153 Va. 304 | Va. | 1929
delivered the opinion of the court.
S. B. Poteet owned, at the time of his death, two boundaries of land, one known as “The Home Place” and the other as “The Powell’s River and Wallen’s Creek Farms.” The Federal Land Bank of Baltimore had a deed of trust or mortgage against “The Home Place” for $10,000.00, but this sum had been reduced to $8,375.25 as of May 1, 1927. The Potomac Joint Stock Land Bank' held a deed of trust or mortgage against “The Powell’s River and Wallen’s Creek Farms” for $12,000.00, but it had been reduced some, and as of February, 1927, amounted to $11,614.16. He owned, in addition, about $20,000.00 worth of personalty, while his total indebtedness, including the lien debts mentioned, was something over $76,000.00.
The trial court was of opinion that Mrs. Poteet was entitled to dower in the surplus, payable out of the surplus, and not to dower in the whole, payable out of the surplus; that is to say, it gave her dower in $12,325.00 only.
Both of these trust deed debts were made after marriage. They were made to secure the husband’s debts and in them the wife joined. The husband, as we have seen, is dead and the foreclosure or its equivalent took place, not in his life time, but during the administration of his estate.
In such circumstances, it is sometimes held that the-release of dower enures to the benefit of the mortgagee and his privies only, but not to subsequent creditors. The leading case in support of this doctrine of surety-ship is Mandel v. McClure, 46 Ohio St. 407, 22 N. E. 290, 5 L. R. A. 519, 15 Am. St. Rep. 627. It alsa prevails in North Carolina. Askew v. Askew, 103 N. C. 285, 9 S. E. 646. In some states, as in Indiana for
Commercial Banking & T. Co. v. Dudley, 76 W. Va. 332, 86 S. E. 307, 12 A. L. R. 1334, seems to be an exception to this general rule. The court there held that the widow was dowable in the whole, and in reaching that conclusion said it was not necessary to invoke the doctrine of suretyship. It is criticized in 12 A. L. R., at page 1357, whose editor holds that the theory of suretyship was really adopted although disclaimed by the court. If this be not so, then it seems to stand alone.
. Whatever may be the reasons governing those cases which give to the widow dower in the gross estate, they are opposed to the general weight of authority. Hoy v. Varner, 100 Va. 600, 42 S. E. 690, quotes with approval this statement of the status of the law: “The general rule is that when the husband had mortgaged his lands before coverture, or the wife during coverture has united with him in mortgaging land belonging to him, and such land is sold under the mortgage, the widow, if the sale takes place after the death of the husband, and the wife, if the sale takes place before his death, in jurisdictions where the inchoate right of dower is regarded as such an interest as must be protected, is entitled to have her dower assigned or reserved from the surplus only, after paying the whole amount of the mortgage indebtedness. The dower interest should be confined to one-third of the value of the excess of the land, after deducting the entire amount owing upon the mortgage. 10 Amer. and Eng. Enc. L. (2d ed.) 169; 1 Scrib. Dower, 492.” 12 A. L. R. 1358.
Prof. Graves, in Notes on Real Property, section
Wilson v. Branch, 77 Va. 65, 46 Am. Rep. 709, and the minority opinion in Land v. Shipp, 100 Va. 337, .41 S. E. 742, support the widow’s claim for full dower, but Prof. Graves, in commenting upon the Wilson Case, said: “It is respectfully submitted that this ease is contrary to authority and unsound in principle.”
In Minor on Real Property, Vol. 1, section 287, it is said: “The terms of this statute ('section 2269. Code 1887; section 5119, Code 1919) leave it in doubt whether the wife, in taking her dower ‘in the surplus’ is to take out of the surplus only one-third of the surplus or is to take one-third of the value of the whole tract subjected to the lien. But it is now settled in Virginia that the dower is to consist of one-fchird of the surplus only, not only under the statute where the land is sold under the lien = in the husband’s lifetime, but also independently of statute where the land is sold under the lien after the husband’s death.”
Such uncertainty as may have theretofore existed was put at rest by Hoy v. Varner, supra. It is true that case, in the main, dealt with a contest between the widow and the heirs, but certainly no one would claim that the heirs were entitled to a consideration not extended to creditors. What was decided in Hoy v. Varner? Judge Burks was then State Reporter. This is what he thought was there held:
“If a wife unite with her husband in the conveyance of his land in trust to secure the payment of his debts, and the deed is duly acknowledged and recorded, upon the death of her husband before any sale under the
This is Prof. Lile’s comment on that case (8 Va. Law Reg. 675): “The excellent opinion in this case sets at rest a much debated question, and clears up for us, and for lawyers who shall come after us, the hazy .notion generally prevailing in the profession as to the precise nature of a wife’s contingent dower right, and the relation she occupies in the transaction when she unites with the husband in the execution of a deed of trust or mortgage on his real estate. The court decides, on what appears to be the soundest principles, that when a wife thus unites in the execution of a lien on the husband’s lands, she does not, on foreclosure of the lien, occupy the position of a surety, either in person or estate, and therefore has no equity of exoneration; that a contingent dower interest is not an estate distinct from the husband’s estate; and hence that when she so unites with him she conveys nothing but merely releases a contingent claim. The application of these principles leads logically to the conclusion reached, namely, that where a deed.of trust, executed by the husband and wife on his lands, is foreclosed after the husband’s death, the wife is entitled, as her dower, only to one-third of the surplus for life. In Land v. Shipp, 100 Va. 337, 41 S. E. 742, 6 Va. Law Reg. 170, the same measure of dower was held
“These two cases make it clear that whether the lien is foreclosed in the husband’s lifetime, or after his death, the measure of the widow’s dower is the same, namely, one-third of the surplus, and not dower in the whole but to be paid out of the surplus, as seems to have been held in Wilson v. Branch, 77 Va. 65 [46 Am. Rep. 709], which case the court disapproves on this point.”
Hoy v. Varner fully supports these digests of that decision, all of the Virginia cases are reviewed and the question here raised was there settled. Indeed, Judge Harrison was of opinion that it had been settled by Land v. Shipp, supra, decided in the preceding June. Hoy v. Varner was decided in November. His dissenting opinion is addressed alone to the fact that the majority of his associates thought the widow was dowable in the surplus only. To this he could not assent.
When a wife unites with her husband in a mortgage on his land to secure his debt, her dower interest in the event of foreclosure attaches only to the equity of redemption. She is dowable in the surplus, payable out of the surplus, and this whether the land be sold, strictly speaking, to satisfy the mortgage, or is sold, subject to it in the settlement of an insolvent husband’s estate. In either event, general creditors take what the husband had which is the equity of redemption subject to the widow’s dower therein.
In so holding the trial court committed no error.
“In England the doctrine has been declared that a dowress, like an heir or devisee, has a right to have the personal estate of her husband applied so far as it will go in discharge of mortgages and other debts contracted by the husband, which are charges upon the land which she holds in dower. The English doctrine, however, has not been universally accepted in the United States. The weight of authority, independent of statutory enactment, is against the right of. a widow to have mortgages and other encumbrances satisfied from the personal estate of the husband in order to preserve her right of dower in her husband’s lands. There are, however, a number of jurisdictions in which the English rule has been followed. In other jurisdictions the rule is controlled to a certain extent by statute.” 19 C. J., page 489.
The right to such application of the personal estate is denied in the leading case of Hewitt v. Cox, 55 Ark. 225, 15 S. W. 1026, 1029, 17 S. W. 873, where the court said: “But it is contended that Mrs. Hewitt never released her dower to her husband, or to his administrator, or devisees, but only to the mortgagee as security for the payment of a single debt of the husband, for which she did not bind herself personally; and that therefore the personal assets of the estate of the husband, the principal, should be exhausted before that of the surety should be taken. The fallacy of this
In Daniel v. Leitch, 13 Gratt. (54 Va.) 195, the court ■ said: “At the death of John Daniel, his widow, the appellant, Mary Ann Daniel, had a right of dower in the said tract of land subject to the said deed of trust; in other words, in the equity of redemption. Heth v. Cocke and Wife, 1 Rand. [22 Va.] 344. The land being the primary fund for the payment of the debt secured by the deed of trust, she had no right to have it paid ■ out of the personal estate, even if that had not been, as it was, required for the payment of his other debts, to which it was wholly inadequate.”
It is true that in this case the debt was not personal to the hoisband; the land came to him already encumbered. Prof. Graves calls attention to the fact that a different conclusion by implication would there have been reached had the debt been personal and the estate solvent (Notes on Real Property, section 305); nor does that distinguished authority on the law of real property wholeheartedly agree with the reasoning -in Hewitt v. Cox, supra. In his opinion “the true view
S. B. Poteet, however, died insolvent. All of his estate is liable for his debts, save only the widow’s-dower in the surplus proceeds of the mortgaged land, and this is true whether the doctrine of suretyship be completely adopted or not. The cross-appeal must be sustained.
It follows from what has been said that the decree-appealed from must be affirmed, in so far as i t directs that Mrs. Poteet’s right to recover as dowress be limited to the equities of redemption, but is erroneous-in that it permits these equities to be increased by a
Affirmed in part; reversed in part.