Anderson's trustee v. Sterritt

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee, Mrs. Sterritt, and her present husband, filed this petition, asking to have dower assigned her in certain-lots of ground in the city of Louisville. Her former husband, Thomas Low, was seized in his own right of this land, in his lifetime, and during the marriage, and conveyed the same by deed to Garvin, Bell & Co., the remote vendors of the appellants. Mrs. Low, now Mrs. Sterritt, was under age-at the date of the conveyance by her husband; nor was the deed, although acknowledged by her, recorded within the time prescribed by law so as to pass her contingent right of *501dower. She* arrived at age in the year 1857, and became discovert by the death of her husband in the year 1858.

The appellants relied as a defense on the statute of limitations, barring a recovery of real estate after the .lapse of fifteen years from the accrual of the cause of action. The statute reads: "An action for the recovery of real property can only be brought within fifteen years after the right to institute it first accrued to the plaintiff, or to the person-through whom he claims. ” The chancellor below adjudged that this statute did not apply, as the claim asserted for dower was not an action to recover real property, but the assertion of a mere right in the nature of a chose in action. The appellants then relied on the statute of ten years, that provides: "An action for relief not provided for in this or some other chapter, can only be commenced within ten years next after the cause of action accrued.” It was considered below that this statute would apply if the appellants or those claiming under them had been in the actual adverse possession of the lots of ground for t'he period mentioned in the statute, but that the constructive possession following the legal title could not be regarded as adverse to the claim of the appellee.

A party may acquire title to real estate by adverse possession, but under either of the statutes relied on it is not necessary for the party holding the legal title, and ágainst whom the claim is sought to be enforced, to show that he has had an actual possession under his claim of title for the period mentioned in the statute. It is true there must be an adversary claim to that of the plaintiff, for if not, there Is nothing to prevent an entry on the land or the assignment of the dower. The appellants and their vendors have •been claiming to hold this land under the conveyance made *502to Garvin, Bell & Co. since the year 1856, and the appellee’s disability was removed in the year 1858. She had then, arrived at the age of twenty-one years, and was a feme sole. Her right to prosecute her claim, and to enter upon the-land under, the order of the chancellor, accrued at that time, and the statute expressly provides: “That an action fertile recovery of real property can only be brought within fifteen years after the right to institute it first accrued to the-plaintiff. If there was no claimant of the property, and the-possession was with the widow by reason of her marital rights, although not living on the property, an action would not be necessary; but here these parties were vested with, the absolute title twenty-three or twenty-four years before-the bringing of this action, and within the last five or six years made valuable improvements upon the property.. Their claim was during all this time hostile to that of the-widow, and her right to institute this character of action-, first accrued in the year 1858. If one is invested with the fee-simple title to land, the possession is necessarily with the-title, unless there is an adverse holding, and no cause of action arises in favor of the owner until an entry is made-under a claim of right, and then he may maintain his ejectment. The statute commences to run when the entry is made, and no right of action exists until then. If A owns-vacant lands, and there is no hostile possession, he cannot sue to recover it, because there is no one to sue or wrong-to complain of; but the moment there is an entry, with a claim of right hostile to the owner, the- cause- of action arises. This is the effect of the statute of limitations as-between the real owner and one who, acquires, an- actual, adverse possession. This rule does not apply to the case at bar. The wife, at the time the appellants, acquired the title,. *503had neither title, possession, or the right of entry, but a mere contingent right that she might enforce in the event she survived her husband. Her husband, who was invested with the legal title, and had either the constructive or actual possession, conveyed the absolute estate to the vendors of these appellants. They have held and claimed under that conveyance for twenty-three years or longer, and the widow is now asserting a claim hostile to this title, with a cause of action that originated more than twenty years before it was instituted. She. is certainly barred from any recovery, not by reason of the ten years statute, but by reason of the fifteen years statute applicable to the recovery of real estate* It is true that at common law, and before the adoption of the Revised and General Statutes, there was no limitation to the assertion of a claim for dower; yet courts of equity fixed the period at twenty years, and denied a recovery after such a lapse of time. By our statute, “the words real estate or land shall be construed to mean lands, tenements, or hereditaments, and all rights thereto and interests therein, other than a chattel interest,” &c. (General Statutes, chapter 21, section 13.) The claim to dower is not the assertion of a mere personal right or a chose in action; it is a right to real estate. (2 Scribner on Dower, page 33, section 21.) The widow claims that she is entitled to have assigned her one third in value of this real estate during her life. When assigned to her she has an estate of freehold, and it is difficult to arrive at any other conclusion than that the recovery, if successful, is of real estate, and not a mere chattel interest.

In the case of Kinselving v. Pierce, reported in 18 B. Monroe, this court said a purchaser from the husband, by express contract, may purchase subject to the wife's claim *504for dower, and that in such a case his holding would be presumed to be consistent with his purchase, &c. ; but where, as in the case then being decided, the purchaser denies the right, and claims and holds the land as his own, his possession is not only adverse to the vendor, but to all claiming under him. The widow's right of action accrues upon the death of her husband, and unless the possession be expressly held subject to her claim by the vendee, her right of action will be barred by the statute of limitations. This case shows that since the adoption of the Revised Statutes this court has regarded the statute of limitations as affecting the claim for dower like other actions for real estate, and it is manifest that, with the absolute title acquired from the husband, no actual possession is necessary to bar the wife’s claim for dower. The purchaser from the husband held and acquired the same possession that the husband of appellee had, and for a wrongful entry on this land after the purchase these vendees could have maintained their ejectment; and when the widow attempts to enter, or calls on the chancellor to disturb their title by assigning her dower, they may interpose the fifteen years statute, if that time has elapsed since the disability of the appellee was removed, for then her cause of action accrued.

The judgment below is reversed, and cause remanded, with directions for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.