defendant Catherine Christine. The sons successively died during his lifetime. He had by the plaintiff one daughter. He and the plaintiff lived together about a year and a half, and then separated and lived separately until his death. In 1872, while he and the plaintiff were thus living separate, he purchased a lot of ground in St. Louis, and took title as follows: A life estate to himself and remainder to his daughter Catherine Christine, her heirs and assigns forever.
These facts undoubtedly show an intention on the part of Crecelius to defraud his wife of her dower. A husband cannot make such a devise of his land as will defeat his wife’s right of dower therein. Nor can he make a deed of his land which will have this effect, unless she joins formally, therein as required by the statute. Eev. Stats., sect. 2197. Nor will her right of dower be prejudiced by any judgment or decree confessed by him, or by any laches, default, covin, or crime committed by him. Ibid. What he cannot do directly, he cannot do indirectly. Obviously he cannot be permitted to accomplish this result by taking a conveyance of land purchased with his own money during the coverture, to himself for life, with remainder to one of his children. It has always been held, so far as we know, whether as respects dower in lands, the widow’s or children’s pars rationalis bonorwm under the custom of London, a right conferred by deed to a portion of the estate of which the covenantor died seised, or the widow’s dower in personalty under our statutes, that any gift, conveyance, or vestiture of the legal title to real or personal property, made by a husband, father, or covenantor in a deed, with the design of enjoying the use of the property during his life and passing it upon his death to a voluntary donee, discharged of such right of the wife, child, or
The case before us falls clearly within this rule. The judgment is affirmed.