51 Mo. 544 | Mo. | 1873
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a suitby attachment against the defendant Mary F. Beauchamp, widow of James Beauchamp-, deceased, to recover four thousand twelve and 61-100 dollars for goods, wares and merchandise alleged to have beeu sold and delivered to her. The ground of the attachment-was non-residence. The cause was taken by change of venue from the Common Pleas Court of Livingston county to the Circuit Court of said county.
The answer denies the indebtedness and alleges that she, the defendant, is the widow of Jas. Beauchamp, and that the only property attached or which purports to be attached as appears by the sheriff’s return, is the property in which she has a dower interest only as widow of said Beauchamp, and in which her dower interest has never been assigned or admeasured to her, and that said dower interest is not subject to attachment. That the suit was instituted by attachment only, and by publication of notice, and that the property so seized is not subject to attachment, and the seizure thereof conferred no jurisdiction.
Plaintiff filed a replication alleging that defendant had duly made her election to take and he endowed absolutely in a Share in such lands equal to the share of a child, of such deceased husband, subject to the payment of his debts, in lieu of the one-third part
A demurrer to this replication was filed by defendant and sustained by the court and the cause is here by appeal.
The only question presented by the record, is as to the effect of the election, made by the defendant. Did it vest in her a title in fee to an undivided one-third part of the real estate described in the return ?
The case of Orrick and Wife vs. Robbins, Admr., (34 Mo., 226,) to which we are referred by counsel for respondent, seems not to have been noticed by the court, if brought to its attention at all, in the case of Matney vs. Graham, et al. In that case the widow of Robbins had made an election to be endowed absolutely in a share of her husband’s lands equal to the share of a child, in lieu of one-third part thereof for her life? as in the case before us. The proceeding was a petition by Orrick and Wife, (who was the widow of Robbins) to*the pro. bate court for an order upon the administrator of the estate of Robbins, that he should pay them in right of the wife, the rent received from a tract of land adjoining the land on which the mansion house was situated, and being part of the same tract, and which at the time of Robbins death was rented out and in the possession of a tenant. The legal effect of the election made by the widow, was necessarily involved in the decision of the case. For if, as I think/the election operated as an absolute renunciation of all claim of dower under the first
In my opinion the demurrer to the replication- was improperly sustained.
the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.