It is urged by counsel for Mrs. Noble, that the adjudication of bankruptcy against her husband, and the transference of her husband’s title to his property to his assignee, amount to a “judicial sale” of his property within the meaning of the act of March 11th, 1S75. and that she stands vested with the same interest in his estate as she would have inherited in the event of his death. The first branch of this proposition is sustained by the recent decision of the supreme court of the state in Roberts v. Shroycr, which is not reported. This being a decision of the highest court of the state, upon a statute of the state, and upon a question relating to real property, must govern the same question in this court. I assume, therefore, that Mrs. Noble’s right to immediate absolute ownership and possession of her marital interest in the lands of her husband is as complete as it would have been had the sale been made on execution under the judgment of a state court. But as ro the other branch of the proposition, viz., that the interest she takes in-such contingency in real estate to which her husband held but an equitable title, is the same that she would inherit in the event of her husband's death — that is not decided by the case cited, nor by any other to which my attention has been called. The supreme court of the state has repeatedly held, that a married woman is vested with an inchoate title, during tlie lifetime of her husband, to all the real estate of which he was seised in fee during coverture, that, under the statute, would descend to her at his death. He cannot, without her concurrence, alienate or suffer alienation of this inchoate title vested in her. But as to lands in which he holds but an equitable title only, the case is different. In such lands she has no inchoate title. The twenty-seventh section of the descent law above cited shows this, and the supreme court of the state has repeatedly held, that the husband without her concurrence may dispose of such equitable title, and that the purchaser will hold the same clear of any claim of the wife. When land owned by the husband in fee is sold upon execution against him, the wife’s vested inchoate right remains intact. That cannot be sold on execution against him. for it is not his. He cannot sell it himself, for it is vested in his wife. The act of March. 1S73. enlarges the wife’s right, in so far that it terminates in the contingency provided for the husband’s right of survivorship, and admits her into ownership and possession during his lifetime. But in respect of land held by the husband by a merely equitable title, the case is entirely different. In such land the wife has no vesred inchoate interest during his lifetime. While he lives, the equitable title is his absolutely. He may sell it without consulting her. His dominion and ownership are absolute. This being the character of his ownership of an equitable title to land, it must, of course, be subject, like any other property owned absolutely by him, to the claims of his creditors. If. upon creditor's bill, or upon proceedings supplemental to execution, it is subjected to the claims of his creditors during his lifetime, he would not, of course, hold “an equitable interest at the time of his death,” within the meaning of section 27 of the descent law, and his widow would inherit notli-ing.
As said before, I regard the case of Roberts v. Shroyer [unreported] as an authoritative interpretation of the act of March, 1875, irrespective of any question respecting its original merits. I may add. however, that it accords with my own view of the proper interpretation of that act. Conceding, therefore, to that act, as thus interpreted, the greatest efficacy that can be claimed for it here, we have but the case of a judicial sale of an equitable title to real estate, made in a husband's lifetime, to pay his debts, leaving nothing to descend to his wife. The act of March 11th, 1875, neither by its letter nor spirit gives the wife an interest in such case. By its terms it applies only to judicial sales of real estate of the husband, in which the wife “has an inchoate interest by virtue of her marriage.” The twenty-ninth section of the statute of descents, above cited, is not applicable here. That section has reference to the settlement of a decedent’s estate and the descent of real property, as between the widow .and the other heirs. It was not intended to establish the rights of the widow as against creditors. The case under consideration is that of a contract for the purchase of real estate where but partial payments of pureliase-money have been made, being subjected to sale to satisfy the demands of creditors. The exceptions to tlie master’s report are overruled.