
    Caroline Veit, App'lt, v. Elvira Dill, Resp’t.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, Second Department,
    
    
      Filed May 14, 1894.)
    
    Deed—Effect.
    A deed of “all the dower * * * and other rights ” of the grantor, conveys all the interest of every kind that the grantor may have.
    Appeal from a judgment dismissing the complaint and awarding relief to the defendant.
    
      Thomas H. Williams, for app’lt; Wm. B. Hurd, Jr., for resp’t.
   Brown, p. J.

This action was brought in form of the specific performance of a contract for the sale of land, but really to recover the expense incurred in the examination of the title on the ground that the defendant, who was the vendor, could not convey a marketable title. The defendant acquired title to the land in. question from John Moore. Moore’s title came from Mary Doyle and seven children of herself and her husband, John Doyle, The Doyle title was acquired in 1867, under a deed made to John and Mary, in which there "were no words showing any intent on their part to hold as tenants in common. John Doyle died in 1881. The case presented is one where the parties appear to have been misled by the case of Meeker v. Wright, 76 N. Y. 262. Mrs. Doyle, after her husband’s death, contracted to sell the land to Moore. Upon the authority of the case cited it was assumed that Doyle and his wife held as tenants in common, and that the husband’s estate, upon his death, descended to his children, subject to the wife’s dower. Two deeds were accordingly executed and delivered to Moore. One conveyed the estate of Mrs. Doyle and three adult children in and to ten-fourteenths of the land, and the other conveyed four-fourteenths assumed to be vested in four infant children, and in this share Mrs. Doyle released her dower. The decision of this case rests upon the construction to be placed upon the latter instrument. The appellant claims it is a conveyance of the dower only, while the special term has decided that it was a conveyance of all her estate, whatever it might be. We agree with the trial court. The conveyance grants, releases, conveys, and quitclaims “all the dower and third and right and title of dower, * * and all other right of me, the said Mary Doyle, in an to,” etc. The intent of Mrs. Doyle, under the contract, to convey the whole land, is clear, and she received the consideration expressed in the agreement. It is equally clear that she intended by the instrument from which I have quoted to convey not only her dower, but all other rights she had in the land. The instrument was, in effect, a quitclaim deed, and the language used was appropriate to vest in the grantee all estate she had in the land.

The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur.  