A widow, after the death of her husband, shall forthwith and without difficulty have her marriage portion and inheritance; nor shall she give anything for her dower, or for her marriage portion, or for the inheritance which her husband and she held on the day of the death of that husband; and she may remain in the house of her husband for forty days after his death, within which time her dower shall be assigned to her.
No amount of forethought on the part of a Crown tenant, setting his house in order against his decease, could rescue his widow from the extremely unfortunate position into which his death would necessarily plunge her. He must leave her without adequate protection against the tyranny of the king, who might inflict terrible hardships by a harsh use of rights vested in him for the safeguard of the feudal incidents due to the Crown as overlord. Newly deprived of her natural protector, she was under the immediate necessity of conducting a series of delicate negotiations with a powerful opponent fortified by prerogatives wide and vague. She might indeed, if deprived of her “estovers,” find herself for the moment in actual destitution, until she had made her bargain with the Crown; she had a right, indeed (under normal circumstances) to one-third of the lands of her late husband (her dos rationalis) in addition to any lands she might have brought as a marriage portion, but she could only enter into possession by permission of the king, who had prior claims to hers, and could seize everything by his prerogative of primer seisin.[[414]] This chapter provides a remedy. Widows shall have their rights without delay, without difficulty, and without payment.
I. The Widow’s Share of Real Estate. Three words are used:—dos, maritagium, and hereditas.
(1) Dower. A wife’s dower is the portion of her husband’s lands set aside to support her in her widowhood. It was customary from an early date for a bridegroom to make adequate provision for his bride on the day he married her. Such a ceremony, indeed, formed a picturesque feature of the marriage rejoicings, taking place literally at the door of the church, as man and wife returned from the altar. The share of her husband’s land thus set apart for the young wife was known as her dos (or dowry), and would support her if her husband died. In theory the transaction between the spouses partook of the nature of a contract by which they arranged the extent of the provision to be given and accepted. The wife’s rôle, however, was a passive one; her concurrence was assumed. Yet, if no provision was made at all, the law stepped in, on the presumption that the omission had been unintentional on the husband’s part, and fixed the dower at one-third of all his lands.[[415]]
John’s Magna Carta contents itself with the brief enactment “that a widow shall have her dower.” The Charter of 1217 goes farther, containing an exact statement of the law as it then stood:—"The widow shall have assigned to her for her dower the third part of all her husband’s land which he had in his lifetime (in vita sua) unless a smaller share had been given her at the door of the church." Lawyers of a later age have by a strained construction of the words in vita sua, made them an absolute protection to a wife against all attempts of her husband to defeat or lessen her dower by alienations granted without her consent during the subsistence of the marriage.[[416]] Magna Carta contains no warrant for such a proposition, although a later clause (chapter 11) secures the dower lands from attachment by the husband’s creditors, whether Jews or others.
(2) Maritagium. It was customary for a land-owner to bestow some share of his property as a marriage portion upon his daughters, that they might not come to their husbands as empty-handed brides. The land so granted was usually relieved from all burdens of service and homage. It was hence known as liberum maritagium, which almost came to be recognized as a separate form of feudal tenure. Grants for this purpose could be made without the consent of the tenant’s expectant heirs, although early English law absolutely prohibited alienation of lands for any other purpose without their consent. Maritagium was thus “a provision for a daughter—or perhaps some other near kinswoman—and her issue.”[[417]] The husband of the lady was, during the marriage, treated as virtual owner for all practical purposes; but on his death the widow had an indisputable title to lands brought with her “in free marriage.”[[418]]
The obvious meaning, however, has not always been appreciated. Coke[[419]] reads the clause as allowing to widows of under-tenants a right denied (by chapter 8) to widows of Crown tenants—namely “freedom to marry where they will without any licence or assent of their lords.” This interpretation is inherently improbable, since the barons at Runnymede desired to place restrictions on their enemy, the king, not upon themselves; and it is opposed to the law of an earlier reign, as expounded by Bracton.[[420]]
Daines Barrington[[421]] invents an imaginary rule of law in order to explain a supposed exception. An ordinary widow, he declares, could not in the normal case marry again before the expiry of a year after her first husband’s death. Some widows, however, were specially privileged. Maritagium was a right conferred on widows of land-owners to cut short the period of mourning imposed on others. This is a complete inversion of the truth; the possession of land always restricted, instead of extending, freedom of marriage. Several later authorities follow Barrington’s mistake.[[422]]
Such mistakes when made by recent writers are the more inexcusable in view of the clear explanation given a century ago by John Reeves,[[423]] who distinguished between two kinds of marriage portion: liberum maritagium, whence no service whatever was exigible for three generations, and maritagium servitio obnoxium, liable to the usual services from the first, although exempt from homage until after the death of the third heir.[[424]]
(3) Hereditas. The first two words are thus readily understood: but what is hereditas? Is it simply another name for one of these, or is it something different? It is possibly used to denote estates acquired by the wife, not as a marriage portion, but in any other way, for example by the opening of a succession on the death of someone, her father or other relative, of whom she is the heir.