delivered the opinion of the Court. The first and most important question in this case, is, what estate did Joanna Burrell take, in the property devised to her by the will of her father, Moses Brackett.
It is contended on the part of the demandant, that it is an executory devise, and could not be barred or affected by the deed, or by any other act done by the devisee Joanna Burrell in her lifetime, and in the event that has happened, the death of Joanna, leaving no children, the estate, by force of the devise, has become vested in the surviving sisters, of whom the demandant is one.
On the part of the tenant it is contended, that the devise to Joanna was an estate tail, with a contingent remainder to the sisters ; that Joanna, being tenant in tail, had a power jointly with her fiusband, by force of the statute of this State, by her deed duly executed and recorded, to bar all remainders expectant upon such estate tail, and convert the same into an estate in fee simple, and that by the deed shown to have been executed to Walter, this effect has been produced, so that the claim of the demandant, to a contingent remainder, no longer exists.
If this suit is in form a formedon in remainder, as appears in the statement of facts, it is obvious that the demandant has no right to recover upon showing herself entitled to the estate as an executory devise ; because it can only be held as an executory devise, by showing, that there was no estate tail in Joanna, and no remainder, contingent or vested, upon which alone formedon in remainder can be maintained. But as the question has been argued upon general grounds, without reference to the form of the writ, as the effect of deciding it upon this ground would be merely to turn the demandant round to another form of action, and as there are other sisters claiming upon the same grounds, who are understood to be represented in this suit, we have thought it proper to consider the rights of the demandant, without regard to the form of her action.
Many of the subjects alluded to in the argument, are among the most abstruse and profound of all the questions *110brought before courts of justice upon this most difficult branen °f the law of real property ; they depend upon considerations and distinctions highly technical, artificial and refined, and to render the subject more perplexing, there is found, upon some points, a most distressing diversity of opinion among those eminent jurists, who are regarded as the highest authorities upon most questions of law. But we think the cause before us may be decided, in conformity to those fixed rules in which all the authorities concur, without involving the discus sion of those litigated and vexed questions which have so much divided them.
The essential difference in the quality of the estate, between a remainder and an executory devise, is, that the former may be barred at the pleasure of the tenant in tail, by a common recovery, or, in our State, by a conveyance by deed ; but he who holds by force of an executory devise, has an estate above and beyond the power and control of the first taker, who cannot alienate or change it, or prevent its taking effect, according to the terms of the will, upon the happening of the contingency, upon which it is limited. It does not depend upon the particular estate, but operates by way of determination of the first estate limited, and the substitution of another in its place.
As an executory devise was allowed only to give effect to the intent of a testator, when such intent would otherwise have wholly failed, as not being conformable to the rules of the common law in regard to the transmission of real property, it has been adopted as a fixed and settled rule, that whenever a future interest in lands is so devised, that conformably to the rules of law, it can take effect as a remainder, it shall be construed to be a remainder, and not an executory devise. Purefoy v. Rogers, 2 Saund. 388. And in Doe v. Morgan, 3 T. R. 765, it is said by Lord Kenyon, that if ever there existed a rule respecting executory devises, which has uniformly prevailed without any exception to the contrary, it is that which is laid down by Lord Hale, in Purefoy v. Rogers, that “ where a contingency is limited to depend on an estate of freehold, which is capable of supporting a remainder, it *111shall never be construed to be an executory devise, but a contingent remainder only, and not otherwise.”
Another settled rule in regard to an executory devise, to prevent this mode of devising from being resorted to as a means of creating a perpetuity, is, that it must vest within the compass of a life or lives in being, at the time the devise takes effect, that is, at the death of the testator, and twenty-one years and the fraction of a year after, otherwise such executory devise is wholly void.
And in the application of this rule, regard is had, not to any event which has taken place after the death of the testator, but the question is, whether by possibility the estate is so limited upon a contingency, that it may remain more than the allowed period, before the contingent interest will become vested, and if it can, it is not a good executory devise.
There are two kinds of executory devise ; one, where an estate is devised to one, but upon some future event that estate is determined, and the estate thereupon is to go to another; the other, when the estate is limited to commence m futuro, contrary to the rules of the common law. In the latter case, the fee in the mean time remains in the heir of the devisor.
In determining, therefore, with a steady reference to these rules, whether a contingent interest given by will, is in legal contemplation an executory devise', or a remainder, the first consideration is, whether the estate, after which it is limited, is an estate in fee or in tail.
If the estate after which it is to take effect, is an estate tail, upon which the contingent is dependent, there are two grounds, upon which, in most if not in all cases, it may be concluded, that the limitation over does not constitute an ex-euctory devise.
1. That the contingent interest thus given, after the devise of an estate tail, can in most instances take effect as a re mainder, and so may become barred by a common recovery suffered by the tenant in tail;
2. Because if the devise is made to depend upon the determination of a previous estate tail, such particular estate may last as long as there remain any issue in tail, that is, to an *112indefinite and unlimited period, and so the contingent estate might not vest within the time required for the vesting of an executory devise, and therefore it cannot take effect as such.
To determine whether any particular devise constitutes an estate in fee or an estate tail, considered by itself, is usually not very difficult. It depends upon certain rules of construction, applied to particular forms of words, which are in a good degree settled. But it is a well-known rule of construction, that every clause and word in a will are to be taken together, however detached from each other, to ascertain the intent of the testator. When therefore, by one clause in a will, an estate for life or an estate in fee is given by plain words, if it appear in other parts of the will, by explanatory words or by implication, that it was the intent of the testator, in such devise, that the issue of the devisee should take the estate in succession after him, then the life estate is enlarged in the one case, and the estate in fee is reduced in the other, to an estate tail.
If therefore, an estate is devised to A and his heirs, which is a fee ; and it is afterwards provided, that if A die without issue, then over, this reduces it to an estate tail by implication. The law implies that by “ heirs ” in the first devise, was intended heirs of the body, and it also implies from the proviso, that it was not the intent of the testator, to give the estate over, and away from the issue of the first devisee, but on the contrary, that such issue should take after the first devisee.
The difficulty therefore in determining, whether a contingent devise is an executory devise or a remainder, usually arises where there is a plain devise in fee in one clause, and afterwards, a gift over upon the contingency of the first devisee dying wdthout issue. If the implication from such description of the contingency taken together is, that in the event described it was the intention and expectation of the testator, that the issue should take in succession, then the fee first created is reduced to an estate tail, the tenant in tail may suffer a recovery and bar*all remainders, and the gift over cannot take effect as an executory devise, both because it may take effect as a contingent remainder, and because it might not vest within the time limited for the vesting of the estate under an *113executory devise. But if properly described, the event of a person’s dying without leaving issue surviving or not, is a contingency, upon which an executory devise may be limited over, as well as the happening of any other event. And there may be very good reasons why a testator should select this event, as one, upon the happening of which, or not, the estate should remain absolute in the first devisee, or go over to some secondary object of the testator’s bounty. He may properly consider, that if the devisee, a son for instance, the first object of his bounty, has children, who survive him, he shall have the estate absolutely, to enable him to provide for such children, but leaving it to his discretion, whether he will transmit the estate to them, or make any other disposition of it, as he, such first devisee, may determine. But if such first devisee should leave no children to be provided for, the testator might well determine to adopt his own mode of disposing of the estate, and direct it in that event to vest in some other person. If therefore the description of this contingency is such, as not to raise any implication, that it is the intent of the testator that the issue are to take the estate as children and heirs of the parent, then the estate limited over is a good executory devise ; the first devisee has an estate in fee, deter minable upon the happening of the contingency, but otherwise absolute.
In the former case, taking the first devise in fee, with the subsequent words “ if he die without issue,” as raising a necessary implication, that it was the intention of the testator to give the estate to the first devisee and his issue, it is a tenancy in tail, to which the law annexes certain incidents, among which the most important is, that the tenant in tail may suffer a common recovery ; in the other, the law implies, that notwithstanding the first devise in fee, and the subsequent limitation over, upon the contingency of the devisee’s dying without issue, there was no implication that if there were issue, they were to take the estate by force of the devise ; then the original estate in fee, created by the first clause, is not reduced to an estate in fee tail, but the first devisee always continues to hold as tenant in fee, an estate in fee simple, determinable and defeasible, upon the happening of the event of his dying *114without actually leaving children surviving him ; but otherwise absolute and indefeasible, so that he has the absolute disposal of it either by will or otherwise. During his lifetime, therefore, he cannot suffer a common recovery, but he may alienate the estate subject only to the condition of not dying without leaving issue surviving him. With these general views of the legal distinction between an executory devise, and a remainder, let us now consider the provisions of Moses Brackett’s will.
A devise to one and his children, he having no children at the time, is equivalent to a devise to him and his issue, and creates an estate tail. Wild's case, 6 Rep. 16 ; Wood v. Baron, 1 East, 259 ; Davie v. Stevens, 1 Doug. 321 ; 6 Cruise’s Dig. 280, tit. 38, c. 12, § 27. Here it is found, that at the time of making the will, Mehetabel was single, having no chil dren; of course the devise to her was an estate tail. It is not found whether the daughter Joanna Burrell had any child at that time or not. If she had not, the point is beyond doubt, that the words constitute an estate tail in her. But if she had a child at the time, we are of opinion that taking the whole together, the word “ children ” must be deemed to be a word of limitation and not a word of purchase. There are several reasons for this. The subsequent provision, that if she die and leave no children, shows a manifest intent, that the children should take after the mother, which they could only do as tenants in tail. If they took per capita, as purchasers and tenants in common with their mother, they would take with and not after her, and would take estates for life only, there being no words of limitation. And if it be argued, that the subsequent words enlarge this to an estate tail by implication, it is answered, that that might well be, if the estate were in the first clause given to the mother alone; but if it is an estate to-the mother and children in the first instance, as purchasers, then the proviso would be, if they should die and leave no children, in order to create an estate tail by implication in the first takers. It is also a strong circumstance, that the testator used exactly the same form of words, in regard to an unmarried daughter, where the word “ children ” could only be used as a word of limitation, and in regard to both, devises *115over, in the same terms, in case of their death without children, thereby manifesting an intention of creating the same estate, upon the same limitations, in respect to both. Considering it as the clear intent from the will, that the daughter Joanna should take the estate, and her children, if she had any, after her, and that could only be done, by considering her as taking an estate tail, to her and her issue, and that this conclusion is fortified by the general tenor of the will, we are of opinion that Joanna Burrell did take an estate tail, under this will.*
Such being the nature of her estate, the contingency of dying and leaving no issue, is precisely equivalent to dying without issue, and looks therefore to the general failure of issue before the devise over is to take effect. Then by the well-established principle, the devise over cannot take effect as an executory devise, both because it can be supported and have effect as a remainder, expectant, upon the determination of the estate tail to Joanna Burrell and her issue, and also, because if an executory devise could be so limited upon an estate tail, it might not vest within the time allowed for the vesting of the estate under an executory devise.
The next question is, whether the demandant is entitled to recover the whole or any part of the estate as a remainder.
Jf the tenant had issue by his wife Joanna, a fact which does not appear in the statement of facts, it is obvious that the tenant would hold a freehold estate for his own life, as tenant by the curtesy. If the wife was seised as tenant in tail, it was as tenant in tail general; the issue would be entitled to inherit as heir in tail, and therefore the husband would be tenant by the curtesy. If the husband is tenant by the curtesy, the demandant would have no right to recover now, whatever right she might have after his death. If it depended upon this consideration alone, it would be necessary to ascertain the fact, whether there has been issue of the mar riage born alive, before any judgment could be given.*
But the remaining material question is, whether the estate *116tail, and the remainders and reversions expectant thereon, have not been effectua% barred, by the deed executed by Seth Burrell and his wife to William Walter.
By the statute of 1791, c. 61, § 1, a simple, easy and efficacious mode of barring estates tail is provided. After reciting the dilatory and expensive process of common recovery, the statute professes to provide a more simple method of accomplishing this object, and one not liable to the same objections. The first and most obvious conclusion arising from this statute, taking the preamble and the enacting clauses together, is, that wherever an estate tail might before the statute have been barred by a common recovery, and an estate in fee substituted therefor, the same thing may be done under the statute, by a deed duly executed in the manner provided by the statute.
The provision of the statute is as follows:—“That it shall be lawful for any person or persons who shall be seised and possessed of any lands, tenements or hereditaments, within this commonwealth, in fee tail, being of full age, by deed duly executed before two or more credible subscribing witnesses, acknowledged before &c., or before any justice of the peace in this commonwealth, &c., and recorded in the record of. deeds for such county, for a good or valuable consideration, bonft fide, to give, grant, sell and convey such lands, tenements or hereditaments, or any part thereof, in fee simple, to any person or persons capable, by law, of taking and holding real estates, in this commonwealth; and such deed so executed, acknowledged and recorded, shall be sufficient and effectual in law, to bar all estates tail in such lands, tenements, or hereditaments ; and all right and title of the tenant or tenants in tail, and their issue in tail, and of all others claiming under and by force of the original gift or grant which created such estate tail, in and to such lands, tenements or hereditaments; and all reversions and remainders, expectant upon the determinations of such estates tail; and to pass, and to vest the absolute inheritance, in fee simple, of such lands, tenements or hereditaments, in such purchasers or grantees, without any fine or common recovery, made or ruffered, or any other act or ceremony whatever,”
*117fu comparing the deed with these provisions, • it appears that every requisite of the statute has been complied with.
. Seth Burrell and Joanna his wife, of full age, being at the time seised of the premises within this commonwealth, in fee tail, in her right, and being in possession thereof, duly executed their deed, on the 19th of April, 1806, before Mottram Vesey and George Nightingale, two subscribing witnesses, who are presumed to be credible, in the absence of all proof to the contrary, which was duly acknowledged on the same day before Peter B. Adams, a justice of the peace of the commonwealth, and was duly recorded in the registry of deeds for the county of Norfolk. It purports to be made upon a valuable consideration of two thousand dollars ; nothing appears to indicate that it was not made in good faith ; and it purports to give, grant, sell, and convey to Walter and his heirs, he being described as of Boston, merchant, and of course being capable, by law, of taking and holding real estate m this commonwealth.
Can there be any reasonable doubt, that under the statute, a deed by husband and wife, conveying estate of which they are seised in her right in fee tail, is as effectual to convey her estate and convert it into a fee simple by force of the statute, as it would be to transfer the estate of which she is seised in fee simple ?
In the case of Lithgow v. Kavenagh, 9 Mass. R. 174, Mr. Justice Sewall intimates such a doubt, but it did not become necessary for the Court to give any opinion upon it. He says, “ But it may deserve some consideration, whether the form of conveying hitherto in use, for married women, as to their estates in fee simple, rendered effectual by a peculiar usage, against general principles, is also, under this statute provision for barring estates tail, an assurance of title, after the death of the husband, against the wife and her issue, claiming per for mom doni.,’> If this doubt were well founded, the only mode, in which an estate could be barred, would be by fine or common recovery, and the objections to that mode would remain in their full force, in all cases, where the estate tail happens to be in a married woman. He intimates, that in such case, a manifest intent to convey that *118peculiar interest should be apparent, and perhaps it ougn to appear, in case of a married woman, that she acts with out undue influence of her husband.
In regard to the apparent intent, where the land is minutely described, and where the only estate and interest, which the grantors have in it, is an estate tail, the intent of the grantors to transfer it must be sufficiently apparent.
As the statute has made no provision for the separate examination of a married woman, in executing a deed under this statute, to ascertain whether, in the disposal of her estate, held in this qualified way, she is under any unsuitable bias, it seems very clear, that a gratuitous examination of this kind, in point of fact, would not render the deed effectual, under the statute, if otherwise it did not come within its provisions. It is only in case the deed conforms to the statute, that the statute gives it the effect of a recovery, to bar all remainders and reversions. The consequence therefore would be, that a common recovery must still be resorted to, with all its ex pense and delay, to bar the entail, where the tenant is a feme covert. But what is the ground of this doubt ? If founded in considerations of policy, and in the safety of those who claim under married women, where is the difference, in this respect, between giving her such a power over her estate tail, and her estate in fee simple. The policy does exist in England, and there a married woman can only convey by fine, or other matter of record, in conducting which she is examined separately. But from the earliest times, we overlooked this danger to heirs, and permitted her to join with her husband in a conveyance of her separate estate in fee simple by deed ; why then should the policy remain in regard to her entailed estate ? In the case cited, p. 172, Mr. Justice Sewall, in alluding to cases in England, where by local custom the deed of husband and wife is held to be as effectual as a conveyance by record at common law, adds, that a like usage has prevailed here from the earliest times. A conveyance by husband and wife of lands holden in her right, may be by deed, and this mode of conveyance is now to be ranked among the common assurances, which are not to be questioned or disrobed. This usage and the efficacy attributed to the deed *119of a married woman, not only to bar herself of an inchoate right of dower, but to convey and transfer her separate estate, were long known as the settled law of the land, and must have been so recognised and understood by the legislature when this statute was passed. They must be presumed to have used language, and made provisions, in reference to the ex isting laws upon the same subject matter. The language of the statute is general: “It shall be lawful for any person or persons, who shall be seised and possessed of any lands, &c., in fee tail.” This exactly describes the case of husband and wife, seised in fee tail, in her right. The statute adds, “by deed duly executed,” &c. What constitutes the due execution of a deed, except that it. must be by a person of full age, is not particularly described. It is left to be regulated by the known laws respecting the execution of other deeds in like cases. It must be sealed, and delivered, it must be made by a person of sane mind, and free from duress. Had a feme covert been under a general disability to convey her land by deed before, there would have been strong ground for the argument; though still it might have been contended with some plausibility, that as the statute makes no exception it would be reasonable to consider it as an enabling act, giving the power where it did not exist before. But when it is considered, that from the earliest times it had been in the power of a married woman, by joining with her husband, to convey her estate by deed, whenever she had the power of alienation; that at common law, she had the power, when holding estate as tenant in tail, by joining with her husband, to suffer a common recovery, by which all remainders and reversions would be barred, and when it was the avowed puipose of the statute to substitute the simple and cheap method of a conveyance by deed, instead of the dilatory and expensive process of a common recovery, and when the statute itself makes no exceptions, we think it would be narrowing down the operation of the statute, and depriving it of the legitimate and liberal operation intended by the legislature, to say that it shall not extend to give efficacy to the deed of husband and wife. It is to be considered, that the statute gives no new power, but provides a more simple and *120easy method of executing an existing power. Prior to the statute, necessity and the usage of the country had put husband and wife on the same footing with other holders of real estate, and authorized them to convey by deed, contrary to the rules of the common law. If they could not then bar an entail, in the same way, in case the wife was seised in fee tail, it was not because she was under a disability as a feme covert, but because no tenant in tail could bar the entail, without first suffering a common recovery. When this last provision is changed by positive law, and tenants in tail are authorized to bar the entail by deed, without exception, why should the disability of coverture be set up as an implied exception, when by the existing law, in relation to the same subject matter, that is, the conveyance of the estate of a feme covert by deed, no such disability had existed ? On the whole, we are of opinion, that the deed of Burrell and his wife was as effectual to bar the remainders and reversions, expectant upon this estate tail, as her own deed would have been under the statute, had she been sole, and seised in like manner.
It was intimated in the argument, that the conveyance in fee to Walter was not made in good faith, and “ bond fide ” under the statute.
It is not perhaps easy to decide what was intended by the use of the words bond fide in this statute.
In Wheelwright v. Wheelwright, 2 Mass. R. 447, the deeds purported to be made for a valuable consideration ir. money, and also for love and affection ; and it was in proof, that the intent of the tenant in tail, in executing the deeds, was, to prevent the entail from depriving the grantees of the lands conveyed, in other words, to bar the entail. On the part of the issue in tail, it was contended that such a conveyance was not made bond, fide within the statute. On the other side it was maintained, that this was a legitimate and proper purpose under the statute, doing nothing more than the tenant in tail had a right to do without the statute, by common recovery. It was held by the Court, that the deeds purporting to be made both for a good and for a valuable corsideration, it was clear that the statute intended that the *121tenant in tail might bar the heir in tail, by deed conveying the land to his relations, executed for a good, although not for a valuable consideration; treating a conveyance under the statute as a substitute for a common recovery. The Court further say, that as the statute makes estates tail assets for payment of the debts of the tenant in tail before and after his decease, a bona fide conveyance is required, to prevent aliena tians to defraud creditors, and not to protect the heir in tail.
This goes far to settle the construction of the terms bond fide in this statute.
In Soule v. Soule, 5 Mass. R. 64, there was an agreed statement of facts, by which it appeared, that tenant in tail conveyed to A, and he to B, and B back to the original tenant in tail and grantor, in fee simple. It was there agreed in terms, that there was no consideration for either of the deeds, but the intention was to bar the entail. It was held by the Court, that this was not conformable to the statute, and was inoperative, and it was decided expressly upon the ground, that there was no consideration, whereas the statute requires the deed to be made upon a good or a valuable consideration, either being sufficient.
But we do not consider this general question as involved in the present inquiry. The deed purports to be made for a valuable consideration actually received, and there is nothing to render this admission in the deed questionable, if it were open to question in a case like the present. The only circumstance is, that the grantors have remained in possession. But this they might do, in perfect consistency with the deed. The original deed purports to be made in consideration of a sum of money, and of a lease of the premises for one year, at an apparently nominal rent. Before the expiration of the term, a declaration of trust by indenture was duly made, by Walter, among other things to permit.the grantors to have possession of the premises, during their lives and the life of the survivor. This therefore satisfactorily accounts for the continued possession of the tenant, since the making of the deed. How this conveyance would have stood against the claims of creditors, is another and very different question.
There is nothing in the declaration of trust itself to show, *122that the valuable consideration was not paid, according to the purport of the deed. It was made many months after the deed. It might be, that the original deed was given to pay or secure a debt to the grantee or some other person, which was afterwards paid, or otherwise secured, and the declaration of trust substituted instead of a reconveyance, at the request of the parties.
But it is unnecessary to speculate upon the various purposes, for which the deed might have been originally made, or the views which afterwards led to this declaration of trust If it were intended to impeach this deed, as not being a good conveyance to bar the entail, by force of the statute, because it was made without consideration or not bond fide, the burden of proof was upon the demandant to show it, and this has not been done.
We are therefore of opinion, that by this deed to Walter, the remainder in tail now claimed by the demandant was legally barred, and therefore, neither as an executory devise, nor as a remainder, is she entitled to recover. This renders it unnecessary to give any opinion upon the effect of the deed of partition and the covenants contained in it.
It was agreed by the parties, after this opinion was given, that neither at the time of the making of her father’s will, nor at any time, had Mrs. Burrell *nv child.