8 Barb. 618 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1850
On the 1st day of April, 1848, the defendant, Elizabeth Nanny, was and yet is the wife of the defendant, William Nanny, who at that time was the owner in fee of a farm of land in Warwick, in the county of Orange. On that day she joined her husband in a mortgage to Francis G. Den-ton, the plaintiff in this cause, to secure the payment of the sum of one thousand dollars, money borrowed, payable one year from the date, with the interest. - The mortgage contained the
The 165th section of the act, (2 R. S. 119,) in regard to proceedings upon bills of foreclosure, provides that the proceeds of any sale made under the decree of the court of chancery shall be applied to the discharge of the debt adjudged by such court to be due, and of the costs awarded. And if there shall be any surplus, it shall be brought into court for the use of the defendants, or of the persons who may be entitled thereto, subject to the order of the court. The money is, therefore, by authority of this statute, in the custody of the court, for the use of the defendants or such persons as may be entitled thereto. The' judgment creditors claim that their lien upon the land, which has been divested by the sale, follows and attaches to the surplus proceeds in court, and the wife, whose contingent interest in the lands has been divested, in like manner, also claims a lien upon the surplus, which, although contingent, is entitled to protection and preservation by the court.
“Dower is a title inchoate, and not consummate until the death of the husband; but it is an interest which attaches on the land as soon as there is a concurrence of marriage and seisin.” (4 Kent's Com. 50.) Dower is highly favored in equity. And as was said by the master of the rolls (Sir Thomas
The authorities quoted lead to the following conclusions: 1st. That dower is an interest in land which attaches upon the concurrence of marriage and seisin. 2d. That the equity of redemption in mortgaged premises, before entry or foreclosure, is equivalent to the estate in fee, descendible by inheritance, devisable by will, and alienable by deed. 3d. That a widow is entitled to dower in an equity of redemption, as well when the mortgage was executed before marriage as when it was executed by the husband and wife during coverture. 4th. That a widow, as against the mortgagee and those claiming under him, is entitled in equity to redeem upon payment
If the wife is a necessary party to a foreclosure suit, in order to discharge the estate in the hands of a purchaser under the decree from her right to redeem, she becomes so because she has a valid subsisting legal interest in the subject matter of the suit, which the court is bound to protect. Judge Story, in his treatise upon Equity Pleadings, remarks, “ that courts of equity adopt two leading principles for determining the proper parties to a suit. One of them is a principle admitted in all courts, upon questions affecting the suitor’s person and liberty, as well as his property. Namely, that the rights of no man shall be finally decided in a court of justice unless he himself be present, or at least until he has had a full opportunity to appear and vindicate his rights. The other is, that when a decision is made upon any particular subject matter, the rights of all persons whose interests are immediately connected with that decision, and affected by it, shall be provided for as far as reasonably may be.” (Story's Eq. Pl. 73.) Now it is impossible to say that the interests of a married woman who unites with her husband in a mortgage to secure his debt, and who, if she survives him, will be entitled to dower in the estate, after the payment of the debt, is not connected with or affected by proceedings which aim to deprive her of that right? Nor is it possible to say that such proceedings, when consummated, will not affect her rights in
Land has been sold in which the wife had a legal interest which was not required to pay the mortgage debt. And upon the principle of equitable conversion, the proceeds, so far as it respects her, must still be regarded as real estate. The claim of the judgment creditors rests upon the same foundation. Their interest in the land, like the interest of the wife, has been divested by the sale under the decree, and their liens attach in equity upon the proceeds of the land unnecessarily sold, in the same order of priority as they existed upon the land before sale. Where the lands of a testator have been sold for the payment of his debts, on account of the deficiency of the personal estate, which is primarily liable, and personal assets afterwards come to the hands of the executors, which should have been devoted to that object, the devisees or owners of the land are exclusively entitled to such personal assets as a substitute' for the lands sold. And although such devisees or owners, as between their heirs and personal representatives, take such assets as money, and not as land, still they take them upon the equitable doc
The costs and expenses of this proceeding must be paid out of the fund in court, and two-thirds of the residue must be paid to the judgment creditors, (including what has been already paid,) in the order of priority mentioned in the report of the referee. The remaining third must be paid over to the treasurer of the county of Orange, and kept invested at interest during the joint lives of the defendants William Nanny and Elizabeth his wife, and the life of the defendant Elizabeth should she survive her husband; such interest during their joint lives to be subject to the future order of the court, on the application of any person having an interest. And the interest to accrue after the death of the defendant William Nanny, and during the lifetime of the defendant Elizabeth, should she survive him, to be paid to the said Elizabeth, as and for her dower in the said surplus moneys. And after the death of the said Elizabeth, the principal sum to be subject to the order of the court to be made after her death, upon the application of any person having an interest therein.