Case Name: BELLE R. BOYD v. E. M. REDD, Administrator of A. J. BOYD, et al.
Court: Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jurisdiction: North Carolina
Decision Date: 1896-02
Citations: 118 N.C. 680
Docket Number: 
Parties: BELLE R. BOYD v. E. M. REDD, Administrator of A. J. BOYD, et al.
Judges: 
Reporter: North Carolina Reports
Volume: 118
Pages: 680–687

Head Matter:
BELLE R. BOYD v. E. M. REDD, Administrator of A. J. BOYD, et al.
Aotion to Establish Resulting Trust — Proceedings for Allotment of Dower — Judgment—Estoppel.
1. The judgment in a special proceeding for the allotment of dower to a widow, was intended by the Statutes (Section 278, 2111 and 2112 of The Code) to be and is conclusive upon the heirs, devisees or other claimants who may be made parties, as to the title of the husband and the rights of the widow; therefore,
24Estoppels being mutual, a judgment allotting dower to a widow in all the lands of which her husband died seized in a proceeding to which the heirs and devisees of her husband were parties, will estop the widow from afterwards maintaining an action to subject a portion of the lands to a parol trust, on the ground that her husband purchased such lands with money belonging to her.
Civil aotion, tried before Norwood, J., at Spring Term, 1896, of RocKINGhah Superior Court. Tbis action was brought by Mrs. Belle Richardson Boyd, widow of A. J. Royd, deceased, against the administrator of said Boyd, ■deceased, to recover judgment for various sums of money belonging to her and received by her husband, and against the heirs and devisees of her husband, to have them declared trustees for her as to 109 acres of land in the town of Reids-ville, the complaint alleging that, out of a specified sum ■of money collected for her by her late husband, he invested the larger portion in said laud, talcing title to himself. The action was begun on 16th July, 1895. Previously she had filed her petition for dower, and among the lands alleged in the petition to belong to her husband, and out of which she claimed dower, was the tract of laud mentioned in the complaint in this action. On May 6, 1895, the final judgment in the proceedings for allotment of dower was entered, which confirmed to her, as a part of her dower, a portion of the 109 acre tract sought in this action to be subjected to this trust. The administrator, heirs, and devisees and creditors having docketed judgment were parties defendant to the special proceeding for dower.
The answer of the defendant Redd, administrator, o. t. a., of A. J. Boyd to the complaint contains the following paragraphs which furnish a statement of the facts and ■defenses relied on :
“Forsecond defense. 8. That the plaintiff ought not to be allowed to say, ‘ that out of the sum of $1,333.33, derived from the sale made to John A. Smith as aforesaid, thesumot'SCM) . s invested by said A. J. Boyd, plaintiff’s husband, (and tiiie taken to himself instead of to her,) for said lands, as alleged in paragraph 10 of the complaint, because she alleged in a petition duly filed by her in a special proceeding lately begun in said superior court for the County of Rockingham aforesaid for the purpose of having her dower allotted in the lands of which her said husband died seized, entitled Belle JR. Boyd against S. JR. Boyd and others, wherein the parties to said proceedings are parties to this action, that her husband was-at the time of his death seized in fee-simple of said lands mentioned and described in paragraph 10 of the complaint, and divers other parcels of land are likewise mentioned in said petition ; and that in said proceedings for allotment of her dower aforesaid, the same was set apart to her out of the lands described in the complaint, covering_ames thereof, and said allot-tment was-duly confirmed on motion of the plaintiff, as will fully appear by reference to the judgment-roll in said proceedings, which [will] be produced at the trial of this action, and when produced will be asked to betaken as a part of this answer, and same is pleaded in estoppel of this action.’
“ For third defense. 9. That the plaintiff ought not to be admitted to say, ‘that out of the sum of $1,333.33, derived from the sale made to John Smith as aforesaid, the sum of $910 was invested by said A. J. Boyd, plaintiff’s husband, (and title taken to himself instead of to her,) for said land, as alleged in paragraph 10 of the complaint, because in a special proceeding begun in the superior court of said County of Rockingham, entitled E. M. Redd, administrator d. l>. n., with the will annexed of A. J. Boyd, against Belle R. Boyd a?id others, by issuing of a summons on the 24th day of December, 1894, duly served on Belle R. Boyd, plaintiff herein, requiring her to appear at the office of the clerk of said court in Wentworth, in said County of Rockingham, on the '7th day of January, 1895, and answer or demur to the petition to be filed in said office, which petition was duly filed in said special proceedings on the 7th day of January, 1895, in which it was alleged that said A. J. Boyd was at the time of his death seized in fee-simple of said lands mentioned in paragraph 10 of the complaint in this action, and divers other tracts, or parcels of land are likewise mentioned in said petition, and the relief demanded therein was that said lands be sold to make assets to pay the debts of said A. J. Boyd, &c., the said E. M. Redd, this defendant, having been duly appointed and qualified as administrator as aforesaid, and the said Belle R. Boyd failed to appear and answer or demur to said petition or complaint. A decree was duly made therein on the 7th day of October, 1895, empowering said E. M. Redd, as administrator as aforesaid, to sell said lands, except the dower theretofore allotted to the-plaintiff, as alleged in paragraph 8 of this answer, and all of the parties to this action were parties to said special proceedings, the judgment-roll of which will be produced at the trial of tills action, and when produced will be asked to be taken as a part of this answer, and same is pleaded in estoppel of this action.’ ”
The plaintiff, Belle R. Boyd, replying to the new matters of defense set up in defendant’s answer, said :
“ 1. That as to the plea of estoppel, set up in paragraphs, 8 and 9 oí said^answer, it should not bar the plaintiff’s recovery in this suit, for the reason that, when said suits were brought and which are now pleaded as an estoppel, and long thereafter, plaintiff was utterly ignorant of her legal and equitable rights sought to be enforced in this suit; that it is time she was fully cognizant of all the facts set forth in her complaint, out of which said legal and equitable rights arise, but that she had not related them to her lawyer nor taken any counsel in regard to them, at the-time of the bringing of said special proceedings, and until some time thereafter, being under the impression and belief that, notwithstanding said real estate mentioned in the complaint was purchased with her money, that, inasmuch as her husband had taken the title to himself instead ■of to her, (a fact she did not know until after his death,) she was without any legal or equitable rights in the matter, and would be forced to accept things as they were ; and that it was under this impression that she filed her petition for dower, in which she alleged the property mentioned in the complaint in this cause to be the fee-simple estate of A. J. Boyd, and that by so doing she-has in no way lessened or impaired the rights of the creditors of A. J. Boyd ; but if said special proceedings are allowed to be used and pleaded as an .estoppel upon her, to defeat her greater rights set up in this suit, great injury and damage will be done to her ; that as soon as she was informed by her attorneys of her legal and equitable rights, arising out of the facts set forth in her complaint in this cause, she at onóe and without delay instituted this suit; that it will be .. and wrong and defeat the ends of justice, for the defendant to be permitted to take such a technical ■advantage of the plaintiff. And, further, plaintiff alleges, :at the bringing of this suit the said dower suit was then • pending and undetermined, and did not go to judgment until .long after the bringing of this suit,- and that the land laid off to her as dower in said suit is covered by the land mentioned in this suit. For the same reasons set forth, plaintiff did not file an answer in the suit of E. M. Bedd, administrator as aforesaid, to sell the real estate of A. J. Boyd ; and though true E. M. Bedd, in his petition, asked that the real estate mentioned in this suit be sold, together with other real estate mentioned in said petl'icm, the same was not offered for sale and has not been solví, and such of the other real estate as is therein asked to be sold, though offered for sale on the 30th day of November, 1895, has not as yet been sold and confirmed by the ■court, hence said special proceeding is not res ad,judicata, but is still wholly within the breast of the court and sub ject to its orders and decrees ; and that in this suit has since-its institution (July, 1895) a lis pendens of the plaintiff’s, claim has been filed, and all orders, decrees and proceedings, had and done in said two special proceedings mentioned are-subordinate to any orders or decrees that may be made in this suit; that said administration has not been wound up and no debts paid off by said administrator, and the rights, of no purchasers, creditors or innocent parties will or can be affected by the results of this suit.”
In deference to an intimation by his Honor that he should hold that the plaintiff was estopped to maintain her action, she submited to a non-suit and appealed.
Messrs. John T. Pcmnill and Glenn dk Manly, for appellant.
Mr. H. B. Seoit, for appellee.

Opinion:
Avery, J.:
A widow is entitled to dower in one-third of' the legal or equitable estate in lands of which her husband was seized in fee at any time during coverture, (The Oode,. Section 2103,) and the husband is generally deemed seized of any land " when he may have had any right, title or-interest in the inheritance." The Oode, Sec. 1281 (12). Where no agreement is made between the widow and the. heirs or devisees, the statute requires that she shall institute a special proceeding and that the heirs and devisees, and other persons in possession of or claiming estates in lands out of which she seeks to have dower allotted shall be made parties. The Oode, Secs. 2111 and 2112. Ifit-had never been expressly so held it would be obvious from, an examination of the statutes already referred to and the. other provisions of The Oode, (Sections 218, et seq.) that these special proceedings for the allotment of dower were-intended to be prosecuted to a judgment, which should be. binding and conclusive, as to the title of the husband and; the right of the wife growing oat of his estate, upon the heirs and devisees, as well as upon other claimants who might be made parties. The very fact that persons in the adverse possession, or claiming adversely, are required to Toe made parties, is evidence of the purpose of the Legislature to conclude them by a judgment in the 'proceeding. Estoppels must be mutual, (Springer v. Shavender, decided at this Term) and if the. heirs or devisees are concluded from denying her right in the land allotted, she' can not be heard to deny the admissions in the pleadings •as to their rights in the portion not assigned to her. The special proceeding is a controversy instituted for the purpose of determining the relative rights of the widow and the heirs. The plaintiff, as widow of A. J. Boyd, had obtained presumably a larger allotment of dower by alleging in her petition, as was admitted by the heirs, that her husband was seized, among others, of the very tract of land in which she now seeks as against the same heirs to •set up a parol trust on the ground that the purchase-money was paid by her husband, in part at least, out of funds -accruing from the sale of her own separate real estate. The land allotted as dower to a widow is not subject to the payment of the husband's debts during her life, (The Qode, Sec. 2105,) and as the law allows the personal representative, on showing the insufficiency of thepersonal assets, to sell any, or, if necessary, all of the real estate of the -decedent, outside of the dower, to pay the debts and charges -of administration, (The Code, Sections 1436 to 1444,) the creditors for whom he acts are interested in maintaining the stability of a decree which affects their rights. The final decree confirming the allotment of dower was entered May 6, 1892, and this action was not brought till the 16th day of July thereafter. When the plaintiff brought •her action, therefore, it had been adjudged in a proceeding in a court of competent jurisdiction, wherein the heirs-at-law and devisees of her husband were parties defendant as they are in this action, that her husband wras seized of the Rand of which she now claims to be equitable owner in her own right, and that on his death it descended to his heirs and devisees subject to her dower. In consequence of this adjudication of seizin on the part of her husband, the value of her dower was in creased pro tanto. After deriving such advantage from the allegation and admission of her husband's ownership in a controversy with the same parties as heirs-at-law and devisees, she will not be heard, when such proceeding is pleaded as an estoppel, to maintain an action founded upon the allegation that the findings which constituted the basis of the decree in that proceeding wrere untrue. Springer v. Shavender, supra. The plaintiff is clearly estopped from setting up the parol trust, and on the trial abandoned her claim to other relief demanded. The judgment of the court below is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.