84 Md. 346 | Md. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiffs below are judgment creditors of the defendant, who is the widow of the late John S. Clayton, and as such widow she is entitled to dower in the real estate of her late husband. But it appears that her dower has never been actually assigned or set off to her, and it would, therefore, follow that she has not, at common law, any interest or estate in the lands of her husband until such assignment has been made. Previous to the assignment of dower her interest is a mere chose in action, nothing but a right by appropriate proceedings to compel the assignment to be made.” Freeman on Executions, sec. 185. So long, therefore, as the common law prevails the unassigned dower right cannot be taken in execution at law. It is contended,
■ In the early cases in England the jurisdiction here contended for, to subject choses in action to the claim of creditors by a creditor’s bill, was sustained, but generally upon the ground of fraud, trust, or for some other reason which it was conceded would entitle the creditor to invoke its aid. Thus Taylor v. Jones, 2 Atk. 600, lays down the doctrine that where a debtor has in fraud of his creditors assigned to trustees certain choses in action in trust for himself for life, and then over to his wife and children, a Court of Equity will favorably hear the application of such creditors, and decree such trust estate to be sold for the payment of their debts. And this was held to be so, notwithstanding such choses in action were not subject to levy and sale upon execution at law. Rex v. Marisal, 3 Atk. 192; Edgell v. Haywood, 3 Atk. 352; Horn v. Horn, Ambl. 79; Partridge v. Gopp, Ambl. 578; Smither v. Lewis, 1 Vern. 398. But 'even in cases like that of Taylor v. Jones, supra, and the others just cited, which would perhaps be now generally -conceded to be within the limits of equity jurisdiction because of the allegation and proof of fraud, it was subsequently held in England that creditors could get no relief in equity because they had no legal right which equity could enforce; Dundas v. Dutens, 1 Ves. Jr. 196; Grogan v. Grogan, 2 Ball & Beatty, 210. In the case last cited Lord Manners quoted Lord Thurlow as having said: “ The opinion in Horn v. Horn is so anomalous and unfounded that forty such opinions would not satisfy me. It would be preposterous and absurd to set aside an agree
The case of Davison v. Whittlesey, 1 MacArthur, 153 (D. C.), was much relied on by the plaintiffs. It was decided on the authority of Tompkins v. Fonda, supra, which having been based on the New York statute should have had no weight where, as in the District of Columbia, no such statute was in force. Nor are we satisfied to adopt the reasoning of the Court in Davison v. Whittlesey. After stating that at lazv the right to have dower assigned could not be reached, it is said: “ But in equity it is otherwise. The widow has no right in conscience to deprive her creditors of the benefit of her right of dower for the satisfaction of their claims by continuing in joint possession with the heirs and neglecting to ask for a formal assignment, which assignment if made, would enable the creditors to reach her dower by execution.” It must be remembered that in the case at bar, there is not only no fraud alleged by the plaintiff, but they have disclaimed any intention of charging bad faith or collusion between the defendant and the heirs at law who are in possession of the land in which she is entitled to have ,dower assigned to her. In the position she has assumed in this case, she is only standing upon her legal rights. It is conceded that at common law, aside from such statutes as
Much reliance was also placed upon the language used by Chancellor Bland in the case of Watkins v. Dorsey, 1 Bl. 531. To the same general effect also is Ager v. Murray, 105 U. S. 126, where it is said that it is within the general jurisdiction of a Court of Chancery to assist a judgment creditor to reach and apply to the payment of his debts, any property which by reason of its nature only, and not by reason of any positive rule exempting it from
Nor do we assent to this view that the mere abolition of the extraordinary remedies of outlawry and attachment of the person would confer jurisdiction on equity. Such a conclusion would be in conflict with reason, as well as with modern authority. It would certainly not seem to follow that if the law had always and consistently refused to give an execution against things in action, and had allowed only the extraordinary remedies just mentioned, that upon the destruction of the latter, the former would not only thereupon spring into existence, but become remedies appropriate for a Court of Equity. The contrary conclusion would, we think, be more reasonable, namely, that the Legislature having abolished execution against the person which was used for the purpose of getting satisfaction out of the debt- or’s effects which could not be reached by other executions, and having failed to provide any new remedy to take its place it was not intended there should be any. And so it has been held in Donavan v. Finn, 1 Hopkins Ch. Rep. 59 (N. Y.); Buford v. Buford, 1 Bibb, 305; Greene v. Keene, 14 R. I. 387, 397. “ Equity follows the law,” and as we have seen, a rule either of statute or common law is as potent in a Court of Equity as in a Court of law. 1 Story Eq. Jur., sec. 64. Whatever may, at one time, have been the vague and general rule as to the limits and extent of equity jurisdiction, it is now well settled that “ no Court of Chancery at this day would attempt to supply the defects of law by deciding contrary to its settled rules in any manner, to any extent, or under any circumstances, beyond the already settled principles of equity jurisprudence. 1 Pomeroy Eq. Jurisp. section 47.
It would seem to be reasonably clear from the authorities already cited and the discussion of them that, in the absence of a statute and in the absence of fraud or some other ground of equity jurisdiction, a Court of Equity has no power to subject the defendant’s unassigned right of dower to the payment of her debts. But this conclusion will, we think, be placed beyond doubt by a brief consideration of some of the adjudications of the highest Courts of other States. In the case of Maxon v. Gray, 14 R. I. 641, which was decided in 1885, the very question now before us was passed upon. That case, like this, was a bill in equity by judgment creditors for a decree for a sale of an unassigned right of dower, and in an able and elaborate opinion the Court came to the conclusion, after reviewing many of the previous cases, that equity had no jurisdiction. To the same effect Green v. Keene, Ib. 388. In Cresswell v. Smith, 2 Tenn. Ch. 416, it was held that chancery has no power to reach stocks or things in action, even in the hands of third persons unaffected with fraud or trust without the aid of a statute.
The plaintiffs having failed to bring their case within the limits of equity jurisdiction as established and practiced in this State, their bill must be dismissed. “ When a credit- or,” says Chancellor Sanford in Donavin v. Finn, supra, ‘ ‘ comes into this Court for relief he must come, not merely to obtain a decree or satisfaction of a judgment, but he must present facts which form a case for equity jurisdiction.” Such facts the creditors who filed the bill now before us have entirely failed to set forth, and we therefore agree with the learned Court below that the demurrer to the bill was properly sustained and the bill was properly dismissed.
Decree afirmed.