Wood v. Keyes

6 Paige Ch. 478 | New York Court of Chancery | 1837

The Chancellor.

This is a case that clearly calls for the interposition of this court, to prevent the gross injustice of permitting the whole estate of which the husband died seized from being destroyed by the costs of a useless litigation respecting the separate claims of dower in the various lots conveyed by the husband, when the trustee is willing to have the whole dower assigned at once out of the estate which must ultimately bear the loss. It is at least doubtful whether this could be done in a court of law without the assent of the widow. But, as it can be of no possible benefit to the widow, this court will not allow her to be guilty of the unnatural act of destroying the whole property of her deaf and dumb daughter, either to gratify her own caprice or the improper ^¡elings of those under whose advice she is acting. • A decree must, therefore, be entered for the appointment of admeasurers to assign to her out of the real estate devised to the complainant, which in equity is liable to sustain the whole charge, so much thereof as will be equal to the whole dower to which she is entitled in all the lands conveyed by her husband with warranty during coverture, together with her dower in the lands devised to the complainant in trust; and there must be a perpetual injunction against further proceedings at law.

The proofs in the cause, however, show that the offer to the widow to assign her whole dower out of the estate devised was not made until the suits were commenced at law, and that she then offered to receive a pecuniary satisfaction for her dower in the lands conveyed in the life time of her husband. The costs of those suits up to the time ofissuing the injunction in this suit must therefore be paid out of the trust estate in the hands of the complainant. The widow must also be compensated out of the rents and profits of the real estate held by the complainant in trust for the value of her dower, from the death of her husband, in the estate of which he died seized, and from the filing of *480this bill in the other property* And if the parties cantiot agree upon the amount, it must be referred to a master to ascertain the same.

It being understood by the court that the complainant’s cestui que trust has died since the hearing of this cause, the decree must be entered as of the 20th of April, 1836. And, in case the trust is at a i end, the suit must be properly revived in the name of the person who has succeeded to the complainant’s rights, if further proceedings in the cause shall be found necessary.-