20 Me. 242 | Me. | 1841
The opinion of the Court was by
It is provided by Statute, c. 41, § 6, “that the estate in which a widow shall have a right to claim dower by this act, is all such lands, tenements and hereditaments of which the husband was seized in fee, either in possession, reversion, or remainder, at any time during the marriage, except where such widow by her own consent may have been provided for by way of jointure prior to the marriage, or where she may have relinquished her right of dower by deed under her hand and seal.” In England, by the St. of 3 & 4 Will. 4, c. 105, .§> 4, the widow is not entitled to dower out of any lands conveyed by her husband during life or devised by his last will. And in several of the States the right has been restricted to lands of which the husband died seized. No such limitation exists here. In this case the husband was seized during the marriage as the statute requires. The seizin must be a rightful one; for if the husband be in under a title, which is defeated by an elder and better one, his widow is not entitled to dower. Litt. <§> 393, and Butler’s note, 170. Although the case states, that the tenant and those under whom she claims have held under a title different from that of the husband, it does not state, that it was a better one, or that it prevathed against that of the husband. The estate had been held by a title apparently adverse to that of the husband for more than twenty years before his death; and the counsel for the tenant contends, although the statute of limitations does not begin to run against the right of the widow until after the death of the husband, when the tenant claims under him, that it does operate as a bar when there has been a possession for so long a period under an adverse title. And he relies upon such a statement of the law in 2 Hill. Abr. c. 21, <§> 33, where it is said, “ where a husband conveys his land without the wife’s joining in the deed, the statute of limitations does not run against her till after his death. Otherwise it seems where an
Whether the action would not be barred by the statute of limitations, if it had not been brought within twenty years after the death of the husband, does not arise in this case. That question has been decided upon the statutes of other States. Barnard v. Edwards, 4 N. H. R. 107; Jones v. Powell, 6 Johns. Ch. 194.
It is said, that a jury would be at liberty to presume a release of dower, and that the Court should therefore do so on this agreed statement. As the tenant does not profess to hold under but against the title of the husband no conveyance from him can be presumed; and without it she could not during his life release her dower by our laws. And sufficient time had not elapsed before the commencement of the suit to authorise the presumption, that she had released since his death.