delivered the opinion of the Court. This action of assumpsit for rents and profits of estate in which the plaintiff is alleged to be dowable, is supposed to be authorized by St. 1816, c. 84, which provides, “ that in all cases where any person has died, or shall die seised of any estate, leaving a widow, who is lawfully entitled to dower therein, such widow shall be, and hereby is entitled to have and receive one undivided net third part of the rents, incomes and profits of such estate, until the heir or heirs of such deceased person shall assign and set out to such widow her dower, according to law, or until the same shall be actually assigned and set out to her, under a judgment of court, or an order of a court of probate.”
There is reason to believe, that this new remedy was intended only to be applied against the heirs of the deceased, who might refuse or neglect to have the dower seasonably assigned.1 For heirs only are mentioned in the statute, as those .who are to assign and set out the dower; and it cannot be supposed, that in all cases where the right to dower might be denied, so great a departure from the common law was in tended, as to allow the title to be disputed and settled in an action of assumpsit. It is more probable, that as at common law, and by the preexisting statute, in actions of dower no damage could be recovered, except from the time of a demand by the widow to have the dower assigned, the principal object was to give her a right in the rents, &c., from the time when her title to dower accrued, viz. the death of her husband, so that she might recover in the form of damages the amount thus due, without any demand, and that the rents and profits should be the rule of damages whenever she should be obliged to sue for her dower. So that it may be considered doubtful, whether an action of assumpsit was intended to be given tv the statute, or whether any other change was contemplated, than fixing the rule of damages and superseding the necessity of a demand.
But waiving these considerations, which have not been much relied on in the argument, we will proceed to the inquiry, whether, upon the facts stated, the plaintiff is lawfully entitled to dower in the estate described in the writ; for if she is not, so that she could maintain her action at law or be entitled to have an assignment by a decree of the probate court, she of course cannot support this action.
In the year 1814 the premises were mortgaged by her husband A. Gibson to Brooks, to secure the sum of 15,000 dollars, and she in due form of law released her right to dower. In 1816, A. Gibson the mortgager died, not having
It is contended by the plaintiff’s counsel, that these trans actions amount to a payment of the debt to Brooks, and an extinguishment of the mortgage ; so that the widow is entitled to dower, in the same manner as though no mortgage had ever been made. If this be so, the defendant would manifestly be a great sufferer, as he has paid the whole value of the estate, consisting of the debt to Brooks and the sum paid for the equity of redemption ; and the widow would gain an unjust advantage, the law presuming that she was paid a consideration for her dower to the extent of the sum secured by the mortgage deed.
It is therefore on technical ground only that she can expect to succeed in her present claim, and on this ground the cause has been argued ; viz. that Crehore, by the purchase of the equity, became virtually the mortgager, and then having satisfied the claim of the mortgagee, the mortgage is paid and discharged, without regard to the/orm which was chosen by the parties to give legal effect to the transaction ; that there is in truth no subsisting mortgage, the very object of it having been answered by the satisfaction of the debt. The course of the argument admits, that if the defendant is in legal contemplation now the assignee of an undischarged mortgage, the plaintiff has no claim in law, whatever she may have in equity, as being dowable of the right of redemption. And this may well be admitted, for surely the plaintiff, having relinquished her right of dower upon the mortgage, could not maintain her claim against the mortgagee or his assignee. The case of Popkin v. Bumstead, 8 Mass. R. 491, is stronger than the present
Several cases have been cited, to show that widows are entitled to dower in the equity of redemption of mortgaged estates ; and without doubt they are against all but the mortgagee and those claiming under him, and they may enforce their claims at law.1 So also if the mortgage is discharged by the husband in his lifetime, or by his executors or administrators out of the proceeds of his estate, the right of the widow which had been suspended revives, and she may proceed to recover her dower, just as if there had been no mortgage. But against the mortgagee or his assignee her right is only in equity, and it is only by a bill in equity, and by paying her due proportion of the debt, that she can avail herself of her right;2 and without doubt the executors and administrators, if there be personal estate whereby the debt may be discharged, may be compelled to contribute their just proportion in order to liberate the estate for the heirs, or for the creditors, if it should be for their interest to have the estate redeemed, and to enable the widow to have her dower.
But it is insisted, that the assignment of the mortgage in this case is mere matter of form, and that the law will give it no other operation than as evidence of payment and discharge of the mortgage. No doubt it has this effect against the mortgagee himself; he has received his debt, and can have no further claim ; but the question seems to be, whether the interest of
Mergers are odious in equity, and shall not be allowed where the estates may well stand together. Thus if lessee for years make the lessor his executor, the term is not drowned, because the lessor has the freehold in his own right and the term in auter droit. Co. Lit. 338 b; Vin. Abr. Merger, [A. 2) pl. 1. Now the defendant purchased the right in equity of the administrators of the mortgager, and that right may well stand with the assignment to him by the mortgagee.
This doctrine of giving effect to the assignment, according to the interest of the assignee, is fully explained and decisively settled in the court of chancery in England and in New York, and it is a principle very suitable for application in the present case, because it promotes substantial justice, and deprives no one of any just privilege or advantage. St. Paul v. Viscount Dudley and Ward, 15 Ves. 173; Forbes v. Moffatt, 18 Ves. 390; James v. Morey, 2 Cowen, 246.
In Co. Lit. 208 a, Butler’s note 105, analogous principles are settled ; but the doctrine against dower is carried further. If a term is raised by way of mortgage, and 8 purchaser takes to himself the term, the widow, if the marriage was after the mortgage, is not dowable even in equity, although the husband were always seised of the inheritance.
But it is thought that the fact of the defendant’s having, at the time of his purchase of the right of redemption, entered into a bond or covenant to pay the debt to Brooks, puts him in a worse condition than he would otherwise be in, and deprives him of the power of assuming the character of an assignee of the mortgage. Why should this'make a difference ? The debt being secured by note, as well as mortgage, it was proper that the administrators should take care that in no event the estate should be called upon for payment of the debt. It was proper, therefore, that they should exact security to effect this object, but the legal character of the whole transaction is in no respect changed thereby.
Nor does the fact that the defendant, after taking the assignment from Brooks, conveyed the premises in mortgage to Parker, hinder him from claiming to hold as assignee of the mortgage. The deed to Parker would convey all the interest which the defendant had, whether as owner of the fee simple unconditional, or as assignee of the mortgage, but does not prevent him from insisting, as against the widow, to hold as assignee.
The supposed entry of the defendant on the 13th of February, 1818, a few weeks after the assignment from Brooks and conveyance to Parker, whether valid or not to foreclose the right of redemption, and so to bar the widow of dower, is at least strong evidence of the intention of the defendant to consider the original mortgage as subsisting ; and this intention, as will appear by the authorities cited, is decisive of the right in the defendant so to consider his claim.
That the widow’s right to be endowed by virtue of the equity of redemption remaining in her husband at the time of his mortgage to Brooks, still subsists, unless the entry above mentioned and possession under it for three years, amount to a foreclosure, cannot be denied. But this is not a right which can be enforced at law against the defendant, who represents the original mortgagee. It is only by a bill in chancery, under
Plaintiff nonsuit.
1.
See Gibson v. Crehore, 5 Pick. 146
1.
See Revised Stat. c. 60, § 2; Sheafe v. O'Neil, 9 Mass. R. (Rand's ed.) 13, n. (a); Snow v. Stevens, 15 Mass. R. (Rand’s ed.) 280, n. (a); 2 Powell on Mortg. (Rand’s ed ) 699, n. (1).
2.
See Revised Stat. c. 60, § 2; Gilson v. Crehore, 5 Pick. 146; Carll v. Butman, 7 Greenl. 102.
An assignment of dower is not necessary, to enable the widow to maintain a suit in equity for the redemption of the mortgage. Gibson v. Crekore, ubi supra.
1.
See Hunt v. Hunt, 14 Pick. 374; Gibson v. Crehore, 5 Pick. 146; Thompson v. Chandler, 7 Greenl. 377; James v. James, 6 Johns. Ch. R. 417; Gardner v. Astor, 3 Johns. Ch. R. 55; 3 Powell on Mortg. (Rand’s ed.) 1069 a, n. (1).
If after an equity of redemption has been sold on execution, the mortgagee convey all his interest in the land to the mortgager, it will operate as an assignment, and not as an extinguishment of the mortgage. Barker v. Parker 4 Pick 505.
But if the mortgager be seised of the equity of redemption at the time of the conveyance to him by the mortgagee, the mortgage will be extinguished ibid. Wade v. Howard, 6 Pick. 492.
1.
See Gibson v. Crehore, 5 Pick 146; Carll v. Butman, 7 Greenl. 102.