81 Mo. 145 | Mo. | 1883
This was a suit for dower, in which the plaintiff alleged she was married to Jas L. Childress in May, 1851. That he died in 1879 seized of certain real estate, describing it, in which she had never relinquished her dower; that she and her co-plaintiff were lawfully married; and that the defendants were in possession of the land, and prays that her dower may be assigned.
Defendants answered, alleging that plaintiff is not
The evidence very clearly tended to prove that Childress left his wife in 1862; that she never heard from him again until after she married Payne; that one George Bradbury, a brother-in-law of Childress, informed her that Childress had been killed, and detailed the circumstances; that he told Wm. T. Payne the same thing; that Eliza Payne represented herself to William T. Payne as a widow; that understanding Childress to be dead, from rumor, and from statements by his relatives, plaintiff's married in January, 1864, and lived together as man and wife ; that they kept, and took care of two of Childress’ children, born of the marriage between him and Eliza Payne; that in 1867 they heard Childress was living in Texas; that at that time they had had three children since their marriage; that that was the first they heard that Childress was alive, It was
“ That if the court, sitting as a jury, believe that about the month of January, 1862, Jas. L. Childress, then the husband of plaintiff, went away from home and joined the Confederate States army, and that afterward, when said plaintiffs were married, they had good reason to believe from information before that day received, that said James L. Childress had died, or had been killed whilst so in said Confederate States army; and that said plaintiffs have, since their said marriage, lived and cohabited together as husband and wife, and had children born to them, and have cared for and supported a child or children born of the marriage of said James L. Childress, and said plaintiff, Eliza; and that said James L. Childress, never after said marriage of plaintiffs, visited nor returned to said plaintiff, Eliza, or in any manner sought to claim her as his wife, then the court will decree to plaintiff, Eliza Payne, dower in and to one third in value of the lands described in the petition of plaintiffs for and during her natural life, although the court may find from the evidence, that said plaintiff, Eliza Payne, did, subsequent to her said marriage to her co-plaintiff, learn that said James L. Childress was still alive,” against the objection of the defendants, and refused counter propositions of law for the defendants.
I. The facts are well settled, and the whole case turns
All the cases I have been able to find, hold the true construction of similar statutes to be, that if a woman leave her husband with her own free will, and afterward live in adultery, her dower is forfeit. It is said in II Crabb on Real Property, 173: “The wife’s leaving her husband, must have been her own voluntary act, to create a forfeiture of dower under the statute; therefore, when a woman was kept from her husband by the contrivance of his relatives, and induced to marry another man under the assurance that her husband was dead, this was held not to be an elopement which barred her of her dower.” Cogswell v. Tibbetts, 3 N. H. 41. In this last cited ease, it is held that, by the common law, a woman did not forfeit her dower by committing adultery, even when she eloped with the adulterer, but that under the statute ("Westminster) there could be no forfeit
The judgment below is affirmed.