The only question in this case is, whether the agreement between the complainant and her intestate, John H. Martin, on the one hand, and Nancy, the widow of William Martin, deceased, and now the deceased wife of defendant, as set up in the bill, can be carried into effect without violating any rule of law ? The Court below held that it could, not, and dismissed the bill filed for that purpose.
The ease was submitted to this Court without arguments and if we have failed to meet the theory on which the bill was filed, or that upon which the defence rested, our failure to do so, must be credited to that fact. We have had to depend alone on the investigations that we have been able to *156give the question, unaided by counsel, or a knowledge of the ground on which the decision of the Court below was placed. We always dislike to be placed in this situation, for the Court cannot always anticipate the views of counsel, or grasp a ease in all its bearings until it is looked at from the stand point of counsel or the Court below.
[1.] We are told that the Court below dismissed the bill, because the agreement set up by the bill, was an attempt to create a remainder in personalty by parol, and was void on that account, upon the rulings of this Court in Kirkpatrick vs. Davidson, 2 Kelly, 301. Maxwell vs. Harrison, 8 Ga., 61. Yarbrough vs. West, 10 Ga., 471, and Booth vs. Terrell, 16 Ga., 20. These cases certainly do establish the rule that a remainder in slaves, personal property, cannot be created, by a verbal or parol gift. They go no further; and although this is the law of the land, and must be so regarded, I, speaking for my self only, doubt the soundness of the rule, because I cannot see any good reason for it. The old rule was, that a remainder could not be created in personalty, even by deed or will, but that rule has long ceased to exist, and this rule, which was founded on that rule, or gr ew out of it, ought to have passed away with it, or to be more accurate, should never have been made. If the estate or interest created in [the thing be not obnoxious to the statute of frauds, it should not be declared void simply because it was a remainder. Almost every other species of interest or estate in personalty, that can be created by deed or will, can be by parol, and why not a remainder when not otherwise obnoxious to other rules of law % This doubt of mine, however, has nothing to do with the interpretation we put upon this agreement, either in my own judgment or that of my associate.
The agreement does not make an estate in remainder, and does not, consequently, fall within the rule of the cases cited, because the property about which this difficulty arises —the personal assets of the unadministered and unrepresented estate of William Martin, deceased, did not belong *157to the persons making the agreement in respect to its disposition — that is, they did not have the legal title to them; for personal assets do not descend and belong to the heir at law, but to the administrator, who alone can, at law, sell or dispose of them; therefore, any agreement that these parties might make in respect to them, could not make an estate in remainder, or otherwise, that would be good at law. Their interest — that of these contracting parties — was not a legal, but an equitable one. Concede, however, that although these parties have not an estate good at law, in this personal estate, and, therefore, could not make a technical remainder on that account, still, in disposing of mere equitable interests, if such an estate should be created, which, at law, would be void for conflict with its rules, such equitable estate, or interest, so created, would also be void for like reasons, which I do not admit, then, we say, that there is no remainder, strictly and technically so-called, created by this agreement, whether considered as a legal estate, or as a mere equitable interest. I shall first dispose of the question as to the personal property; that as to the lands stands on a different footing, and must be tried by other rules.
The fact that this estate, thus created, by this agreement, in the complainants, is called by the parties in the same, and by the pleader in framing the bill, a remainder, does not make it one. The term is employed loosely, and in what Mr. Eearne calls a lax sense. — 1 Fearne, Con. Rem., section 159; page 54.
The personal property in controversy, is the one-third part of "William Martin’s estate that would have been apportioned to his widow as one of the three heirs at law of the deceased, and belonged to her absolutely, had there been a regular distribution under the statute, and the amount or parts of the shares of the other two heirs, in excess of the one-third of the estate, which she took and the others gave in consideration of her agreement that they might have the whole at her death, whenever that might happen. As to the excess over one-third, or that portion of the estate which *158she, under the agreement, took, over and above one-third, and which, but for this agreement, would have been apportioned to and belonged to the complainants, there can be no remainder as to this part of the property, because it equitably belonged to the complainants, and was so treated in that arrangement, and now it returns to those who gave it. This is in the nature of a reversion, certainly not of a remainder; and a reverson by parol gift is not void, or has never been so decided in Georgia.—Booth vs. Terrell. 16 Geo., 20 Such disposition of personal property, instead of being held void, is constantly sustained by the Court, as in cases of loans to children’, and all other questions of like character. Then, as to the third, or that portion, of the personal property embraced in this agreement, and which equitably belonged to Mrs. Martin, there was no remainder created or attempted, for there was no particular estate carved out of it to support such remainder, and without which none can exist.—2 Blk. Com. 165. 2 Co. Litt. 126, 19 a, where a remainder is defined, most accurately and technically, to bo “ a residue in an estate in land depending upon a particular estate, and created together with the same.” Hero the whole estate was disjsosed of, though the enjoyment was not to commence until after the death of Mrs. Martin. An estate created to commence at a distant period of time, without any intervening estate, is, therefore,! properly no remainder; it is the whole of the gift, and not a residuary part. And such future estate can only be made of chattel interests, which were considered in the light of mere contracts, by the ancient law, {Raymond 151,) to be executed either now or hereafter, as the contracting parties may agree, (2 Blk. Com., 165,) and that is this case.
[2.] Another reason for the judgment of the Court below, has been assigned, and that is, that the agreement is. obnoxious to the fifth clause, fourth section of the statute of frauds, in that the agreement was not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof. "We do not think that the agreement is obnoxious to that clause, or any *159other, of the statute of frauds. The parties made uo stipulation as to time, but the performance of the agreement depended upon a contingency that might have occurred within the year, and consistently with the understanding and rights of the parties. It is well settled that such agreements are not within the statute of frauds.—Fenton vs. Emblers. 3 Burr. 1278; 1 Salk, 280 ; 1 Lord Raymond, 316 ; Brown on Statute of Frauds, section 272 to 279, and cases there cited.
[3.] The agreement as to the real estate is taken out of the statute by part performance. Giving up the possession, use, and profits of the land by complainant, and the taking possession, and use thereof, by Mrs. Martin, during the whole term of her life, from the first of May, 1845, to some time in the year 1859, “ all being done in pursuance of, and in contemplation of the contract,” and “ unequivocally referring to and resulting from the agreement,” must be held sufficient performance to authorize a Court of equity to decree a specific performance of the agreement.—Gilmore vs. Johnson; 14 Geo. 683; Blade vs. Blade 15; Geo. 445.
The questions here argued are of very great importance and magnitude, requiring much more time and attention than I have thought proper to bestow on them in this connection. I have done but little more than to state the principles involved, and give the reasons, briefly, why the objections suggested do not control this agreement, and I think that I have succeeded. I was thus brief because I felt throughout the investigation, that although the argument presented was conclusive, yet, that it was not the true ground on which to rest this case.
[4.] Here are three persons having an equal and common interest in an undivided and unrepresented estate, consisting of lands and personal property. Their title does not come to them by deed or gift, but it is that which the law casts upon them as the legal distributees of this estate. They come together for the purpose of amicably distributing the estate amongst themselves in such parts and proportions as they *160choose to agree upon, as they hare a right to do, and as it has been asserted time and time again by the Courts, they will be protected in. Indeed, such family and friendly settlement and distribution of estates, without the aid of an administration, by persons of full age, are greatly favored by the Courts, because they save expense, prevent family feuds and dissensions, and put the parties interested speedily in possession and enjoyment of their rights. The widow, feeling that one-third of the estate would not give her such support and maintenance as she desired, or for some other equally good and sufficient reason, proposes to her step-son and daughter, that if they will permit her to take such parts and as much of the real and personal estate as she prefers, and keep and use it for her life-time, that then the whole estate— that which she selects, as well as that which she does not— shall go to them, to be equalty divided between them as their absolute property. They accept her proposition and the agreement is concluded. The widow, in persuance of this agreement, takes the best lands, the best negroes, the best stock; and the best, or choice, of every thing, and much the larger part; to all of which complainants, on the faith of the agreement, consent; and she, in further performance of the agreement, for fourteen years retains and enjoys to the fullest extent, this large and undue proportion of the estate, and without let or hindrance by her co-distributees, and solely on the faith of this agreement. .Row what objection can there be to the execution of this most equitable and favorable arrangement, at least for the widow í What has the doctrine of remainder, or the statute of frauds and perjuries, to do with the matter ? I have shown they do not control it, but if they did, instead of preventing fraud, and being used for the benefit and security of the rights of parties, these important rules of law would be, in such cases as this, mere instruments to cover and protect the grossest of frauds, and to violate and defeat the rights of persons as arranged and agreed upon by themselves, according to their own wishes and in furtherance of what they believed, and no doubt was, the best *161interest of all the parties. But they — these rules of law — in my judgment, not only do not control, but they have nothing whatever to do with the execution or defeat of this agreement. The title to this property was not east upon the parties to this agreement by law, on the death of its owner. Certain substantial formalities, snch as administration, distribution, apportionment, or partition, were necessary before they, or either, were clothed with a complete title. Still, they possessed a substantial interest therein, the right to the one-third part thereof by each, through, and by this machinery of the law for transferring the légal title from, and out of, the intestate into them. The widow, however, desires a different interest or estate than that which the law would give her, and her co-heirs, to oblige and gratify her wishes, or because they preferred a different interest themselves than the law would give them, consent that she may take a different estate — that is, a life estate in a larger and better portion of the estate than one-third, and she takes and enjoys that other and different estate, in lieu of the one which the law gave her. Is there any rule of law that prohibited her from so doing ? She was m juris, capable of judging what was to her interest and what was not, and having acted, is she not concluded thereby ? We think so, most unquestionably. She had au interest in an undivided, unrepresented estate, and proposed to sell out that interest to her co-heirs ; they accept the proposition, buy her interest, pay her for it; she receives and enjoys the compensation, and now that the whole is done and past, shall her representatives repudiate her agreement ? We think not. On the contrary, we think that they are absolutely concluded.