Sarah Cobblar, the legatee mentioned in the following will, had intermarried with the other plaintiff, John W. Robertson, at the filing of this petition. The only question in the case arises on the construction of the will of John Parish, which is as follows: —
1st. It is my will and desire, that all my just debts be paid by my executor, hereafter named.
2nd. I give and bequeath to my beloved wife Ailsy, all my plantation and tools of every description, household and kitchen furniture of every description, all my stock of horses, cattle, hogs and sheep, and two carriages; also, one negro man named Major, and all my crop of every description which may be on hand: my will is that Ailsy, my wife, have the above named property, her natural life, which is only lent for that time.
3rd. My will and desire is, that my negro woman named Riah, together with all the household and kitchen furniture, except one bed and furniture, and one chest, to do as she thinks proper with.
4th. After my wife's death, my will is, that Sarah Cobblar, a daughter of Thomas Cobblar, is to have the above named beds, furniture and one chest. I also give and bequeath to the said Sarah Cobblar, seventy-five acres of *Page 75 land, taking in my dwelling house, orchard and spring. I also give and bequeath to the said Sarah Cobblar, three hundred dollars, or a negro girl worth that money. Now, in case the said Sarah Cobblar should decease without having any children, my will and desire is, that all, except the bed, and furniture, and chest, is to go to Elijah Cobblar's children, and be equally divided among them.
5th. My will and desire is, that, after my wife Ailsy's decease, my wish is, that the balance of my land, together with everything else, should be sold, and the money arising from the said sale to be equally divided between Elijah Cobblar's children.
I do hereby make and ordain my friend, John Roberts, executor, c.
The plaintiff prayed that the legacy of $300, or the negro woman, might be paid to him, immediately, by the executor, who is made defendant.
The answer of the executor, after admitting all the allegations of the petition, submitted to the Court, whether he ought to pay over the legacy before the death of Ailsy, the widow.
The cause was set for hearing on the bill, answer and exhibit; and, on the hearing, it was declared as the opinion of his Honor, that the possession of the legacy to the plaintiffs should be postponed until the death of Ailsy Parish, the widow, and a decree was made accordingly, from which the plaintiffs appealed to this Court. The only question presented on this appeal, is, whether the bequest to the feme plaintiff, of "three hundred dollars, or a negro girl worth that money," contained in the will of the defendant's testator, is to be paid immediately, *Page 76 or to be postponed, as to the time of payment, until the death of the widow.
In the Court below, the decree was against the plaintiffs, upon what we conceive to have been an erroneous construction of the will under which they claimed. The terms of the bequest import an immediate gift, and they are to be so construed, unless a contrary intent is apparent from other parts of the will.
The defendant contends, that such contrary intent does appear, from the clauses which immediately precede the one under consideration, for the reason, that the first of those clauses expressly postpones the bequest of the bed, furniture and chest, to the death of the widow; and the second, by a necessary implication, postpones the devise of the seventy acres of land to the same time, the land having, in a previous part of the will, been given to the widow for life, and that the clause in question, commencing with "I also give and bequeath to the said Sarah Cobblar," c., must, by force of the word also, have the same construction. It is true, that, in the cases of SHERILL v. ECHARD, 7 Ired. 161, and HYMAN v. WILLIAMS, 12 Ired. 92, the construction turned partly upon that word which was explained to mean "in like manner," or "in the same manner." SHERRILL v. ECHARD was shortly this. A testator devised to his wife, during her life or widowhood, all his estate, except what he should by his will otherwise dispose of. He then gave certain property to his children, to be their's at his decease. Then comes this clause: "Also, at the decease of my wife, I give to my son G., my man Stephen, and to my son L., my man Charles. Also, I give and bequeath to my son L. W. all my lands, c., (on which he had previously given his wife a life estate.) Also, unto my son L. W. I give my two boys Dick and David, with their mother:" Held, that these negroes, last mentioned, did not pass immediately to L. W., *Page 77 but only in remainder, after the death or marriage of the widow. In HYMAN v. WILLIAMS, the bequest was substantially as follows: "I leave to my wife Charity, one negro man Primus," (and other negroes;) "also, she may take choice of any one of the negro girls belonging to my estate, which I may not give away," c., "and, at the death of my wife, the negroes which I have loaned to my wife, and their increase, I want to be equally divided between my four grand-children," A, B, C, and D. Held, that the wife took a life estate only in the negro girl selected by her, from those not given away. In the opinion delivered in each of these cases, the Court, while laying some stress on the word "also," sought the aid of other dispositions in the will, to fix the construction, and thus, with the definitions "in like manner," and "in the same manner," given to that word, they were enabled to reconcile one part of the will with another, and give a consistent exposition of the whole. But, if the same meaning be attached to the word "also," in the will now before us, a directly contrary effect will be produced. Instead of enabling the expounder to give operation and effect to each and every clause of the will, it will compel a declaration of intestacy as to a life estate in the bequest, which the plaintiffs are now claiming. In no part of the will is any money given to the widow, either expressly by that designation, or by general terms. She cannot take a life estate by implication, in the three hundred dollars, or in the negro girl, which that sum may purchase, because it appears from the case of WHITE v. GREEN, 1 Ired. Eq. 45, and the authorities there cited, that the doctrine, that a gift by will to A, after the death of B, is a gift for life to B, by implication, does not, under any circumstances, apply to personal chattels. If, then, the widow cannot take this bequest for her life, it is certain that no one else can; for, it is manifest, that it cannot form a part of the fund given in the residuary clause. *Page 78
Any other construction, then, than to hold it to be an immediate bequest to the feme plaintiff, will leave it as an undisposed residue during the life of the widow, to be divided among the next of kin. Such could never have been the intention of the testator, and we therefore adopt the only other admissible construction; to wit, that which makes it a present gift to the feme plaintiff.
The decree given in the Court below must be reversed, and a decree be entered here for the plaintiff.
Decree reversed.