39 Iowa 28 | Iowa | 1874
On the trial of the cause before the court, it was found that on the 25th day of Feb uary, 1867, Milton E. Mead was owner in fee of the south half of the northwest quarter, and the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 15, in township 89, range 5, west,in Delaware county; that on that day the said Milton E. Mead and one C. W. Mead each borrowed of Mathews & Cornwell the sum of $400, and executed their joint and several promissory note therefor, payable two years thereafter with interest; that to secure the payment of said note, the said Milton E. Mead and Eosetta F. Mead, his then wife, together with O. W. Mead and wife, executed and delivered their mortgage deed conveying the above described real estate of the said Milton E. Mead, together with'certain real estate therein described belonging to the said C. W. Mead, in which mortgage said Eosetta relinquished her right of dower to said lands belonging to her husband; that the $400, borrowed by said Milton E. Mead, was expended in payment óf part of the land mortgaged; that after the execution of the note and mortgage said Eosetta F. Mead, wife of said Milton, died, leaving surviving her said Milton E. Mead and three minor children; that afterwards, on the 19th day of September, 1867, said Milton E. Mead, intermarried with the plaintiff herein. On the 17th day of February, 1869, said Milton E. Mead and C. W. Mead each borrowed of said Mathews & Cornwell the further sum of' $600, making their n >te for $1200, payable February 17,’ 1870, with interest. To secure the payment of this note, the said Milton E. Mead and his then wife, the plaintiff, and the said O. W. Mead executed another mortgage upon all of the lands covered by the first mortgage, except forty acres, and upon certain lands belonging to said C. W. Mead; that Milton E. Mead died, September 25, 1870, leaving the plaintiff, his widow, and the said minor children, his heirs at law. The notes and mortgages have not been filed against the estate, but on the 14th. day of April, 1873, C. W. Mead, the duly appointed adminis- • trator of the estate, commenced proceedings in the Circuit Court, asking to be authorized to sell said mortgaged lands or so much thereof as was necessary to pay off the one-half of
The statute respecting the right of dower is as follows: “ One third in value of all the real estate in which the husband at any time during the marriage had a legal or equitable interest, which has not been sold oh execution or other judicial sale, to which the wife has made no relinquishment of her right, shall, under the direction of the court, be set apart by the executor, administrator, or heir, as her property in fee simple on the death of her husband, if she survive him.” Sec. 1, of Chap. 151, Laws of 1862.
It is urged that there was no authority to make the order of sale because the claims had not been formally filed against the estate. When the administrator made application to the court, for authority to sell the land for the payment of these mortgages, he thereby recognized and admitted the claims as being just claims against the estate, whether they were formally filed or not; but even if this filing was - necessary, the objection cannot be urged now by a party who had an opportunity, as we must presume the plaintiff had, to object before the order of sale was made.
The judgment of the Circuit Court will be
Affirmed.