*390 By the Court.
McDonald, J.delivering the opinion.
Tne testator’s daughter, Catharine, was single at the date of his will and continued so down to the time of his death. In disposing of his property, he gave and bequeathed unto his beloved daughter Catharine, an equal share of his estate with each of his other children, for her own separate estate, and the same shall vest in and be held in trust by his beloved son Levi B. Smith, for the sole separate use, benefit estate, and support of said Catharine and her children, for and during her natural life, and at her death shall be equally divided between her children, share and share alike; the same shall not be subject to the payment or satisfaction of an]r debt, contract or obligation of the husband with whom she may hereafter intermarry.
Catharine married William S. Johnson, and died, leaving no child. The property sued for, was Catharine’s part of the negroes, received by her trustee, on the distribution of her father’s estate, and which, on her marriage, had been turned over to her husband. The defendant’s counsel moved before the Court below, and the Court awarded a non-suit, on the ground that the will vested an absolute estate in Catharine. This judgment of the Court is assigned as error.
In determining the construction due to the clause of the will under which the parties respectively claim the property sued for, we must consider the entire will in connection with the agreed statement of the parties. In the first place then, the testator intended to dispose of his whole estate, finally and absolutely, by his will, and did not intend to die intestate in respect to any part of it.
The second item begins thus: “ I give and bequeath to my beloved children all my estate both real and personal,” upon the terms and in the manner following, &c. &c.
He gives to several of his children, specially mentioned, an equal share of his estate, but he gives to none a specific legacy, and then, in the sixth clause of his will; he gives *391and bequeaths unto his other children the whole of the balance of his estate, real and personal, &c.
He does not die intestate in regard to any part of his estate.
He had an object in mentioning specially the names of some of his children in his will, while he omitted the names of others, and that object is apparent from the face of the will and the agreed facts, which, so far as may be necessary to elucidate the intention, will be hereinafter stated. His children seem to have shared equally his affection and kindness. Each shared his bounty equally with the rest. By the second item of his will, he bequeathed to his daughter, Mrs. Stanton, her share of his estate, and settled to her sole and separate use, and for the support of herself and children, free from the debts of her husband. The property at her death, was to be equally divided amongst her children. The property given to his daughter Mrs. Dennis, whose husband was dead, was secured in the same manner, to be protected against the improvidence and debts of any husband she might thereafter marry, and remainder to her children. The property for his daughter, Mrs. Bussey, he gives in the same way, except, for her and her children he appoints no trustee.
According to the agreed statement he had, at the time of the making of the will, ten children, all of whom survived him. Six of them were .daughters. The names of two of his daughters do not appear in the will, nor does that of any his sons, except as executor or trustee. No specific legacy is given to any of his children. There is but one specific bequest and that is (in a codicil to his will) to his wife, of his barouche and horses or ponies, accustomed to draw it. His wife, it appears from the statement had an estate of her own, which rendered it unnecessary to make further provision for her. The daughters, whose names do not appear in the will, were Willie Ann Hardison, wife of William B. Hardison, and Emeline Wooldridge, wife of William G. Wooldridge. The marriage of Emeline and her husband took *392place about eight years before the date of the will, at which time (the date of the will,) they had several children. Willie Ann and her husband had been married upwards of fifteen years at the date of the will. They had several children. The husbands of both these daughters were, at the date oí the will, and continued to he, kind, steady, prudent, provident and thrifty men, and were in affluent circumstances. Harriet, (Mrs. Bussey,) and her husband were married about two years before the date of the will. They had two children. Pie had then and still has-a respectable property, and was, and is, a steady and thrifty man. His character for provideixce, management, and all the properties of good husbandry, was not so well established and known to the testator, at the date of the will, as the characters, in these respects, of Hardison and Wooldridge. The husband of Sarah, (Mrs. Stanton,) had never, up to the date of the will, manifested anything like energy or thrift, but a contrary character,, and was without an estate worth naming. The sons of the testator were all of age at the date of the will, and were steady in their habits, and careful of their interests. Catharine was about sixteen years of age, and she and a brother were the only children residing with the testator at the time. The foregoing is the only part of the agreed statement necessary to be considered. In the latter part of the sixth item of the will is this provision; “ if either of my children should die before myself, then the share of such child or children so dying shall be received by the lawful representative of such child or children.”
The will shows no intention on the part of the testator to create an estate tail or a perpetuity. There is no limitation over, on the dying without issue or children of either son or daughter. It is true, that it appears that all the married daughters had children, yet all the children might have died in the life time of the parent. It does not appear that all the sons were married. It is probable that one of them was not, as he lived with the testator at the date of the will, and there *393was no gift over of his share on his death without a child. It does not appear to have been the testator’s purpose to have perpetuated, in his family, the property he left to his children. What was his purpose, then, in giving the property in trust to some of his daughters with the remainder to their children respectively? Mr. Stanton was an improvident man, and his wife had children, and the testator’s intention and desire were that they should enjoy the support which their share of his estate might afford them, and he gave it to her sole and separate use, but gave it absolutely, to them jointly with remainder to the children, and appointed a trustee.
To Mrs. Dennis, he gave the property upon similar trusts. She might intermarry with a husband whose improvidence might expose her to want, and against that possibility he intended to protect her. There was a trustee appointed for her and her children.
Mrs. Bussey’s property he settled in the same way, but appointed no trustee. Mr. Bussey had not been so long in his family as some of his other sons-in-law, but he had been long enough there for him to become acquainted with and appreciate his management to a certain extent; yet not to establish him so fully in his confidence as to assure him that a change in his circumstances might not bring difficulties on his daughter. He omitted the appointment of a trustee, probably, because he was as well satisfied of the prudence and good management of Mr. Bussey as he could be with those of any trustee whom he might appoint. He appointed a trustee for his unmarried daughter, whose fortunes were all in the future, and for the same reasons, settled her property on her. To his other two daughters, in the management of whose husbands he seems to have had entire confidence, he did not give the property in trust. Their shares passed to them absolutely. He did not give it over in remainder to the children. Here is strong evidence that his only purpose in giving the property in trust to any of his daughters was *394to secure the enjoyment of it to them and their children, in the same manner that settlements are made by Courts of chancery to protect the property of wives against the improvidence of husbands. Such settlements do not extend beyond the purposes for which they were made. The testator made an absolute gift. The law of descent covers an absolute estate. The testator provided that this absolute gift should be so held as to secure his bounty to the objects of it, but not to be extended beyond the existence of these objects. It is the same object, unexpressed by the source from which it flows, that Courts of chancery carry into effect. If there had been children by this marriage, the case might have been different, but it is not necessary to consider that. The words of the will are strong enough, and do vest in Catharine an absolute interest. I give and bequeath to my beloved daughter Catharine, an equal share of my estate with my other children, for her own separate estate, and he proceeds to say how it shall be held, and gives a remainder which is necessarily contingent on her having a child. The contingency never happened upon which alone the remainder could take effect. That cannot divest the vested interest. The case of Harrison vs. Foreman, 5. Vesey Jr. 207, is a case bearing strongly on this. In that case, the Master of the Rolls remarked, that “ it is perfectly clear that, when there are clear words of gift, giving vested interest to parties, the Court will never permit that absolute gift to be defeated, unless it is perfectly clear, that the very case has happened, in which it is declared, that interests shall not arise.” The whole of the testator’s will shows that he intended to give to each of his children a share of his estate, that the shares should be equal, that they should be absolute, that the daughters should be protected against the improvidence or prodigality of their husbands, and nothing more, except that, if there were children, they should receive the benefit. The absolute interest having passed, precludes the idea of a reversion. Having once absolutely passed, and no *395contingency having happened, upon which it was to be divested, it remains vested, and does not revert. The case of Whittle vs. Dudin, 2. Jacob and Walker 278, is a still stronger case. The case of Joslin vs. Hammond went upon the intention of the testator. We put this case on the testator’s intention, but it seems to me that the Master of the Rolls came near making an intention for the testator, in that case, which he did not express.
We are of opinion, that under the circumstances admitted to exist in the case, on a construction of the whole will, an interest in the property vested absolutely in Catharine, the daughter, and that nothing having happened to divest it, her husband is entitled to it.
Judgment affirmed.