287 F. 994 | D.C. Cir. | 1923
On the 24th of February, 1920, a married man, William P. Cullinane, agreed in writing to convey to Elizabeth M. Reilly a good record title to certain real estate upon the payment to him by her of the sum of $7,250, The terms of sale required that $300 of the purchase price should be paid on the execution of the agreement, and that payment of the balance should be made within 30 days thereafter, provided that the examination of title had then been completed and reported.
On the ground that his wife refused to join him in making a deed to the property unless he purchased a house for her with the proceeds of sale, Cullinane on the 8th of March, 1920, repudiated his contract and notified the purchaser that conveyance of the property could not be made as he had agreed. •
Elizabeth M. Reilly thereupon filed a bill in equity in the Supreme Court of the District, praying for the specific performance of the agreement of sale, and that Cullinane be required to convey the property and to indemnify the purchaser against his wife’s right of dower, in the event that she did not become a party to the stipulated conveyance.
The wife of the defendant is entitled to dower in the lands which were the subject of the contract (Annotated Code, § 1158), and until they are freed of that right, either by proper release or transfer thereof, conveyance of a good record title cannot be made to the purchaser, as required by the terms of sale. Jones v. Gardner, 10 Johns. (N. Y.) 266; Stevens v. Hunt, 15 Barb. (N. Y.) 17.
Specific performance of the contract consequently depends on whether the wife can be or ought to be compelled to part with her dower right, either directly, by ordering her to join in the convey-, anee to the purchaser, or, indirectly, by ordering her husband to convey a good record title and to procure the release of the outstanding dower interest. Notwithstanding the broad powers of equity to enforce respect for the obligations of contracts in the absence of an adequate remedy at law, we are decidedly of the opinion that neither alternative can be invoked by the plaintiff, and that the wife’s inchoate interest in the property cannot and should not be affected by the husband's contract, or by any proceedings against him thereon.
The wife is not a party to the agreement, or to the action brought to obtain specific performance thereof, and as she and her interests are not subject to the jurisdiction of the court in this proceeding, she cannot be forced by judicial decree to part with her dower right in order to fulfill a contractual obligation incurred by her husband without her consent. Bride v. Reeves, 36 App. D. C. 476-484.
To order the husband to make conveyance to the purchaser of a good record title, and therefore conveyance of his wife’s right of dqwer,- necessarily implies in him a power and authority over her not possessed by the court, and assumes that by subjecting Cullinane to pressure the court may accomplish through him that which could not be directly accomplished by judicial decree.
The requiring of the husband to do that which he can do, and ought to do, is correct enough; but it is not correct to put him in a position where he may use the decree of the court to coerce his wife into parting with her right of dower, a property interest designed for the support and the well-being of mother and children after the death of the family’s natural protector, and consequently specially favored by the law. No mandate should be directed to the husband which may result in forcing the wife’s will, or which, seeking to accomplish by indirection that which could not be directly achieved, imperils a sacred right of the wife, and menaces the peace, love, and confidence which should mark the marriage relation. 2 Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, §§ 731, 732, and 733; Outram v. Round, 4 Vin. Abr. 203;
On the other hand, if the court were assured that the husband was not the better man, and that the wife was the controlling influence in the household, a decree such as that contended for could hardly be excused even as the last resort of equity, inasmuch as it would leave the husband at the mercy of the wife, and might tempt her to exact, as the price of her complacency, unreasonable concessions endangering the marital relation and the family welfare.' 2 Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, 733.
It is said that the wife’s conveyance of her dower right can be secured, if Cullinane will invest the purchase price in a home for his wife, and that therefore a decree of specific performance would subject the wife to no coercion, and would require of the husband nothing more than he can and ought to grant. Neither this court nor the court below has any knowledge as to the reasonableness of the wife’s demands, and if such knowledge could be derived from the record, the disposition of the purchase price of the property in issue is not a matter within the cognizance of either court, and neither by direction nor indirection should the husband be required to make investments which he thinks are unwise or not warranted by his financial condition.
But, apart from all that, decrees in equity should be within the power of the defendant to perform, and no decree should be entered which is dependent for its fulfillment on the will of a stranger to the litigation or on that of a person not subject to the court’s jurisdiction. 3 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur. § 1405; Clark v. Seirer, 7 Watts (Pa.) 107, 32 Am. Dec. 745; Birmingham v. Sheridan, 33 Beav. 660; Beattie v. Burt, 122 App. Div. 473, 107 N. Y. Supp. 153; Hurlbut v. Kantzler et al., 112 Ill. 482; Weed v. Terry, 2 Doug. (Mich.) 344; Martin v. Colby, 42 Hun, 1; Pillow v. Pillow, 3 Humph. (Tenn.) 644.
' Appellant insists, however, that if conveyance of the wife’s dower cannot be secured, then conveyance by the husband subject to the dower right of the wife should be decreed on such terms and with such indemnity against the right of dower as will protect the vendee against loss.
Learned counsel for appellant fail to specify what form the indemnity should take, or how an effective indemnity could be provided for, in any way other than by a reduction in the price agreed to be paid. If either an indemnity bond or an abatement in price should be required, the penalty of the one and the amount of the other would have to be fixed. That could not be done without determining the value of the dower right, which in its turn cannot be ascertained without prophesying the prior death of the husband and forecasting the date of the wife’s demise — a gruesome, futile task, which the courts cannot be called upon to undertake.
True enough there are mortality tables, from which the average expectation of life may be determined; but they furnish no information whatever as to the actual date of death of any particular
In addition, it should be said that a decree directing Cullinane to convey at a reduced price, or to indemnify the purchaser for his wife’s right of dower, would not be a decree of specific performance, but a decree reforming the contract, a brand of relief not warranted by the pleadings or the facts. Hawralty v. Warren, 18 N. J. Eq. 124 — 128, 90 Am. Dec. 613; Clark v. Seirer, 7 Watts (Pa.) 111, 112; Barbour v. Hickey, 2 App. D. C. 207-215, 24 L. R. A. 763; Bride v. Reeves, 36 App. D. C. 476-484.
The point made that the defendant should have submitted evidence establishing or tending to establish that his wife refused to convey is not well taken. It appears from the bill that the contract to convey a good title was made with a married man, and as that agreement necessarily implied a conveyance of the wife’s dower interest, it could be argued with some force that the burden was on the plaintiff to establish the wife’s willingness to convey and the defendant’s ability to perform. But, however that may be, the bill ah leges that plaintiff was informed by the defendant that he could not carry out his agreement because of his wife’s refusal to join in the conveyance, and the defendant’s answer avers that the wife did refuse to convey her dower right. The allegations of the bill and the averments of the answer are not in any way contradicted by the evidence. Indeed, they are supported to some extent by the testimony of the plaintiff, who testified to the declarations made by the defend^ant as to the refusal of his wife to convey, unless the proceeds of the sale were invested in other real estate. The wife’s refusal was not put in issue, and as the record stands the defendant was not required to make further proof of such refusal. Hawralty v. Warren, 18 N. J. Eq. 124-128, 90 Am. Dec. 613.
The purchaser in this case could have protected herself by requiring the signature of the wife to the contract of sale, and she cannot complain if equity now finds it impossible to enforce the agreement which she elected to accept.
We hold, first, that the wife, not being a party to the contract or a party to the action, cannot be compelled to convey her right of dower.; second, that, the wife not having agreed or consented to the conveyance of her right of dower, it is the policy of the law to protect her in preserving her inchoate interest in the property; third, that no decree should be made which might operate to coerce her into parting with an interest accorded to her by the state for her benefit and that of the children, if any there be; fourth, that no decree of
The decree dismissing the hill of complaint is affirmed,-with costs.
Affirmed.