The question whether the property in controversy belongs to the complainants or to the defendant, depends upon the construction to be placed by us on the following clause in the will of the late John Wilhite, namely: “ Item 4th. My daughter Margaret, I bequeath to her and her children my slave Hannah, unless there is a slave born of my stock; in that case, shall have it, and give up Hannah, as above directed.” The clause referred to by the expression “ above directed,” is a portion of the preceding item, in which, after giving to his wife certain property, the testator says, “she (his wife) must retain all the negroes, unless there should be two more of the blacks; then, in that case, she *291shall keep Prudence and Hannah, and the rest shall be given to the heirs, as I shall hereinafter direct; for sweetly we have labored together for it, and it is my desire that she should enjoy it during her life or widowhood.”
By other clauses in the same will the testator makes several other bequests to his children, in which he uses language similar to that employed in the bequest to his daughter Margaret ; for example — “ To James B. Wilhite and his children my slave Ransom” ; “ To John P. Wilhite and his children my slave Elvira” ; “To my son Jackson W. Wilhite and Us children my slave Prudence, unless there is a second slave born in my stock ; in that case, he shall have it, and give up Prudence, as above directed” j “ To Claiborne L. Wilhite (another son) and his children,” the testator gives his slave Jerry, and adds : “ These five oldest have received one hundred dollars each in their horses and rigging” ; “ To Alfred M. Wilhite and his children” the testator gives his “ slave Sam, and one hundred dollars in a horse and rigging to come out of the salesa similar bequest to Wiley W. of slave Henry; to his daughter Patsy 0. and her children he gives Nance, a slave, “ and two hundred dollars of his ready hard money.” The testator then proceeds to fix periods when the slaves shall be delivered up to “ the heirs,” as he has “above directed.”
It is quite manifest from an examination of this will, that the testator regarded the terms “ heirs” and “ children” as convertible and equivalent expressions. The property which he bequeathes to his own children, he desires should be delivered over to “ his heirs,” «fee., and in every instance the gift to them is to each “and his” or “ her children.” The will is so inartificially drawn, that portions of it are almost inexplicable ; but it is our duty, from an examination of the whole of it, to arrive at the testator’s intention.
The chancellor, by the decree in the record, is made to say, that “ It is well settled that the word ‘children’ is, in general, a word of limitation, and not of purchase.” This is doubtless a clerical misprision, for otherwise it would be at war with his conclusion, which immediately follows, where he says that a “ bequest to a person, and to his or her children, vests the property jointly in the parent and children.” But whether the premise be correctly stated or not, makes no *292difference : the conclusion is right, and it is with this we have to do.
There can be no doubt that a testator by his will can limit property, whether real or personal, to one and to his children then born ; but a bequest to A and his children, if A has no children either at the time the will was made, or when it takes effect by the death of the testator, never has been held to create any interest in after-born children as purchasers.— The term “ children,” in such case, is a word of limitation, and not of purchase. So, in Wilde’s Case, 6 Coke’s R. 17 a, it was resolved by the judges, that if “ A devises his lands to B and to his children or issues, and he hath not any issue at the time of his devise, that the same is an estate tail; for the intent of the devisor is manifest and certain, that his children or issue should take, and as immediate devisees they cannot take, because they are not in rerum natura, and by way of remainder they cannot take, for that was not his intent, for the gift is immediate ; therefore, there such words shall be taken as words of limitation, namely, as much as children or issue of his body.” In relation to the doctrine of this case, and the cases founded on it, Downes, C. J., in 1 Ball & Beatty 459, says the following propositions may be considered as settled by them: “ Where the devise is in terms immediate, and so intended by the testator, and the description of the person to take is general, there, none that do not fall within the description at the time of the testator’s death can take ; therefore, the after-born must bo excluded ; but, where the enjoyment of the thing devised is, by the testator’s expressed intent, not to be immediate by those among whom it is finally to be divided, but is postponed to a particular period, or until a particular event shall happen, then those who answer the general description at that period, or when the event happens on which the distribution is to be made, are entitled to take.”
These authorities, and a number of others which might be cited, very clearly show, that the chancellor was right, in saying that the bequest to the several legatees who had no children before or at the time the will took effect, vested in them the absolute property in the slaves and other properly bequeathed. — Davie v. Stephens, Doug. R. 306; Powell on Devises, vol. 2, pp. 494 to 502.
*293But it by no means follows that the testator used the term “ children” as a word of limitation, from the fact that there may not, at the time of making his will, have been any children born of several of the legatees. There are several clauses in his will, from which it would appear that he fixed upon a future event upon which the slaves were to vest in possession of the legatees. In the fifth item the testator says, it is his desire that the widow should enjoy the property during her life or widowhood. In the thirteenth item he desires his wife to retain the land which he had given to Calvin B. and his children, during her natural life or widowhood ; and he adds, “if there should be two slave children born of my blacks, then, at that time, the negroes to be given up to the heirs, as I have directed.” In the next and last item, immediately succeeding the above quotation, he says: “Item 14th. It is my desire, if my widow do marry, the negroes shall be given up to the heirs, as I have directed ; and if there is one slave only born, Hannah shall be sold ; if two slave children, Prudence shall be sold also, with all the rest of the property, and the money divided equally with the heirs; and if my widow do not marry, she is to retain all the negroes and property during her natural life. N. B. When there are two slaves born, then the young negroes shall be divided with the heirs ; if there is not two, the widow must retain all until her marriage, and if she does not marry, she shall retain all during her natural life.”
The concluding clause seems, when taken in connection with other provisions, clearly to indicate the intention of the testator to allow his widow to keep the negroes during her life or widowhood. This provision for her, from the oft-repeated allusions to it, shows that it was his leading intention to postpone for her benefit the possession of his other legatees; and if there were other clauses in the will repugnant to it, as it comes last, they must give way.
As, then, the will looks to a future uncertain period, when the property bequeathed shall vest in possession, it cannot be said with legal accuracy that the testator did not mean what he said when he used the term “ children”; for by the time the property should vest in possession, each of the legatees might have had children. At all events, there was a possi*294bility of issue, and this is sufficient for the present argument. We do not, therefore, think that the testator used the term “children” in any of his bequests as a word of limitation.- — ■ He intended, if there wore children when the property fell into possession, for them to take a joint interest with their parent. — 2 Powell on Devises, 303; 2 Mod. 104; 1 Ves. 111.
So far as I have been enabled to trace the authorities, the term “ children” has uniformly been construed in its natural, common-law import, unless in cases where departures have been indulged by courts astute to carry out the supposed intention of the testator, and to prevent a total failure of the bequest in favor of the children. In Buffar v. Bradford, 2 Atk. 220, Lord Hardwicke said : “ It must be allowed that ‘children/ in their natural import, are words of purchase, and not of limitation, unless it is to comply with the intention of the testator, where the words cannot take effect in any other way.” See, also, Hatterty v. Jackson, 2 Str. 1172.
In respect to the particular clause under consideration, this reasoning would be inapplicable, as here the daughter had children when the will was made, and when the property, by its terms, vested in possession, and there is no reason'why the intent to give an interest to the children jointly with the daughter should not prevail. — Keyes on Chattels, § 227. We have alluded to the terms employed in other portions of the will, because they are urged, and we think properly, as exponents of this, it being improbable that the same words, occurring in like connection, and apparently intended to accomplish similar objects, should have been intended by the testator to be understood differently.
We concede, that there is some force in the argument, that as the child to be substituted in lieu of Hannah, should one be born, should go to the daughter individually, we should the more readily construe the words giving Hannah as conveying the entire property to the daughter ; but we do not think this sufficient to control the express and direct gift to the children, who were in esse and capable of taking. We cannot undertake to say that the testator might not have meant to give the woman to the daughter and her- children, and the child to the daughter only. Nor will we forestall the inquiry, whether, ainid the use of such a jargon of inapt *295expressions, the testator did not intend that the children should share with the parent a joint interest in the child to be substituted in lieu of Hannah, in the event of the birth of one. Be this as it may, it should not be allowed to defeat the plain gift to the mother and children. They took a joint interest in the slave Hannah and her increase. Such, we apprehend, is substantially the rule to be gathered from several of our own decisions, which bear more or less directly upon this point. — Nimmo v. Stewart, 21 Ala. 682; Cook & Mitchell v. Lewis, 16 ib. 68; Fellows et al. v. Tann, 9 ib. 999; Jasper & Maclin v. Howard, trustee, 12 ib. 652; Rugeley et al. v. Robinson, 10 ib. 137.
As respects the interest of the deceased infant child of the testator’s daughter, several decisions of this court show, that in a proceeding of this character, there being no debts chargeable on the property, there is no need of an administration.' — 16 Ala. 494; 20 ib. 482; 5 ib. 315; 11 ib. 614.
Our conclusion is, that the decree of the chancellor is erroneous. It must therefore be reversed, and the cause must be remanded, that a decree may be rendered in conformity to the views above expressed.