1. Previous to the examination of the principal question presented in this cause, Ave shall dispose of that relating to the jurisdiction of the court. In Barney v. Frowner, 9 Ala. Rep. 901, the application for dower embraced several distinct parcels of land which had been sold by the husband, and we considered the general statutes on the subject of dower as not investing the orphans’ court with the jurisdiction to hear and determine such cases. We did not then advert to a statute passed in 1835, because our attention was not called beyond the general law. This statute would have produced no change in the conclusion upon that case, though the expressions then used with reference to the want of jurisdiction could have been appropriately qualified by showing the effect of the latter act. That is in these words: “ Whereas, doubts have arisen whether or not judges of the county courts could make decrees for the sale of real estate of deceased persons, and exercise other powers-in relation to the same at the terms of the county courts held in vacation, for remedy whereof, be it enacted, &c. that it Shall be lawful for the several judges in this State to hear and determine all applications for dower, as well as applications to sell the real estate of deceased persons, at any of the terms of said court.” If the intention of the declaratory act was to invest the orphans’ court with entire jurisdiction over all suits which may arise out of applications for dower, it certainly was a great omission not to provide the means for trying contested issues of fact; and even if this mean was provided, or could be called into existence by construction, the difficulty would remain of adjourning or continuing the cause from one fortnight to another until the cause was prepared for trial. Yet it is evident enough that some jurisdiction over the subject matter was intended. The preamble to the statute in our judgment furnishes the key to unlock its meaning. Doubts had arisen whether the judges of the county courts at the courts held in vacation could make decrees for the sale of real estate of deceased persons, and exercise other powers in relation to the same. Now, in no sense of the terms can real estate which one has sold in his lifetime be said to belong to his estate upon his death, and it is not to such estates the statute has reference. But lands of which
2. As the plaintiff in error presses for a decision of the principal question, and as that has been sufficiently argued, we proceed to pronounce our opinion upon it, as otherwise it may return in another suit. The only decision, to which our attention has been directed, holding a sheriff’s sale as destroying the right of the wife to dower is in Scott v. Croosdale, 1 Yeates, 75, S. C. 2 Dallas, 127. That seems to establish that in Pennsylvania the widow is dowable only of such lands as remain of the estate of her husband after payment of his debts. The lands were sold under a levari facias against her husband’s executors, and the sale was held to take away her dower estate in the particular lands. But even in that State, it would seem that if the lands had been sold under a fi. fa. against her husband in his lifetime, the widow’s right would remain unaffected. This was held some three years after the decision of Scott v. Croosdale, in regard to an estate tail held by the husband, but sold under a fi. fa. against him. [Sharp v. Pettit, 1 Yeates, 339.] The rule is believed to be general in those States where the common law prevails, or where the common law right of dower is not materially changed by statute ; but the widow is dowable of all lands held during coverture by the husband under a legal seizin. In Ayer v. Spring, 9 Mass. 8, the land of which dower was demanded had been extended and sold under an execution, yet the widow was held dowable of its value at the time of the execution, though not of its increased value by reason of improvements made afterwards. In Embree v. Ellis, 2 Johns. 123, the lands were sold under fi. fa. against the husband, but this, so far from defeating the claim of the widow, was, coupled with his previous possession, the only title shown in him to support the dower estate. In Harrison v. Eldridge, 2 Halst. 392, the husband and wife both joined in a mortgage, and the land was afterwards sold by the creditor under a fi. fa. against the husband, but neither the gale nor the mortgage were considered as destroying the dower estate as against the purchaser. Other cases asserting the same principle, it is supposed could be found, but
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.