14 Mont. 325 | Mont. | 1894
This case involves a claim by plaintiff to a dower interest in certain lands situate in Helena, Lewis and Clarke county, in the possession of defendant, who claims to be the sole and exclusive owner thereof. On the trial of the action in the district court findings of fact were made, and thereon judgment was entered in favor of defendant, in effect adjudging that plaintiff' had made out no right of dower in the premises in question; and therefore adjudging defendant’s title quieted as against said claim of plaintiff. Plaintiff appealed from the judgment, insisting, in this court, that, according to •the findings of fact, the judgment should have been rendered in her favor, establishing her claim of dower in said premises.
In brief, the facts as presented by the findings are as follows: That plaintiff and George Rausch were married in Austria, August 28, 1847; that about five years thereafter George immigrated to America, where he was joined later by plaintiff, his wife; they lived together- in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, some time, and afterwards in Denver, then territory of Colorado,
While these events were transpiring in reference to the history of George Rausch, the plaintiff in this action, Johannah Catherine Rausch, as appears from the findings, sought also to carve out her fortune in the great western hemisphere, independently of George, her husband, and, among other events, at Laramie City, Wyoming, entered into marriage bonds with one Patrick G. Murphy, and lived with him in that relation about seven years, when she obtained a divorce from him in the courts of that jurisdiction, on the ground of his desertion and failure to support her.
Now, after all these events, and after the death of Rausch, plaintiff asserts her claim to dower right in said property, purchased with defendant’s money, in the city of Helena, and has instituted this action to enforce such dower claim. Defendant Eliza, in opposition thereto, set up, not only the proceedings setting said property apart to her as her homestead by order of the probate court, but also alleging her equitable right to said property by reason of its having been purchased with her money as aforesaid; all of which facts are found, and are admitted to be true as the case now stands. But plaintiff’s counsel insist that defendant, having administered on the estate of George Rausch, and returned said property in the lists as property belonging to his estate, and having allowed the same to be set apart as her homestead, under her supposed right as the wife of George Rausch, is thereby estopped from now asserting that said property was not, in fact or in equity, the property of George Rausch, but that she was, and still is, the equitable owner thereof, independently of her supposed relation to Rausch by marriage.
The estoppel proposed to bar the assertion of defendant’s equitable' right to said property cannot be maintained. The position taken by plaintiff’s counsel throughout the argument of this case is that defendant was never the lawful wife of Rausch; that her marriage with him was void in law. But that she was deceived and acted innocently, and without knowledge of any legal impediment to such marriage, is not
There is no principle of estoppel to bar defendant, under the conditions shown in this ease, from asserting her right to said property. If so, then she is estopped by having suffered wrongs and imposition through the misconduct of others in matters wherein she was innocent and deceived; and the law of estoppel, so operating, would augment her injury. Such is not the office of estoppel. It is interposed against guilty conduct to prevent imposition, deception, and injury to others acting in good faith in reference to the same subject. Nor does it appear that any disadvantage resulted to plaintiff from the events recited. Nor is her conduct as free from question as that of defendant, against whom no suspicion of bad faith or guilty knowledge is suggested. For, as appears from the findings of fact, plaintiff not only entered into formal marriage relations with said Murphy after she and Rausch separated (although it is found that she believed Rausch dead when she
There is no ground shown upon which plaintiff can recover. Let the judgment stand affirmed.
Affirmed.