
    Madigan and another vs. Walsh.
    Doweb : Husband’s oral agreement of sale of lands, before the marriage.
    
    1. An inchoate right of dower is such an interest in land as will enable the wife to maintain an action to establish such contingent right, and remove a cloud fraudulently attempted to be created upon it.
    2. An oral agreement for the sale of-lands being, under the statutes-of this state, not merely voidable but void, a wife acquires on the marriage an inchoate right of dower in lands of her husband, notwithstanding such an agreement previously entered into, where there is no part performance before the marriage taking the ease out of the statute.
    APPEAL from the Circuit Court for Ozaukee County.
    Action by Mary and Patrick Madigan to bave a deed of forty acres of land in said county executed by them to Walsh, adjudged fraudulent and void as against her. Plaintiffs.are husband and wife, and were such in. December, 1857, at which time said Patrick was seized in fee of the lands described in said deed; and the complaint alleges that Walsh, Patrick Madigan, and others, at his request, with intent to defraud said Mary, represented to her that the deed (which Patrick had executed) was a promissory note, and she, not being able to read writing, and relying upon such false representation, affixed her signature to it by making her mark. The answer, after a general denial, alleges that in 1856, Patrick Madigan and Walsh resided in the state of Rhode Island'; that Patrick was the owner in fee of eighty acres, including the forty in question; that he then offered to grant one half of said eighty in fee to Walsh, if the latter would come to this state with him and improve the land so to be granted; that Walsh accepted the offer, came to "Wisconsin with said Patrick, worked upon the eighty acres with him, took possession of the land in dispute, and “ improved it in common between times,” until, in execution of their agreement, said Patrick made the deed to him, said Mary joining therein; that immediately after he took exclusive possession of said forty, commenced to chop and clean thereon, built a house on it, into which he moved in the spring of 1858, and has continued to possess and improve the same as his own ever since; and that plaintiffs have at all times had knowledge thereof. A third defense was set up on the ground that the cause of action had not accrued within six years.
    
      The evidence tended to prove the facts specifically alleged in the complaint and answer. The court found, inter alia, “ that said Mary Madigan is entitled to her right of dower in the premises described in the complaint, as the wife of Patrick Madiganand rendered judgment “that the signature of Mary Madigan to the deed was wrongfully and fraudulently obtained, and that said Mary have the relief demanded in the complaint, so far as her right of dower in the premises is affected thereby, and that the deed is fraudulent and void as to her, and her name thereon is cancelled,” etc. The defendant appealed.
    
      Geo. IF. Poster, for appellant:
    If one contracts to sell land, and afterwards marries, dower does not attach. 6 Kinne’s Comp., 94; Connor and Lawson’s R., 592. It makes no difference whether the contract he in writing or not. Story’s Eq. Jur., 753, 759. The statute of frauds does not require that a contract should be made in writing, but only that it should, be evidenced by writing. 4 Kent, Lecture 61. A man may lawfully fulfill a parol contract to convey land, and the grantee would have all the rights the grantor had when the contract was made, saving the rights of bona fide purchasers for a valuable consideration. The wife does not have dower as such a purchaser. It is a sort of inchoate gift until assignment. 13 Wis., 344 etseq.; 8 ET. Y., 110. See also 1 Washb. R. P., 248. The inchoate right of dower cannot be superior to the right of the husband when it attached. It must therefore be subject to the same equities. In the case at bar the court woul'd have compelled a specific performance. 1 Hilliard on Vendors, ch. 25, sec. 47; France v. France, 4 Halst. Oh., 650 ; 2 Story’s Eq. Jur., 661 et seq.; 16 Wis., 142, 202; 18 id., 510 ; 2 Parsons on Con. (4th ed.), part 2, ch. 9. 2. The action, being brought by the husband and wife, is his action. 9 Paige, 255; Story’s Eq. PL, 61. Can he bring an action for an alleged wrong which, he has caused ? • 2 Story’s Eq. Jur., 694. Having an adverse interest, he should have been made defendant. Story’s Eq. PL, 61; 1 Tiff. & Sm. Pr., 86, 478-9. The action being that of the husband, the statute of limitations applied. 3. The judgment that Mary Madi-gan has a right of dower in the premises, is certainly erroneous. •
    
      II. Gunning, for respondent.
    [No brief on file.]
   Dixon, O. J.

I have had some difficulty in coming to a conclusion in this case, not however upon the- question whether an inchoate right of dower is such an interest in the land as will' enable a married woman to maintain an action like this, but upon the question whether Mrs. Madigan has a right of dower at all in the land described in the complaint. “Dower,” says Chancellor Kent, “is a title inchoate, and not consummate until the death of the husband ; but it is an interest which attaches oh the land as soon as there is a concurrence of marriage and seizin.” 4 Kent’s Com., 50. It has beén compared to a life estate vested in one person, to take effect only in case he survives another. The right to enjoy the estate is but a possibility. He may or he may not survive. If he do survive, the right becomes perfect. 4 New York R., 99. An inchoate right of dower is such a title as will authorize a purchaser who has contracted for a - good and lawful title, to refuse to perform his contract. Parks v. Brooks, 16 Ala., 529; 17 id., 298; 23 id., 616. The relinquishment of such a fight of dower is a good consideration for notes given Tor purchase money and payable to the married woman. Caldwell v. Bower, 17 Mo., 564. I think it clear, therefore, that the wife has an interest upon which an action may be maintained, where an attempt has been made to defeat her right by act of gross fraud, as was shown in this case; but I Rave had some doubts as to whether Mrs. Madigan was entitled to dower under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence.

It appears that Mr. Madigan, before his marriage with the plaintiff, Mrs. Madigan, being sole owner of the land, entered into a verbal agreement with Mr. Walsh, by which he agreed to convey the land in question to Walsh, in case Walsh would come west with him and settle upon and help to clear and prepare the land for cultivation. The parties resided at that time in Providence, in the state of Rhode Island. Walsh assented to the agreement, and subsequently, but not until after the marriage, came west with Mr. Madigan, and has since fully performed the'agreement on his part. Mr. Madigan, always acknowledging the agreement as valid, has accepted the performance by Walsh, and carried the agreement into effect by executing and delivering to Walsh a deed of conveyance of the land. Under these circumstances, it has been a serious question in my mind, whether Mrs. Madigan was entitled to dower in the land so sold and conveyed; and, but for the difference between our statute of frauds and the English statute, and the statutes of many of the states, as shown in Brandeis v. Neustadtl, 13 Wis., 142, it seems to me that she would not be and consequently that this action could not be maintained. Upon this point I content myself with a simple reference to the following authorities : Oldham v. Sale, 1 B. Monroe, 76; Firestone v. Firestone, 2 Ohio St., 415; Bowie v. Berry, 3 Md. Ch. Decisions, 359; Hinton v. Hinton, 2 Ves. Sen., 631, 638; Jackson v. Bull, 1 Johns. Cases, 81; Blackwell on Tax Titles, Title “ Relation,” p. 383 et seq., and cases cited. As our statute of frauds makes a verbal agreement for the sale of lands not merely voidable but void, and as Mr. Walsh did nothing under the agreement by way of part performance before the marriage, I think, notwithstanding the authorities above cited, that Mrs. Madigan may avoid the agreement, and insist upon her right of dower.

The objection that the judgment gives Mrs. Madigan an absolute right of dower in the land is untenable. The language must he construed with reference to the facts pleaded and proved; and being so construed, the judgment establishes only Mrs. Madigan’s contingent right. The effect is merely to relieve her inchoate title of the cloud created by her supposed conveyance.

By the Court. — Judgment affirmed..  