Appellant filed her bill in the Chancery Court for the assignment of dower in lands of which her husband was seized in fee in his - life time, but which were alienated by him to appellee’s vendor without appellant’s joining in the conveyance, or otherwise relinquishing her dower interest .since such conveyance. The bill alleges *146that an assignment of dower by metes and bounds would be unjust, and claims that appellant is dowable of the value of the land at the time of the alienation, and that the- interest on one-third part of such valuation from the death of her husband shall be paid to her annually during her life and secured by a lien on the land.
The reasons alleged to show that an assignment of dower in the lands by metes and bounds would be unjust, are that the tract of land at the time of its alienation was worth about fourteen thousand dollars, and that its value at the time of the death of appellant’s husband was one thousand dollars, that the depreciation in value was caused “largely by the wear and tear of time, and the unskillful cultivation of the soil, coupled with the want of fertilizers, and the failure to keep the houses in repair, all these coupled with the fact that there is a general decline in values in real estate in that locality,” and it is further alleged “that if said tract of land had been kept up to the standard of a well regulated farm, and the buildings kept in good repair, then the depreciation in value would not be so great.”
The land was aliened by the husband in the year 1861-, and the death of the husband occurred in the year 1889.
The general rule is that ’ whenever the property in which the widow is entitled to dower is capable of division, dower must be set off by metes and bounds.—5 Amer. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 927; 2 Scribner on Dower, p. 581, § 1; McClanahen v. Porter, 10 Mo. 146; Dunseth v. Bank U. S., 6 Ohio 76; Code 1886, §§ 1901, 1910.
The assignment of dower by the common law is of one-third part of the lands and tenements of which the widow is dowable, to be set out by metes and bounds, where it is practicable, to be held by her for life. The endowment is required to be of parcel of the lands and tenements themselves. Dower so assigned is said to have been set out “according to common right.”
When, however, the property did not admit of an assignment of dower in severalty, either from the nature of the husband’s interests in it, or from the quality of the thing itself, the assignment by metes and bounds was of necessity dispensed with, and an assignment of compensation in lieu of dower was made, or an assignment “against comm mi right,” as it is sometimes designated, and this assignment was so made as to yield the widow one-third of the rents and profits received from the entire estate.
It was further the rule of the common law that if the land was held by the heir or devisee the widow was entitled to *147have the value of the laud estimated at the time dower was assigned, thus giving her the benefit of improvements made by the heir or devisee, and, also, that she would bear a proportion of the loss which may have been incurred by an unavoidable diminution in the value of the lands during the time which intervenes between the. death of her husband and the assignment of her dower. If such deterioration was caused by the willful waste of the heir, she was entitled to an action for damages against him, but it did not affect or alter the manner of assignment. — Tiedeman on Beal Property, § 135.
With regard to the assignment of dower in alienated estates the rule in England as declared in Doe ex dem Riddell v. Grinnell, 12 B. 682, is that the widow shall be endowed according to the value of the estate at the death of the husband, regardless of any improvement or deterioration resulting from the acts of the purchaser.
But in this country the rule in such cases, according to the weight of authority, is more favorable to the purchaser and excludes the widow from taking advantage of his improvements upon the estate, but it allows her generally, though not in all the States, to have the benefit of any rise in value resulting from other causes, the policy of the rule being^to avoid discouraging purchasers from making improvements.—Wisteoll v. Campbell, 11 R. I. 378; 2 Scribner on Dower, pp. 612-617; Tiedeman on Real Property, § 135.
And that is the rule adopted in this State, both by judicial decisions and by the statute.—Barney v. Frowner, 9 Ala. 901; Beavers v. Smith, 11 Ala. 20; Springle v. Shields, 17 Ala. 295, Francis v. Garrard, 18 Ala. 794; Ware v. Owens, 42 Ala. 212; Wood v. Morgan, 56 Ala. 397; Code, 1886, § 1910.
In this State, before the present statute, when a dilapidated mill upon the land was torn down by a purchaser from the husband, and a new and expensive structure erected in its stead, it was held, that the widow of the grantor was not entitled to any share of the improvements, and that her dower could be estimated with reference to the nature of the premises at the time of the alienation; that the destruction of the old mill afforded a proper case for compensation to the widow by a court of equity instead of an assignment by metes and bounds.—Beavers v. Smith, supra.
We have not been able to discover any case, nor has any been cited by counsel, in which deterioration in value either from natural causes or from the mere negligence of the purchaser or alienee in keeping the property in repair has been 'considered sufficient cause for assigning compensation in *148lieu of dower, instead of setting tbe same off by metes and bounds, or in which it is held that the widow is entitled to compensation on account of such deterioration. On the contrary the doctrine of permissive waste seems never to have been introduced into the common law jurisprudence of this country to that extent. It is said by Chancellor Kent that “Whether the land be improved in value or be impaired by ads of the party subsequently, the endowment, in every event of that kind, is to be according to the value at the time of the assignment, if the land descended to the heir.” And again: “The widow takes the risk of the deterioration of the estate arising from public misfortunes, or the ads of the party.”
The foregoing quotations are contained in an elaborate and learned opinion of the Supreme Court of Missouri in the case of McClannahan v. Porter, 10 Mo. 746, in which the conclusion is reached that the widow takes her dower according to the value of the land at the time of the assignment, and that although she gains nothing by the improvements of the heir or alienee she suffers loss by his waste or neglect depreciating the value of the property. And in 2 Scribner on Dower, p. 635, it is said : “In the United States the doctrine laid down by Perkins, that the widow has no remedy for waste committed by the alienee,during the life time of the husband seems to be generally acquiesced ih. But for waste committed after the husband’s death she has her remedy.—5 Amer. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, p. 931.
In this State when the dower is incapable of being set off by metes and bounds, or when it would be unjust from improvements made by an alienee, or from any other cause, to assign the dower by that mode, the Chancery Court alone has jurisdiction to make an assignment of compensation in lieu of dower.
And in such case the rule is fixed by statute that the widow is dowable of the value of the land at the time of alienation, the interest on one-third part thereof from the death of the husband to be paid her annually, during her life, and secured, if necessary, by a lien on the land, unless the parties agree to a compensation in gross to which the court must give effect. Code, 1886, §§ 1910, 1911.
The test, however, whether an assignment by metes and bounds would, or not, be unjust, within the meaning of the statute, is not whether the interests of the dowress alone, would be promoted or prejudiced by that mode of assignment. The rule prescribed by the statute “to be equal and just must be mutual.”
*149Tbe mutual rights of tbe demandant and of tbe alienee must be considered, and tbe conclusion must be influenced not by wbat would be tbe interest of tbe one or tbe other, but just and right, as between tbe two.
We do not think tbe facts alleged in tbe bill of complaint in this case, make out a case within the contemplation of tbe statute and entitling tbe demandant to an assignment of compensation in lieu of dower instead of by metes and bounds.
It is shown by tbe averments of tbe bill that tbe depreciation in tbe value of tbe land since tbe alienation is due largely to natural causes and to a much less extent to tbe mere failure of tbe alienee to keep tbe property in repair from 1861, tbe time of tbe alienation, to 1891, tbe time of tbe demand for dower, and not from any wilful waste on bis part.
By the common law, as we have shown, while tbe widow shared in improvements made by tbe litir or devisee, neither tbe improvements made by an alienee of tbe husband, nor depreciation in value caused by bis acts, or from natural causes, affected tbe rule for tbe assignment of dower, though wilful waste by either tbe heir, devisee, or alienee, after the husband’s death, would afford tbe basis for a claim for damages to be allowed not, it has been declared, as of any fixed period, but as of tbe value of tbe property at tbe different periods at which tbe widow is deprived of her dower. In the case of tbe heir, from tbe death of tbe husband — in tbe case of an alienee, from tbe time of tbe demand for dower until tbe assignment.—McClannahan v. Porter, 10 Mo. 746; Steele v. Brown, 70 Ala. 235.
We discover nothing in our statute designed to change this general rule; on tbe contrary this court in Wood v. Morgan, 56 Ala. 397, speaking of a statute in substance tbe same as this, said: “So that the section of tbe Code we are considering is rather a legislative recognition of an existing rule than the enactment of a new one.”
Our statute, therefore, being in harmony with tbe common law, instead of making a change therein, it follows that mere depreciation of value whether from natural causes or tbe act or omission of tbe alienee presents no good reason for making an assignment of dower against the common right instead of according to tbe common right, or by metes and bounds.
Furthermore, recurring to tbe question whether it would be unjust, within tbe meaning of the statute, to tbe demand-ant to set off her dower by metes and bounds, we will add *150that the law would not have cast upon her husband, had he-lived, until this time, any duty or obligation towards her, as respects her inchoate right of dower, to keep the premises in good repair, or to cultivate the lands “according to the standard of a well regulated farm,” and if no such duty rested on the husband, we can conceive of no principle of law that would impose that obligation upon the alienee of the husband any more than upon the latter, himself.
To assign dower as the bill in this case seeks to have it done, would require a valuation of the land which would make the widow’s third some four or five times greater than the present value of the entire tract.
Thus the alienee would be compelled to pay annual interest for the life of the dowress on a sum four or five times greater than the present value of the whole tract of land, and more than thirteen times greater than her one-third of the present value of the land. This would be the grossest injustice to the alienee.
An assignment of dower by metes and bounds, so far as any thing in the bill shows to the contrary, would operate justly to both parties.
There is no question of willful waste, committed after the death of the husband, presented by the bill, and consequently it is unnecessary to consider what the rights of the demandant would be, in that case, or what the remedy for their enforcement.
We discover no error in the decree of the Chancery Court, on the motions and demurrers filed by appellee, and it is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.