The facts of the case are fully stated in the opinion in this Court. *Page 9 The bill is filed to procure a construction of the (13) will of Joseph Amis, deceased. By his will the testator devised as follows: "I direct that my children remain with my wife, to be raised and educated out of my estate; and as one child may become of age, or marry, to have allotted off to such child as much of my estate as I have given to my daughter Betsy, and put her in possession of. If my wife should die my widow, I direct that at her death my estate of every description be equally divided between my children, considering, in the distribution, the part which each child may have received at its marriage, or when it came of age. In educating my children, I direct that my son Lewis be continued at college until he graduates; and should the income of my estate justify it, I wish my two sons, James and Joseph, to receive a like education; otherwise, the best education the income of my estate will afford. I wish all my daughters to receive a good English education; should the income of my estate fall short of giving them a good practical education, I wish them to receive one, even at the expense of the capital of my estate." The bill sets forth "that doubts and difficulties have arisen between the plaintiff and defendant as to the proper construction of the will; that it is uncertain whether it was the intent and meaning of the testator that the estate should be divided, at all events, at the death of his widow, or should be kept together, in the hands of his executors, until the education of his infant daughters should be completed; whether or not the said infant defendants should be educated out of the estatefree from charge, and without accounting therefor in the distribution of the same; whether or not the whole of the income of the estate (if the same should be required to give to the infant James such an education as by the will is contemplated and directed) may be applied to that purpose, so as to throw the education of the infant defendant, Judy F. Amis, entirely upon the capital of the estate; whether the property to be allotted off to each of the testator's other children, in order to make them equal to his daughter Betsy, as directed by (14) the will should be valued according to the prices of such property atthe time of the allotments, respectively, or according to the price of such property at the time the advancement was made to Betsy; and whether or not those of the testator's children to whom allotments or advancements have already been made are entitled to any part of the hires which have been received on account of such of the negroes as shall be allotted to the other children." These are the points to which our attention has been directed, and upon which our opinion is required, and *Page 10 relate to the state of things as they exist since the death of the widow. We will proceed to answer them in the order in which they are propounded.
Mrs. Amis, the widow, is dead, and without having again married. This is the event upon the happening of which the testator directs a division of his property shall be made. It was evidently his desire and intention that his children should remain with their mother while she continued his widow; if she married, her house would acquire another master, to whose support he had no wish the property of his children should contribute. Neither, in the case of her death, would it likely be in the power of the executor to keep them together; at least, in that event, his great inducement for having them kept together with their mother would be taken away. But it is sufficient that the testator has expressly said that upon her dying his widow, the property shall be divided. He had no intention of binding up the estate any longer.
In answer to the second inquiry, we say that up to the time of the widow's death, when the general division was to take place, the infant defendants were to be educated out of the general profits of the estate, free from charge, and without accounting for it; and it is reasonable it should be so. The elder children, who had come of age, or married, had received their education out of that fund. If the infant children were, upon a division, made to account for the sums expended upon (15) their education, it would, to that extent, be a diminution of their portion, and give to the elder children, who had received allotments, an increased share, and so far destroy that equality designed by the testator. He has moreover said that until the death of the widow the property should be kept together for the joint education of all his children. It was, in truth, given to her for that purpose. The will does not expressly provide what fund shall defray the expense of educating such of the children as might not have completed their education at the death of the mother, but we think it is not difficult to ascertain the intention of the testator, upon a reasonable construction of his language. He had two purposes in view: The one was the proper education of his children, at all events, and to that he devotes the whole profits of his estate after the maintenance of the family, and even a part of the capital if necessary, and to this end is the direction that the estate shall be kept together during the life of the wife, with certain slight exceptions. While thus kept together, the children would be educated in succession, as they grew up and the profits accrued, which the testator thought was probably an adequate provision for that purpose. If any surplus of income should remain after answering those purposes, it would, of course, be an accumulation for the benefit of all the children while in a course of education. The testator's other purpose was that his estate should not be kept together longer than his wife lived, but be *Page 11 divided at his death. There would, of course, after that event, be no general profits out of which the children could be educated. But it does not follow that they were not to be educated according to the plan laid down in the will, nor that the expense should be defrayed out of the capital of the estate, leaving the profits of the share allotted to each child to accumulate for his or her benefit, nor that the expense should be limited to the profit of the particular child's share, or, if greater, that it should be paid exclusively out of the capital of (16) that share. The two provisions for the education out of the estate and, at the same time, for the division of the estate, are to be reconciled as far as possible. This can be more nearly effected, after the division, by appropriating the profits of each share to the nurture and education of the child to whom it is allotted, and, if that should be deficient, making it adequate by an equal contribution from all the other shares, than in any other method. For the share of the child is to bear its proportion of the burthen; and if the profits of it be the sufficient for the education of the owner, it bears no more than its due burthen by having the profits so applied. So, if they be deficient, then it and all the others must pay an equal quota towards its supply, for the child is to be educated at all events, provided the profits of the whole, as to the sons, be sufficient. As the bill throws no doubt upon that point, we suppose they are sufficient. As the fund is to be, or rather may have to be thus raised, in part, by contribution from all the children, the most convenient mode of doing so is to have an estimate of the amount that will probably be required for the education of each of the infant children, after deducting the profits of each of their respective shares, made by the master, and at once to set apart a fund in the executor's hands to meet it. Should it not all be expended, the residue will be divisible when the estate shall be finally settled, or at any time when it shall be ascertained that it will not be needed for their education.
The third inquiry is, in substance, answered in replying to the second. We will, however, state that by the will the whole of the income, if needed, was a fund for the education of James, irrespective of the effect it might have upon that fund in the education of Judith. The probability of such a result was certainly in the mind of the testator; the provision is: "If the income of my estate falls short of giving them (James and Judith) a good education, I wish them to receive it, even at the expense of the capital of my estate." The education (17) of Judith is a charge upon the whole estate.
Upon the fourth inquiry, our opinion is that the property allotted to the several children, to make them equal to that given to Betsy, is to be valued according to the prices of such property at the time of the advancement to Betsy. A little reflection will show the necessity and propriety *Page 12 of this rule. If in order to make a division it were necessary to convert the whole estate into money, or there was money sufficient on hand to comply with the directions of the will in this particular, how much would each legatee be entitled to receive, in the first instance, and preparatory to a division? Betsy's advancement was valued at $1,300, and that sum, in money, would be the amount each child would be entitled to receive; nothing more, or less. This is a legacy, but in truth it is an advancement, and is to be valued as such.
The last inquiry is also substantially answered in responding to the second. After each allotment the child so advanced had no claim during the life of the widow upon the income arising from the property unallotted. The whole income of the will was devoted to the maintenance of the wife and children and the education of the latter as far as was needed. They have had their maintenance and education out of it, up to the time when they ceased to be members of the mother's family.
The bill sets forth that there are debts still outstanding, and claims in the South to be collected, which will be expensive, and the estate is burthened with an annuity to S. Downey of $50.
In directing a division now, it will, of course, be understood that the division is only to be of such parts of the estate as are in hand, reserving a proper fund for the payment of the annuity, and debts, (18) expenses, and charges of administration, and for supplying the deficiency, if any, of the profits of the shares of the respective infant legatees for their education, as before pointed out. And it must be referred to the master to take an account of the estate and estimate what fund ought to be reserved for those purposes and what part of the estate, upon this basis, may be properly divided now, and of what it consists, and to make the division and allotment accordingly.
PER CURIAM. Decreed accordingly.