8 Gill 207 | Md. | 1849
delivered the opinion of this court.,
The appellant filed this bill on the 2nd November, 1841, claiming her proportion of the rents and profits of her husband’s estate, which descended to him from his grand-father, William Jacob, and which, it is charged, were received by his widow. Against her surviving executor the bill is filed. No person who can assign the dower is made a defendant, and the bill only asks that the rents and profits be decreed to her.
To this claim various objections have been made, and among the rest, that the appellant having assigned her right of dower to a third person, without having demanded her dower, she cannot claim, in equity, her share of the rents and profits. The bill was dismissed by the chancellor.
No doubt if the appellant had recovered her dower at law, she might afterwards have sued in equity for so much of the rents and profits as she was entitled to. So if a widow dies pending her suit for dower, a court of equity will allow rents and profits to her representatives. But if she, herself, consents to take dower, without receiving her proportion of rents and profits, she can never afterwards recover the latter. For this law, see Steiger vs. Hillen, 5 G. & J., 121.
At law, no one, it is presumed, would insist that she could recover her proportion of the rents and profits. If she cannot at law, how can she claim them in equity? ££ There have been doubts” says Maddox, (1st Chy. Practice, 242,)£ £as to the principle on which equity first interfered in cases of dower, in being a mere legal demand.” And all the writers seem to suppose that her title to equitable relief is owing to the difficulties under which the widow labors at law. Having thus possessed itself of jurisdiction in the case, chancery goes on to decree an account of rents and profits.
The right to rents and profits, or damages for withholding dower, is also a legal claim, being given by the Statute of Merton, and recoverable at law. And it is by no means clear, when chancery first undertook to decree the rents and profits, on what
A widow, framing her bill correctly, may demand in chancery, dower in any lands of which her husband was seized during coverture, provided she makes the demand of the person who is bound to assign that dower to her. But no such person is a party to this suit, and no such demand is made. All that she asks for is, that her sitare of the rents and profits he paid by the executor of the person who, she alleges, held the land until her death.
If, in this suit, chancery can decree rents and profits, later rents and profits maybe claimed in a subsecpient suit, and thus her right of dower will enable her, and those claiming under her, to treat the heir as a tenant.
It will not be affirmed that this case, and that of Steiger's Adm'r, vs. Hillen, (5 G & J.,) are precisely alike. It would be difficult, however, to decree rents and profits in this case, without seeming to question the correctness of that decision.
The complainant in this case neither asked for dower, nor. had established or obtained her dower elsewhere. It is possible that if she was to claim it, and, of course, made the person who had an interest in, and the means of contesting her right of dower, she might fail in establishing it. Surely rents and profitsought not to be decreed, while it is yet uncertain whether she ever had a right of dower.
In the case of Sleiger's Adm'r, vs. Hillen, this court said: “After the lapse of twenty-five years from the inception of title, a delay entirely unexplained, and without any claim whatever in the intermediate time being made, it would seem to be against policy and convenience to allow the commencement of a controversy for rents and profits.” In the case before us, there was an interval of more than thirty years between the death of the husband and this application. The husband of the complainant died in 1809, and this bill was not filed until 1841.
The complainant, it is true, according to the paper of admis
Every thing stated as above, in Steiger vs. Hillen, is equally 'true in this case, except it be, that there “the delay was entirely unexplained.” Here we are told, in the bill of complaint, “ that she (the complainant,) never was apprized of her rights till after the death of the said Jane Jacob.” Such allegations are very usual in bills, but do not seem, of themselves, to furnish sufficient excuse for unreasonable delay in the assertion of legal rights. Did it proceed from her ignorance of the right of a widow to dower in lands of which her husband was seized during the coverture? From her ignorance of the persons to whom she was to apply, in order to have dower assigned to herí Of such ignorance as this, if explicitly stated, she ■could not avail herself, because the great object in selecting chancery as the tribunal from which she is to obtain relief, is, that there she is supposed to be “able to ascertain the lands out of which she is dowable, and the persons against whom to bring her writ.” But the conveyance by her of her right of dower, shows that sh'e did not immediately file her bill, and the paper of admissions show's that she was seeking relief elsewhere.
Jane Jacob died in 1837, more than six years before the filing of the bill.
William Jacob, it is admitted, died seized in fee of the land. His widow, then, we have a right to suppose, was entitled to dower. It was not the fault of Jane Jacob, that the complainant, if entitled to it, did not obtain her dower. Complainant's husband, according to the paper of admissions, was entitled to an undivided third part of this land, and subsequently, upon the death of a sister, to an undivided moiety; the widow of Jacob, the whole time, and until her death, having a right of dower therein. The complainant, in her bill, states that she, herself, “after the death of her husband, intermarried with one John Kiddall, and that he died about the year 1816.” The rents and profits to which his wife was entitled, he was authorised to demand, and may have received, though the evidence
Upon the whole, this seems to be what the law pronounces to be a stale demand, a demand too recently set up, to be established in equity, even if there did not exist other objections to it, and we do not think that the chancellor erred in dismissing the bill.
DECREE AFFIRMED.