Strawn v. Strawn

Mr. Justice Lawrence

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a hill for partition and the assignment of dower, filed by a part of the heirs of Jacob Strawn, deceased, against their co-heirs and the widow. A part of these lands had been purchased by Strawn in his life time, and a deed to him had been executed and sent by the vendor, living in Kentucky, to an agent in Jacksonville, to be delivered on the payment of the money. The deed arrived during the last sickness of Strawn, and was therefore not delivered prior to his death. After his death, his widow, who was administratrix, paid the money due, from the funds of the estate, and received the deed. The appellees desire to assign her dower in the lands thus purchased, but she claims the right to receive, instead of dower, one-third, absolutely, of the money paid, as a part of the personal estate.

There is no ground for the claim set up by the widow. She can not be permitted .to say that the vendor of these lands had not a valid claim against the estate, for she has recognized its validity by paying it in her capacity as administratrix. To undertake to charge that payment entirely upon the distributive shares of the heirs, on the ground that it was made for their benefit, when they were not consulted in regard to it, and it was made in discharge of a debt due from the estate, and out of the general funds of the estate, would be most unreasonable. The money has gone in payment of the lands, and the widow must be content to take her dower.

In this case, the Circuit Court taxed as costs against the defendants, their share of the sum of $3,600; as a fee to the solicitors of complainants. On what basis this fee was fixed does not appear, but that it was improperly taxed against the defendants, there can be no doubt. The proceeding was not an amicable one.

The defendants appeared by their own solicitors, as they had the right to do, and why they should be required to assist in paying the counsel of complainants, we do not perceive. Here was a great estate to be divided, and if the parties could not agree upon a division, and litigation became necessary, each was entitled to have his interests protected in court by counsel of his own selection, and one party can not, under our practice, be compelled to pay the fees of the other.

That portion of the decree taxing the fees of complainants’ counsel- in part against the defendants below, is reversed. In other respects, the decree is affirmed.

Decree modified.