12 Va. 264 | Va. | 1841
This cause has been argued with very great ability by the counsel on both sides, and the court is much indebted to them for the light which has been shed upon the various points in the case.
. The appellee’s claim of dower in the Neiu Mills Sfc. is contested, first, because, as is alleged, the property was purchased, held, used and paid for, as partnership property; and therefore was chargeable with partnership liabilities, and properly to be regarded as personal estate, not liable to any dower right of Calhoun’s widow. Whatever doubts may have heretofore existed, as to the light in which real property is to be considered, when
This brings us to the second point; ■ and here, I think it clear, that the deed of trust of Wheatley and Calhoun to Roberts of March 1824, was paramount to the widow’s right of dower. Though it does not appear to have been executed at the same time with the deed of conveyance to them, yet it was so contracted for, and the two instruments must therefore, in equity, be regarded as parts of the same transaction. Gilliam v. Moore, 4 Leigh 30. The dower right of the wife must therefore be subordinate to the deed of trust.
Next, it is to be seen whether that deed of trust is yet in force. It would seem to be so in the strictest sense, for the whole purchase money has not even yet been paid. But even if it had been, I should be clearly of opinion, that it was kept alive for the benefit of Wheatley, so far as he has made payments beyond his just proportion of the debt. Admitting (what I am not yet disposed to concede) that when a surety pays off a bond, there is nothing to which he can be substituted, as the security is gone, yet the same inference cannot be drawn in relation to a deed of trust. If the surety for the debt has paid it, still the title is outstanding in the trustee, and is in the power of a court of equity, which will apply it to his indemnification. The technical objection that the remedy is gone, and there is nothing to assign, cannot prevail; and the court will act upon the conscience of the trustee, and compel him to execute the trust for the benefit of him who stands in the shoes of the creditor.
With this view of the case, I am of opinion, that if mrs. Calhoun shall ask a resale of the trust property, she will be entitled to it; and if there be an excess over and above the purchase money, she will be entitled to her dower interest out of Calhoun’s portion of it. In the event of such claim being asserted, accounts should be directed to ascertain what proportion of the purchase money has been paid by Calhoun, what out of the partnership funds, and what by Wheatley, it being obvious, l think, that Wheatley, if he has overpaid, is entitled, by substitution, to resort to the deed of trust for reimbursement.
The other judges concurred.
The decree of this court declared, that on the joint purchase by Wheatley and Calhoun of The New Mills and 200 acres of land, a contingent right of dower in a moiety thereof accrued to the wife of Calhoun, subordinate, however, and subject to the lien for the purchase money; and had that lien been discharged by the payment, by the purchasers respectively, of moieties of the purchase money, the dower right would have prevailed