14 Fla. 369 | Fla. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In the year A. D. 1866, Caroline Milton, the widow of the late John Milton, filed her petition in the probate court of Jackson county, claiming dower in seventeen hundred and sixty acres of land of lier late husband in said county, The court assigned to her four hundred acres of this land as her dower. Since these proceedings, Mrs. Milton has ascertained that she was entitled to dower in other lands of her late husband in the same county. In November, A. I)..
The executor answered the petition, admitting the claim for dower in the newly discovered lands; objecting to the opening of the first assignment, and insisting that there is no right except as to the lands in which dower has not been assigned.
Upon the petition and answer, the court ordered an assignment of dower in the netvdy discovered lands and denied the prayer so far as it sought to open the previous assignment.
Prom this order this appeal is prosecuted. The error assigned is the refusal of the Chancellor to open the previous assignment and to carve out of the seventeen hundred and sixty acres an additional amount of land equal in value to her interest in the lands which subsequently came to her knowledge. The want of knowledge of the existence of her right in the lands discovered after the assignment, at the date of the assignment, is the ground upon which relief is sought in this ease. Had the widow known of the existence ©f these lands at the date of the first assignment, it was no doubt within the power of a Court of Chancery to have allotted in one tract an amount of land equal to her interest in the whole. Can this be done how, against the consent of the executor, is the question presented for our consideration.
It certainly cannot be done by a petition under the sum
As against the executor, who is the representative of these trusts and rights, she cannot now have an admeasurement of dower based upon a dower interest in this portion of the land, because at her own request a court of competent ju-. risdietion has divested her of all interest and she has no estate therein. There was no mistake, such as a court 0£ equity would correct. Within the meaning of the authorities, there was in fact no mistake. There was simple ignorance of a right of dower in additional and other lands. This right of which she was before ignorant can now be enforced without affecting this previous judgment of the court
The judgment is affirmed.