2 Edw. Ch. 592 | New York Court of Chancery | 1836
According to the condition of the bond and mortgage, the defendant, Jesse West, was to pay the interest of six per cent, on two thousand dollars during the joint lives of the intestate John Edwards and his wife Bridget: and upon the death of the wife or the extinguishment of her right of dower, the principal sum was to be paid. At the death of the intestate, it appears, less than one hundred dollars was in arrear for interest, so that his personal representative, who has filed this bill, could not sustain it on the ground of such arrears being due—the sum being below the jurisdiction of this court.
The first question then is: whether any thing more was due or could be demanded when the bill was filed l I think it is very evident, from the recitals and the condition in the bond, that both the parties to the instrument understood or, at least, supposed that the wife of the obligee had an inchoate right of dower, which could only be extinguished by her death or by some future valid act of release or election on her part. Hence it was that, by way of indemnity to the obligor against such claim or right of dower, the interest on the debt secured by the bond and mortgage was to cease the moment such right became perfect by the death of the husband—and the principal sum was not to be demanded or be considered payable until either the death of the wife or some voluntary act of hers should put an end to her dower. The condition upon which the principal sum was, to become payable, according to the terms and obvious meaning of the bond and mortgage, seem to admit that the wife would certainly be entitled to dower in the event of her surviving her husband; and it would be. contrary to this
But it is contended, on the part of the complainant, that his intestate, the husband, was mistaken on the subject of his wife’s right to dower, after what had "passed between them; that she was equitably barred of all such claim and right; and, as all that the defendant, West, can reasonably ask is to be indemnified and protected, it is now competent for this court so to decree against the wife who, for that purpose is made a party to the suit; and to require the morgagor either to pay the money or suffer the property to be sold.
This brings us then to the question, whether the wife is barred in equity ; for it is conceded that nothing has occurred to work a legal forfeiture or extinguishment of her right?
The grounds assumed for the purpose of producing this effect in equity are, that by the articles of separation in tpe first instance between the husband and wife, which are stated in the pleadings, she agreed to accept an annuity of two hundred and fifty dollars for life, in full satisfaction for her support and maintenance and of all right and claim of dower in her husband’s estate ; and that subsequently, by a decree of the Court of Chancery, upon a bill filed by her against her husband for a divorce a mensa et thoro, she accepted a gross sum of eleven hundred dollars “ in lieu of alimony and of all claims or charges whatever upon her husband for her separate support and maintenance for ever.”
The articles of separation referred to could only operate in equity, not at law, to deprive or bar her dower; and in equity, under the circumstances disclosed by the answer or Mrs. Edwards, the articles cannot be permitted to have this effect. She shows they were violated by her husband’s refusal or neglect to pay the annuity and to afford her the maintenance which was to be in satisfaction of her claims upon him and his estate. His refusal drove her to the necessity of filing her bill for a judicial separation and alimony ; and a decree having been made, it is upon the effect of this decree solely that the question depends' whether she is barred of dower ?
There is nothing in the decree directly showing that the
I am convinced this is the correct view to be taken of the -case. In England, where both for cruelty and adultery the divorce is only a rriensa et thoro and where the wife, when she is the injured party, is allowed permanent alimony, as it is called, I cannot find that it has ever been suggested, in any reported case or by any elementary writer, that the effect of such an. allowance is to deprive the wife of any of
I know of no way by which a feme covert can be barred of her dower, except by her uniting with her husband in a deed for the purpose, duly acknowledged according to statute, or by convicting her of adultery, which works a forfeiture, or upon the doctrine of election, by her accepting a jointure or some other provision in lieu of dower. None of these have occurred in the present case.
It may be asked, what becomes of the wife’s right of dower where she proceeds against- her husband and obtains a divorce a vinculo matrimonii ? The answer is obvious. In such a case, all right to dower is gone : not, however, because she has obtained an allowance of permanent alimony or any thing in lieu of alimony, if either should be decreed, but because of the dissolution of the marriage which puts an end to the relation of husband and wife; and, by necessary consequence, to the right of dower—since it is essential to dower that the marriage should subsist at the death of the husband. A woman cannot have dower who is not the wife of a man in whose lands she claims it at the time of his death.
As the defendant, Mrs. Edwards, was the lawful wife of the complainant’s testator at the time of his death, though -living in a state of separation by the decree of this court, ■she was clearly entitled to dower; and I am of opinion nothing has been done to extinguish or deprive her of it. The