
    Smith and Another v. Ackerman.
    
      Jl. sold, and by a deed containing a covenant against incumbrances .conveyed, to B. certain real estate, in half of which the widow of .¿Z.’s vendor had a right of dower. Held, in a suit against B. on his note given for a part of the purchase-money, that the existence of such right of dower could not be set up as a failure of the consideration of the-note.
    But if the right of dower in such case had been enforced by the widow, or if the defendant had extinguished it, the payment of so much of the purchase-money as the right of dower was worth, might have been avoided.
    Where there are two issues, both must be disposed of before the plaintiff can 'have final judgment.
    
      Thursday, May 27.
    APPEAL from the Fayette Circuit Court.
   Blackford, J.

This was; an action of debt brought by Ackerman against Smith and another on a promissory note for 738 dollars; which note was made payable'to Kindred, and by him assigned to the plaintiff. The noté is dated on the 15th of November, Í838, and was payable on thé 25th of December then following. Pleas, 1st, the general issue; 2dly, failure of consideration. • The latter plea states, that the note sued on, with two others each of the sainé amount,.was given in consideration of two certain town lots in' Gonnersville; which lots, on the day the note was given, were conveyed by the payee and his wife to the defendants;, that the conveyance contains a’ covenant against incumbrances; that one Isaac Wood, who had been seised of the north half of the said'lots, and had conveyed his interest therein to the payee, had died since the latter’s conveyance to the defendants, and had left a widow who was entitled to dower in said half of the lots, which dower exceeded in value the amount of the note, sued on. Replication to the special plea; demurrer to the replication overruled; and judgment in favour of the plaintiff for the amount of the note.

It is not necessary to examine the replication to the special plea, as we consider the plea to be n<3 bar to the action. The defendants received a conveyance for the lots with a covenant against incumbrances; and gave three notes of 738 dollars each for the price. They are now sued on one of the notes, and wish to bar the suit by pleading an outstanding 'right of dower . in half the premises. This cannot be done. The right of dower is nó doubt an incumbrance'; but before it can be a ground for refusing to pay any part of the'purchase-money, .it must have occasioned some special damage to the purchasers. Had the right of dower been enforced by1 the widow, or had the defendants extinguished it, the payment of so much of the .purchase-money as the right of dower was worth, might have been avoided; because theie would have then been a cause of action to -that amount against the payee, on the covenant against incumbrances. But the matter of the plea in question shows no claim against the vendor, on account of the incumbrance, excqpt for nominal damages, and cannot, therefore, be pleaded in bar of the present suit for a part of the purchase-money.

J.S. Newman and C. B. Smith, fpr the’ appellants.

C. H. Test, for the appellee'.

We have heretofore decided a case very similar to the one now Before us. Whisler v. Hicks, May term, 1839. In that case, it is true, the title to dower was not, as in this, consummated by the death of the husband; but still the principle of the cases is the same; the vendee having no better claim to special damage, on account of the incumbrance,- in this case than in the one referred to.

. But though the special plea be bad, the plaintiff was not entitled to final judgment, whilst the issue in fact remained undisposed of. That issue being overlooked, the judgment must be reversed.

Per Curiam.

— The judgment is reversed with' - costs. Cause remanded, &c.  