61 Mo. App. 230 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
—This is a suit for assignment of dower, the plaintiff, who is insane, suing by guardian. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that her husband verbally contracted with Theodocia Brown for the purchase of the lands in controversy for a price of $800; that, at the date of such oral contract, he paid $100 on account of the purchase money out of his own means, and that he subsequently obtained from the defendant the residue of the purchase money. The
This being all the evidence, the court, at plaintiff’s request, gave the following instruction: “Martha Jane Ragsdale, not having joined with her husband in executing a deed of trust to John O’Day to secure the purchase money which he advanced to pay Theodocia Brown for the forty acres of land, has not relinquished her dower in that tract of land, and is entitled to a dower estate of one third therein during her natural life.”
The court refused the following declaration of law asked by defendant: “The court declares the' law to be that, if the defendant agreed with Ragsdale to pay the purchase price of the forty acres of land bought of Theodocia Brown, and Mrs. Brown and her husband made the deed to Ragsdale so as to enable him to execute a deed of trust for the purchase money advanced by O’Day to Mrs. Brown, and that, simultaneously with the execution of the deed_ by Mrs. Brown and her husband to Ragsdale, Ragsdale executed a deed of trust to O’Day for the $800 purchase money paid by O’Day to Mrs. Brown, then and in that case Mrs. Brown is
The declarations of law thus given and refused indicate that the court misconceived the law applicable to the facts. Under the uncontroverted evidence, if no deed of trust had ever been executed, the plaintiff’s husband would have held the premises for the benefit of O’Day by way of a resulting trust. Dyer v. Dyer, 2 Cox, 92; 1 White & Tudor’s Leading Cases in Equity [4 Am. Ed.], 314. The fact that a deed of trust was executed for the purchase money, in which the plaintiff did not join, could not change the matter. This precise point was decided in Clark v. Munroe, 14 Mass. 351. The cases of Fontaine v. Boatmen’s Savings Institution, 57 Mo. 552, and Demeter v. Wilcox, 115 Mo. 634, show by analogy that our courts take the same view of the matter. In fact, we are not aware that it has ever been seriously controverted that a purchase money mortgage takes precedence of the widow’s dower as well as other liens. It is in the nature of a vendor’s lien in favor of the party advancing the purchase money. Moring v. Dickerson, 85 N. C. 466; Kaiser v. Lembeck, 55 Iowa, 244; Jones v. Parker, 51 Wis. 218.
It results that the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.