[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 509 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 510 In this case appeal is from final decree in a suit the purpose of which was to procure judicial interpretation and construction of the terms of a deed.
On March 14, 1924, J.C. Bishop, then a widower, owned in fee simple the lands involved and on that date he made a deed of conveyance of a part of said land to Mrs. Bonnie Tankersley. Thehabendum clause of that deed was as follows:
"To HAVE AND TO HOLD with all the rights, privileges and appurtenances thereunto belonging to the said party of the second part, for and during the term of her natural life and thereafter to any child or children she may leave *Page 511 surviving her in fee, and in the event that any child or children she may have had, born unto her shall have predeceased her, then the child or children of any dead child or children shall represent and take such interest and estate as his, her or their parent or parents would have taken had he or she survived the party of the second part, and in the event that that party of the second part shall leave no child or children nor the representative of such, surviving her, then to Mrs. Mattie V. Davis, wife of A.C. Davis, if she be living, for the term of her natural life and then to any child or children which the said Mrs. Mattie V. Davis, may have left surviving her, in fee, and in the event of any child or children she may have had born unto her shall have predeceased her, then the child or children of any dead child or children shall represent and take such interest and estate as his, her or their parent or parents would have taken had he or she survived the said Mrs. Mattie V. Davis, and in the event that the said Mrs. Mattie V. Davis shall die leaving no child or children nor the representative of such surviving her, then to her heirs in fee."
On the same date he made a deed of conveyance of the remainder of the lands to Mrs. Mattie V. Davis, the habendum clause of that deed being as follows:
"TO HAVE AND TO HOLD with all the rights, privileges andappurtenances thereunto belonging to the said party of the second part, for and during the term of her natural life and thereafter to any child or children she may leave surviving her in fee, and in the event that any child or children she may have had born unto her shall have pre-deceased her, then the child or children of any dead child or children shall represent and take such interest and estate as his, her or their parents would have taken had he or she survived the party of the second part, and in the event that the said party of the second part shall leave no child or children *Page 512 nor the representative of such, surviving her, then to Mrs. Bonnie K. Tankersley, wife of Dr. J.W. Tankersley, if she be living, for the term of her natural life, and then to any child or children which the said Mrs. Bonnie K. Tankersley may have left surviving her, in fee, and in the event of any child or children she may have had born unto her shall have pre-deceased her, then the child or children of any dead child or children shall represent and take such interest and estate as his, her or their parent or parents would have taken had he or she survived the said Mrs. Bonnie K. Tankersley and in the event that the said Mrs. Bonnie K. Tankersley shall die leaving no child or children nor the representative of such surviving her, then to her heirs in fee."
At the time of making these conveyances Mrs. Tankersley and Mrs. Davis were the only children of J.C. Bishop.
After the execution of these deeds J.C. Bishop died, leaving surviving him his two daughters, Mrs. Tankersley and her husband adopted William Edward Tankersley, who was the nephew of Bonnie K. Tankersley's husband. Then on April 14, 1927, Mrs. Tankersley died leaving no children born to her body. Mrs. Mattie Bishop Davis survived and then was the mother of one daughter, Virginia Bishop Davis. Both Mrs. Mattie Bishop and Virginia Bishop Davis are now living.
The Chancellor was confronted with two questions. The first question was whether or not William Edward Tankersley, an adopted son, was entitled to take under the terms of the deeds at the death of Mrs. Tankersley. The adoption of William Edward Tankersley occurred in North Carolina and he has never been a resident of, or domiciled in, the State of Florida. It, therefore, follows that the adopted child did not take under the deeds. We construe the deeds, as did the Chancellor, to limit the remainder estate to children *Page 513 of the body of the grantees, respectively, but, aside from this, the child adopted by Mrs. Tankersley in another State and who never acquired domicile in this State would not inherit from Mrs. Tankersley under the laws of the State of Florida. Section 3624 R.G.S., 5488 C.G.L., also Mott v. First National Bank, 98 Fla. 444, 124 So. 36.
The next question is whether or not under the facts above stated the fee simple title to all of the lands is now vested in Mattie Bishop Davis under application of the rule in Shelley's Case which is in force in this State. See Arnold v. Wells,100 Fla. 1474, 131 So. 400. In that case we said: "Where a remainder of inheritance is limited in contingency by way of use or by devise the inheritance in the meantime if not otherwise disposed of, remains in the grantor and his heirs, or in the heirs of thetestator, until the contingency happens to take it out of them." So it is that the remainder of inheritance reposed in J.C. Bishop until his death and then reposed in his heirs until the contingency should happen to take it out. But there is another rule which intervenes here and that is that contingent remainders may be defeated by destroying or determining the particular estate upon which they depend before the contingence happens whereby they become vested and contingent remainders are destroyed where the particular estate merges into the inheritance either by the act of the particular tenant or by descent to him of the inheritance after the particular estate has taken effect. Blocker v. Blocker, 103 Fla. 285, 137 So. 249.
So, when J.C. Bishop died with the estate of inheritance reposing in him that estate descended to his heirs, his two daughters above named. The fee of the lands then reposed in the grantor's heirs, being his two daughters, subject to the limitations and remainders stated in the conveyances. When one daughter, Mrs. Tankersley, died, leaving a husband *Page 514 but no children or grandchildren, the fee in both parcels of land reposed, subject to the remainders and limitations, in the other daughter, Mrs. Davis, she then being the sole heir of the father; the husband of the deceased daughter, Mrs. Tankersley, not beingan heir of his deceased wife's father, the grantor in the deeds of conveyance. See Arnold v. Wells, 100 Fla. 1485, 131 So. 400; Blocker v. Blocker, 103 Fla. 285, 137 So. 249.
Each conveyance was of separate land to each of the grantor's two daughters, Mrs. Tankersley and Mrs. Davis, respectively, "for and during the term of her natural life and thereafter to any child or children (or their children) she may leave surviving her in fee, * * * and in the event that" she "shall leave no child or children nor the representative of such surviving her," then to the grantor's other daughter, if she be living, for the term of her natural life, and then to any child or children (or their children) which she may have left surviving her in fee * * * and in the event" the grantor's said other daughter "shall die leaving no child or children nor the representative of such surviving her, then to her heirs in fee."
When Mrs. T. died leaving no children or grandchildren Mrs. D. took a life estate in the parcel in which Mrs. T. was granted a life estate. Mrs. D. then had a life estate in both parcels of land. She now has a daughter living. By the terms of the conveyance, at the death of Mrs. D. both parcels go "to any child or children (or their children) she may leave surviving her in fee, * * * and in the event that" Mrs. D. "shall die leaving no child or children, nor the representatives of such surviving her, then to her heirs in fee."
The remainders or limitations are to the "child or children" or to their children, and not to the "heirs" or the "heirs of the body" of the life tenants respectively, which *Page 515 would render the Rule in Shelley's Case inapplicable in any event, were it not for the final limitation to Mrs. D's "heirs in fee."
The Rule in Shelley's Case is stated as follows: "Whenever an ancestor, by any will, gift or conveyance, takes an estate offreehold in lands or tenements, and in the same will, gift or conveyance an estate is afterwards limited by way of remainder either mediately or immediately, to his heirs or the heirs of hisbody, the words `heirs' or `heirs of his body' are words oflimitation, carrying the inheritance to the ancestor, and notwords of purchase, creating a contingent remainder in the heirs." Minor on Real Property, vol. 1, ch. 27, sec. 753. "It is essential to the operation of the rule in Shelley's Case that the `heirs', `heirs of the body', etc., to whom the future limitation is made shall mean, not particular designated living persons, nor even one or two or more future generations of successors, but that indefinite line of successors through the ages, which is necessary in law in order to make the words words of limitation, and which is meant when we say that we are the heirs of the body of descendants of Adam, the idea of which, in Biblical language, is conveyed by such phrases as `the children of Israel,' `the seed of Abraham,' etc." Minor on Real Property, vol. 1, ch. 27, sec. 758. "A merger takes place when a greater estate and a less meet in one and the same person, in one and the same right,without any intermediate estate, the lesser estate being thereby merged in the greater." Blocker v. Blocker, 103 Fla. 285,137 So. 249.
The words "child or children of the body" are not equivalent to the words "heirs or heirs of the body."
The intervening limitations between the first life estates and the final limitation to the "heirs in fee" of the surviving daughter after the death of such surviving daughter of *Page 516 the grantor, leaving no child or grandchild, prevent a merger until the intermediate estates are satisfied. The final limitation to the "heirs in fee" of the surviving daughter life tenant unites with the life estate of such surviving daughtersub-modo, opening, if necessary, to let in the intervening estates. 2 Minor's Institutes, 405; 11 Coke 80 (a).
Mrs. Davis, as the sole heir at law of her father, the grantor in the conveyance, now has the fee title to, and a life estate in, both parcels of land; but such fee title is subject to others' intervening rights under the conveyances. The parcel in which Mrs. Davis first had a life estate goes, under the conveyance, at her death to her living daughter in fee if she survives her mother and there are then no other children or grandchildren of the mother to share in such estate; otherwise, the heirs of Mrs. Davis have the property in fee if she leaves no children or grandchildren.
The fee simple title to the parcel in which Mrs. Tankersley had a life estate is now in Mrs. Davis as the sole heir at law of her father, J.C. Bishop, subject to the limitations contained in the conveyance as to the rights of Mrs. Davis' daughter and other children and her grandchildren, if any, with a life estate therein to Mrs. Davis and a limitation to her heirs if her daughter or other children or grandchildren do not survive her.
Mrs. Davis, therefore, has a life estate in and a fee simple title to both parcels subject to be cut off by the intervening estate given to her children and grandchildren if she dies leaving any living child or grandchild.
It, therefore, follows that Mrs. Davis, joined by her husband, may convey a good legal title to a life estate in both parcels of land, and may convey fee simple title to both parcels of land subject to the intermediate contingent remainder which contingent remainder may be conveyed by *Page 517 Virginia Bishop Davis when she, or her guardian, is thereunto lawfully authorized, subject to the contingency that Mrs. Davis may die leaving a child or grandchild other than Virginia; or the contingent remainder as to both parcels of land may also be defeated by the death of Virginia without issue prior to the death of Mrs. Davis.
Therefore, the decree of the Chancellor must be reversed and the cause remanded with directions that the Chancellor enter a decree not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
So ordered.
ELLIS, C.J., and WHITFIELD and DAVIS, J.J., concur.
BROWN, J., dissents.