The demandant having made out a primá facts case, entitling her to dower, the general question is, whether the defence set up by the tenant is sufficient in law to bar her claim. He relies on a deed of the premises in question from William Robinson, the demandant’s late husband, to one John Jacobs. *42junior, in which deed the demandant joined, and thereby released to the said Jacobs her right of dower in the premises.
It is admitted, that the tenant has no title under Jacobs ; but his counsel contends that he has, by the common law, a right to plead in bar, and under St. 1836, c. 273, abolishing special pleadings, to give in evidence under the general issue, a conveyance by the demandant to a third person under whom he does not claim ; and he relies on the case of Wolcot v. Knight, 6 Mass. 418, and sundry other cases, in which this principle is laid down. “ For,” it is said, “ although the tenant may have no title, still if the demandant has no right to recover, he cannot be permitted to draw into question the seizin of the tenant, whether he acquired it by right or by wrong.” Stearns on Real Actions, 226.
It has been argued by the counsel for the tenant, that this principle is applicable to a case of dower, where the demandant had relinquished her inchoate right of dower by joining her husband in a conveyance to a stranger. But the contrary doctrine is laid down in Pixley v. Bennett, 11 Mass. 298. And that case, we think, was rightly decided.
The tenant’s counsel contended, that as the demandant had once released her claim, she was for ever estopped to demand dower, whoever may be in possession of the land. But it is very clear that a stranger cannot be bound by, nor take advantage ofy an estoppel. An estoppel, to be binding, must be reciprocal, and parties and privies only are bound thereby.
Whether the demandant’s deed may by law operate as a release, or in any way, except by way of estoppel, is a question which it is not necessary to decide ; because, if it may operate so as to pass the right to the grantee, this action may well be maintained for 'his benefit, or for the benefit of his assigns ; as they cannot maintain an action in their own names, to enforce their right against the tenant.
But there is another answer to this objection to the demand-ant’s title, which is entirely satisfactory and conclusive. The tenant, at the trial, offered to prove that the conveyance to Jacobs was fraudulent and void as to the creditors of the grantor. *43and that, on that ground, he had recovered judgment for the possession of the premises against the assignees of the saiu Jacobs. Now we are of opinion that the tenant, having avoided the deed to Jacobs, cannot now be allowed to set it up as a bar to the demandant’s claim. In Stinson v. Sumner, 9 Mass. 143, it was decided that where a wife releases her claim of dower, by joining her husband in a conveyance, and the purchaser recovers back the purchase money on account of the grantor’s defect of title to the land, the release of the wife thereby becomes inoperative, and does not bar her right of dower after her husband’s decease. The principle, on which that decision is founded, applies conclusively to the present case. The tenant has avoided the deed of the husband, and defeated the estate on which the demandant’-s release of dower was intended to operate. By law, therefore, and in justice, she was thereby restored to her former rights.
The other ground of defence depends on the construction to be given to St. 1805, c. 90, § 5, which provides “ that all the lands, tenements, and hereditaments of which an intestate died seized, and also all such estate which he had fraudulently conveyed, with intent to defraud his creditors, shall be liable for the payment of his debts, and may be recovered and applied thereto, saving to the widow her dower therein, except in the estate so fraudulently conveyed, to which she had legally relinquished her right of dower.” The execution, under which the tenant claims title, was extended on the premises in the lifetime of the demandant’s husband, and is not therefore within the letter or the meaning of the statute, which is expressly limited to the lands, tenements, and hereditaments of an intestate, and to the proceedings after his death. If the demandant’s dower is subject to forfeiture, it must be applied to the equal benefit of all the creditors, and the tenant has gained no priority or title under the execution, in respect to the claim of the demandant. Wildridge v. Patterson, 15 Mass. 148. Where a statute in clear terms is limited to a certain class of cases, the limitation is not to be extended by construction, especially if it would thereby subject an estate to forfeiture.
Judgment on the verdict