The will of Thomas McDonald, admitted to probate in this court, after mentioning his daughter, Mary F. Clyne, contained the following:
“ Fourth. I give and devise to her my said daughter for life, those two certain houses and lots in the City of Brooklyn, D. Y., the one known and designated as Do. 184 Pacific Street and the other as Do. 351 DeKalb Avenue and I hereby give her full power and authority to dispose of both of said houses and lots by her last will and testament, reposing in her implicit trust and confidence that she will devise the same, so that the absolute fee in possession will ultimately and within the statutory period *377vest in her brother’s heirs, or in one or more of them whom she may, under the circumstances existing -at the time of executing the power hereby given her, deem most in need and deserving of her bounty.”
This provision was modified by a codicil, but without affecting the questions now presented.
Mary F. Clyne, the person named in the provision last quoted, died after her father’s death, leaving a will which has been admitted to probate in this court, which contains the following:
“ First. In pursuance of a power conferred upon me by the fourth clause of the last Will and Testament of my father Thomas McDonald, deceased, I give and devise to my husband Edmond F. Clyne, for his natural life, the premises situate and known as Humber 184 Pacific Street in the Borough of Brooklyn, City of Hew York, and the premises situate and known as Humber 367 DeKalb Avenue, in the said Borough of Brooklyn, City of Hew York, and at his death I give and devise said property' to the children of my brother Thomas H. McDonald, deceased, and in case of the death of any of the said children before my- said husband, the share of such deceased child or children to go to his or her issue.”
The present proceeding must be confined to the construction of the father’s will.
If the nature of the power conferred by the fourth paragraph thereof can be ascertained, there will be no legal provocation for any determination as to either the meaning or the practical effect of the daughter’s will. Indeed, there is no conceivable uncertainty in the later instrument. Its disposition of the property involved in the power may be considered, but solely as a convenient limitation of the inquiry, Does the power respecting the premises mentioned in the fourth paragraph of the father’s will give to the daughter the right to devise or appoint the same for life to a person not of the blood of the testator, with remainder, upon his death, to her brother’s heirs ?
*378If the power, primarily full and comprehensive, is not impaired or cut down by the expression of explicit confidence with regard to its exercise, then the paragraph yields nothing but the power to appoint by will and at will to such persons as the daughter shall select. If, however, the power is so characterized and restricted by this provision that it can be exercised only in such manner that “ the absolute fee in possession will untimately and within the statutory period vest ” in one or more of the brother’s heirs, it will need to be determined whether the power would permit the appointment of a life estate in a stranger to intervene before the fee should vest in the brother’s heirs.
It will be the effect of the decree to be made in this matter, (a) that the recital of the testator’s implicit trust and confidence that the daughter would devise the lands in the manner indicated was but an enclitic to his express grant of the power, not rising above a precatory appeal to her trustworthiness, (b) that the wish of the testator was imposed not upon the execution of the power but upon the daughter’s conscience in its fulfillment, and (c) that hence she had a right untrammeled by law to dispose of the lands as she chose.
It will be further found that if the only power was to dispose of the lands “ so that the absolute fee in possession will ultimately and within the statutory period vest in her brother’s heirs,” etc., then the only intention derivable from the language would be that 'any provision in the daughter’s will which would vest the lands in one or more of her brother’s heirs ultimately and at the end of one life, in addition to her own, would be a complete exercise of the power.
Decreed accordingly.