36 How. Pr. 337 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1867
The court, upon the trial, had nothing to do with the offer of judgment served by the
These offers were not evidence upon the trial. The offer appears as part of the evidence given upon the trial, and from the opinion of the judge its effect appears to have been determined by him. I think that determination correct. The offer was too indefinite a foundation for a judgment. A judgment for the recovery of five anda half acres of the land claimed, without further description, would have been void for uncertainty. Nothing could have been delivered to the plaintiff upon the execution issued upon such a judgment. The same remark applies to the offer, so far as the. damages are concerned. It should have been for a sum certain, so that, if accepted, judgment for the amount could have been at once entered.
From the finding of facts by the judge it would appear that the offer was for a sum certain, viz., eight dollars, but from the offer found in the case it was for the rents and -profits of the five and a half acres, from the death of the husband. The case leaves it uncertain whether damages were awarded to the plaintiff from the death of her husband, or from the- time dower was demanded by the plaintiff. If the former, it was error; if the latter, it was correct. The land of which dower was sought to be recovered was alienated by the plaintiff in 1843, long before his death; and in case of alienation by the husband in his lifetime, damages can only be recovered from the time of a demand of dower. The defendant’s counsel insists that in such a case no damages at all can be recovered; but the statute expressly gives damages from the demand. (3 R. S. 33, § 20.) From the printed portion of the case it would appear that the damages were' com
The more material question in the case is whether the judgment is correct in awarding the plaintiff one-third of the lands described in the complaint, or whether it should have provided for the recovery of land equivalent in value to one-third of the value of the land, as such value was at the time of the alienation by the husband, in 1843. The rule appears to be settled, in this state, that when lands are alienated during coverture, by the husband, his widow is entitled to be endowed of such lands amounting to one-third of the value at the time of alienation. Such was the rule before the ¡Revised Statutes. (Shaw v. White, 13 John. 179. Dorchester v. Coventry, 11 id. 509. Humphrey v. Phinney, 2 id. 484.) This rule was not changed by the revision. (Walker v. Schuyler, 10 Wend. 481.) The question is, whether, in such a case, in an action for the recovery of dower, the plaintiff is entitled to judgment for the recovery of one-third of the land, or whether the judgment should be for the recovery of land of the value of one-third of the value of the whole at the time of the alienation; and whether the judgment should settle the value at the time of alienation, and consequently the value to be recovered ? It is insisted by the plaintiff that although the rule may be as stated, yet the former is the judgment to be given, and that the commissioners to admeasure dower are to settle the question of the value at the time of alienation, and consequently the value of the land to be admeasured. I am not aware that this precise question has been settled, by any adjudication. The cases above cited from Johnson tend to show that in the former action of dower, previous to the ¡Revised Statutes, the extent of the widow’s right of recovery, in case of alien
The judgment should be affirmed.
Ordered accordingly.
Daniels, drover and Marvin, Justices.}