dissenting. — This is an appeal from a decree of the Court of Probate for this county, assigning dower to the appellee in the real estate of her late husband, Benjamin Hinds, as if he were sole seized thereof at the time of his death. The appellants appeared in that Court, and denied that her said husband was so seized; and alleged that they were seized as tenants in common with him and others, as coheirs and children of Ashur Hinds, who died as early as the year 1815, and from whom the said estate descended to them as his heirs at law. The appellee claims that her said husband became sole seized by virtue of a partition of the real estate of said Ashur Hinds among his children, by the Court of Probate, in October, 1815, and by which that portion of his estate, in which dower is now claimed, was set off to him. The validity of the proceedings in said Court are denied by the appellants.
Upon the foregoing facts, the first question presented to our consideration, is, whether the Court of Probate had any jurisdiction, so as to authorize an assignment of dower, by any proceedings in said Court. By the R. S., c. 108, § 14, it is provided, that “ any widow entitled to dower in any estate of which her husband died seized, settled, or in a course for settlement in any Court of Probate, may apply to the Judge and have her dower assigned to her, on the principles stated in chapter ninety-five, unless her claim is disputed by some adverse partyand, by the said c. 95, § 3, it is further provided, that “ the Judge of Probate for the county in which the estate of the husband is settled, may assign dower to the widow, in the lands of which the husband died seized, in whatever counties they may be, where her right of dower is not disputed by the heirs or devisees.” Under this statute *126it has been directly settled by this Court, that it was not the intention of the Legislature to submit any question of title to the decision of the Judge of Probate. French v. Crosby, 23 Maine, 216. In this case Shepley, J., remarks, that “the intention of the statute was not to refuse the jurisdiction because a particiilar person disputed the right, but because the right was disputed by the owner of the land, out of which the dower was claimed.” This was said in reference to the apparent limitation contained in § 3, c. 95, by the words “'heirs and devisees.” The construction, adopted by that learned Judge, was in conformity to that adopted by the Court, of a similar statute, in the case of Sheafe v. O’Neil, 9 Mass. 9 ; and is greatly strengthened by the use of the words “ unless her claim is disputed by some adverse party,” in the 14th section of chapter 108, as before cited. It appearing, therefore, from the facts in the case, that the right to dower, as claimed by the appellee, was disputed, the Judge of Probate should have dismissed her petition for want of jurisdiction, and the parties should have been left to settle their conflicting claims in a court having jurisdiction, and where a trial by jury can be had, if need be, to settle any facts in dispute between them.