Beverly v. Waller

Opinion oe the court by

JUDGE BARKER

Reversing.

On the 15th day of February, 1868, R. G. Beverly and L. W. Powell were the joint owners of a large tract of land in Henderson county, Ky. On that day Beverly mortgaged *599liis undivided interest in the land to James White to secure the repayment of $2,000 in gold. His wife, the appellant, Sarah P. Beverly, did not sign this mortgage, nor is her name in any way mentioned therein. On the 17th day of July, 1870, R. G. Beverly mortgaged his interest in the land to Thomas Posey to secure to Posey what he owed him'as guardian, and also for the purpose, as recited in the mortgage, of indemnifying W. B. Woodruff and George A. Sugg from liability upon his bond as guardian of Thomas Posey. Appellant’s name nowhere appears in the body of this second mortgage, but she signed and acknowledged it before the clerk of the Henderson county court. On the 16th day of December, 1870, L. W. Powell having died, his heirs entered into deeds of partition with R. G. Beverly of the lands jointly owned by them and him, whereby they conveyed to him and to his wife, Sarah P. Beverly, one-half of the lands jointly owned. Afterwards Thomas Posey instituted an action in the Henderson circuit court for enforcement of Ms mortgage lien, making R. G. Beverly and appellant and James White defendants. All were served with process. White answered, setting up his mortgage, and making his answer a cross-petition against Beverly and wife, and prayed for an enforcement of his lien. Both Beverly and appellant were served with process in this cross-action. In neither the original nor the cross-petition was any mention made of the inchoate dower interest of appellant. In both of these pleadings it is alleged, in substance, that, while in the deed of partition from Powell’s heirs the land was conveyed to R. G. Beverly and Sarah P. Beverly, his wife, jointly, yet, as against the mortgagees, the wife had no interest save as the wife of R. G. Beverly, and, as to them, she was a mere volunteer. Appellant made no answer to these actions, but permitted judgment to go by default. *600The judgment enforcing the lien of the plaintiff and cross-plaintiff upon the land involved in the action does not mention the inchoate dower right of appellant, or in any way seek to sell or bar it. Under this judgment, the mortgaged land was sold by the commissioner of the court, and purchased by Milton Young and J. W. Buckmann, to whom it was conveyed by commissioner’s deed, and from whom it has successively devolved by conveyance to the present owners, the appellees in this action. In 1902, R. G. Beverly died, and his widow, the appellant, Sarah P. Beverly, thereupon instituted this action against the appellees, the owners of the land, to recover of them the value of her now vested dower interest therein. The judgment enforcing the mortgages of Posey and White having been pleaded as a bar to appellant’s action for dower, she demurred to the plea, and, this having been overruled by the court, she declined to plead further; whereupon her petition was dismissed, and she has appealed.

The one question for adjudication on this appeal is whether or not appellant’s inchoate right of dower in the land was barred by the judgment rendered enforciúg the mortgage liens of Posey and White. Although appellant signed and acknowledged the mortgage to Posey, as her name does not appear in the body of that instrument, she stood toward it as if she had not signed.. In the case of Hatcher and Wife v. Andrews, 5 Bush, 561, this court said: “The deed of Geiger to Elba Holden of the two town lots, and through which the title of these vendees is derived, purports a conveyance alone by the husband; but Annie, his wife, signed the deed and acknowledged it, together with her husband, before the county clerk, who certified it, without stating what she intended to convey. . . . The deed from Geiger purports no conveyance of anything from his wife, nor *601even that she was a party to it. Therefore it is as wholly insufficient as to her as though she had never signed it. Holden is the sole grantor in his deed, and, though the wife signed with him the attesting clause of the deed, yet it does not purport, by apt language, to convey any interest on her part, and is wholly insufficient to bar her of a dower right.” Appellees contend that, although appellant’s inchoate right of dower was not barred or disposed of in any way by the mortgages, yet, because she was made a defendant, and properly summoned in the action enforcing the liens, and allowed judgment to go by default, she is barred by that judgment from setting up any claim to dower against the land sold in the action. It is true that, as a general proposition, a judgment against a defendant who has been duly summoned is res adjudicaba as to all defenses which either were or might have been set up as a bar to the cause of action set forth in the petition. The cases cited by appellant come within this principle. The case of Harpending’s Executor v. Wylie, 76 Ky., 160, was an action to foreclose a mortgage which had been executed by a husband and wife. Judgment by default was rendered, and the property directed to be sold to satisfy the debt. After the death of the husband, a rule having been awarded against the widow and heirs to show cause why judgment should not be revived, the widow responded that at the time of the execution of the mortgage her husband was a lema fiche housekeeper with a family; that he then resided with his family on the mortgaged premises, and continued to reside thereon up to his death, and that the family was still residing thereon; that she had not mortgaged, conveyed, relinquished, released or in any way disposed of the right of herself and infant children to a homestead, and they asked that a homestead be allotted to them in the property. *602This court held on appeal that the original judgment necessarily passed upon the validity of the mortgage given by the husband and wife, and that question became res adjudAcata; that the wife derived her claim to the homestead through the husband, and not from the statute, and, inasmuch as his right of homestead had been adjudged adversely to him in the suit to foreclose the mortgage, he thereby lost it, and at the time of his death he had no homestead in the property It is clear that, if the husband had a homestead right in the • mortgaged premises, it was a defense to the action. against him, at least to the extent of $1,000, and, being defendant, he was required by the rule either to set it up or be barred by the judgment in default. The case of Hill v. Lancaster, 88 Ky., 338, 10 R., 954, 11 S. W., 74, is to the same effect. Lancaster joined issue upon the merits of an action brought against him to subject his land to the payment of his debts, without claiming a homestead therein. Upon the issue joined the chancellor decided adversely to him, and rendered a judgment subjecting his entire interest in the real estate to the payment of his debts. At a subsequent term he sought to file a petition in the nature of an answer, setting up his right to a homestead, but the court said that, while it was a fact that, as against his creditors, he was entitled to a homestead in the land, he had defended the claim upon its merits, and failed to set up his homestead right, which would have been a complete bar to the action if the real estate was not worth more than $1,000, and, if more than $1,000, then a bar to the extent of $1,000. Not having set up this defense, after judgment the question of homestead was res adjudicada. The same principle is established in the cases of Ligon v. Triplett, 12 B. Mon., 283, and Talbott v. Todd, 5 Dana, 190.

But these cases are not applicable to the principle here *603involved. The appellant, at the time she was summoned, had only an inchoate right of dower, which might never become vested. If she had set it up in the case, it would not have barred the action of the plaintiff and cross-plaintiff. They would have been entitled to precisely the same judgment, so far as the sale of the land was concerned, whether her inchoate right of dower was pleaded or not. Van Fleet, in his work on Former Adjudication, section 191, lays down the rule as follows: “In a suit to foreclose a mortgage signed by the husband alone the wife was made a party, and the petition alleged that she had an interest in the mortgaged premises, without making any specific reference to dower, and asked that she set out her interest, and prayed for general relief. Other subsequent incumbrances were also made parties. A general decree by default barring all the defendants, but not in terms barring her dower nor mentioning her name, does not foreclose her dower rights” — citing Parmenter v. Binkley, 28 Ohio St., 32. “And in a similar case in Iowa, in which a wife did not join in a mortgage, which made it subject to her right of dower, its foreclosure by default, after her husband’s death, in a case in which she is simply made a party without mentioning her dower, does not bar it. The court said that, if she had joined in the mortgage, or her right to dower had been put in issue, it would have been barred”—citing Moomey v. Maas, 22 Iowa, 380, 92 Am. Dec., 395. “So, a bill having been filed in New York to foreclose a mortgage against the widow, which she had not signed, and it being alleged that she was a devisee and executrix and also the widow óf the mortgagor, and that she claimed some interest in the mortgaged premises as subsequent purchaser, Incumbrancer, or otherwise, it was held that a decree of foreclosure pro confesso did not bar her dower” — citing *604Lewis v. Smith, 11 Barb., 152. In Freeman on Judgments, section 305a, it is said: “It seems that, in order to conclude the wife’s right of dower, it must in all. cases be necessarily and specifically put in issue whether the proceeding be to foreclose a mortgage to which the wife was not a party, or to enforce any other claim to which her right of dower was paramount”—citing Malloney v. Horan, 49 N. Y., 115, 10 Am. Rep., 335. In the case of Malloney v. Horan, above cited, the court, in discussing a principle similar to the one herein, said: “She is bound by the judgment, whatever may be its legitimate effect. The judgment is final and conclusive upon her as to all matters put in issue and litigated in the action. But, as stated above, the matter of her inchoate right of dower was not put in issue and litigated therein. . . . The plaintiff in this action might have raised in that action the question that she had a right of dower, as yet inchoate, but which might become complete; and might have asked that, if it should be found to exist, the judgment should make provision therefor. But was she bound to do so? This would not have been matter in direct opposition to the action in defense to the claim made by plaintiffs therein. It would have been a quasi admission of the cause of action set up, and a seeking for relief in the judgment which must follow. And when the authorities say that a judgment is final and conclusive upon the parties to it as to all matters which might have.been litigated and decided in the action, the expression must be limited as applicable to such matters only as might have been used as a defense in that action as against an adverse claim therein, and such matters as if now considered would involve an inquiry into the merits of the former judgment. The existence of an inchoate right of dower in the, plaintiff would not have been a defense to the action of the receiver *605for a sale of the premises and a satisfaction from the avails of the sale of the judgment debt which he represented. It could not, if pleaded and shown, have prevented a judgment substantially that' which was rendered. The most which could have been effected would have been to have secured in the judgment an auxiliary provision recognizing and protecting the contingent right. And again, it was a right pre-existent the claims and defenses there litigated, and paramount to any right of the plaintiff in that action there sought to be enforced. . '. . We are of the opinion that the plaintiff is not estopped by the record in the action brought by the receiver.”

So, in this case, the wife might have set up her inchoate dower in the action to foreclose the mortgages, but this would not have been matter in direct opposition to the cause of action made by the plaintiffs therein. Her dower right, if pleaded and shown, could not have prevented a judgment substantially the same as that which was rendered. When appellant was served with summons, if she examined the petition and cross-petition, she found that, so far as she was concerned, the only allegations of the pleadings were with reference to the questions of her taking a beneficial interest under the deed of partition from Powell’s heirs to her husband and herself. These allegations were that, as to the plaintiff and cross-plaintiff, she was a mere volunteer, and had no interest in the land, save as wife of R. G-. Beverly. It must have been evident to her that the only remedy which was sought against her was the denial of her ownership of a beneficial interest in the land. Her inchoate right of dower was as clearly recognized in the pleadings as her beneficial interest under the deed of partition was denied. If appellant had any claim to a vested interest under the deed of partition, it would *606have constituted a defense to the causes of action set up in the pleadings against her, and, 'as she failed to set up such interest, she was concluded by the judgment rendered. Not so as to her inchoate right of dower. That was clearly recognized, but no pretense was made by the plaintiff and cross-plaintiff that their liens on the land were paramount to her dower; and the very fact that they, with their attention directed to the interest of appellant in the land, set up an adverse claim as to her beneficial' interest under the deed of partition, and were silent as to any claim of superiority over her dower right, warranted her in concluding that no claim adverse to her dower interest was sought in the pleadings against her. It was obvious that her claim for dower was paramount to the liens sought to be enforced, and it is not lightly to be concluded that the judge who decided the case committed so plain an error as to adjudge the liens in the mortgage superior to her dower right, unless the language used was such as to forbid an opposite conclusion.

We do not think the case of Merriwether v. Sebree, 2 Bush, 232, is applicable to the case at bar. In that case the widow’s dower had become vested by the death of her husband, and was inferior to the liens upon the land involved for the unpaid purchase money. The estate of her husband was insolvent, and the holders of the vendors’ liens were entitled to have the land sold free of any claim of dower as against them. The widow was not entitled on the merits of the case to anything but to. have her dower assigned to her out of the proceeds of the sale of the land, after the payment of the vendors’ liens, and this is what was adjudged to her in the case by this court. Mrs. Merriwether had no interest in the land sought to be subjected to the payment of the debts of her husband, except that *607of dower, and when she was summoned to answer in the case to settle her husband’s estate she was bound to know that the administrator of her husband was seeking to sell the land free from her right of dower. There was no other reason for her being made a party to the action. Not so in the case at bar. Mrs. Beverly was made a party to the action of Posey and White against her husband for the declared purpose of defeating her claim to a beneficial interest in -the land under the deed of partition of Powell’s heirs, and, this being the only purpose appearing for making her a party, she w'as called on to answer the cause of action set up in the pleadings, and not one which might have been set. up against her.

Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, with directions to sustain appellant’s demurrer to so much of the answers of appellees as set up the judgment in the case of Posey and White against her husband as a bar to her claim for dower in the land involved in this litigation,, and for other proceedings consistent with this opinion.