Buies by which wills are construed are well defined. The several clauses must be construed together, as constituting one instrument; the construction of one clause is frequently aided by consulting another; in case of repugnancy, real or apparent, the general intent is to be carried out, rather than the special; the intention of the testator, if lawful, to be gathered from the language of the will, is to be carried into effect; and, in case of irreconcilable conflict between two clauses, the last is to prevail, as being the latest expression of the testator’s will. It is upon this last principle that codicils, as far as they express an intention different from the will, are to prevail. But they displace and supersede the will, only to the extent expressed, or to the extent the two can not stand and be executed together. The will and codicil are one instrument for purposes of construction, and must be read as if they were executed at one and the same time, except that clauses in the will that are expressly revoked in the codicil, and clauses that are irreconcilably repugnant to provisions in the codicil, must be treated as if stricken out. This is the purpose — this the office of the codicil. — Hitchcock v. U. S. Bank of Penn. 7 Ala. 386; Mason v. Smith, 49 Ala. 71; Hunter v. Green, 22 Ala. 329; 1 Jar. on Wills, 411.
The question, in the present case, arises on the construction of Edward Sims’ will. The clause is that which gives to Aaron Beady a pecuniary legacy of two thousand dollars. If the payment of that legacy Was postponed, by the terms of the will, until after the death of Mrs. Sims, widow and relict of testator, then there can be no question that Moody, the administrator, was rightly allowed a credit for its payment. Mrs. Sims died in 1874, and the payment was made in less than three years afterwards; probably less than two. It is manifest that the period necessary to perfect a bar of a pecuniary legacy, is much longer than that. On the other hand, it is contended by appellant that the provisions of the will do not postpone the payment of this legacy, and that, consequently, it was due and demandable at the end of eighteen months after the probate of the will. The will was probated in 1840 — more than thirty-three years before the death of Mrs. Sims. Aaron Beady, the legatee, was one of *514the executors of the will, and acted in that capacity until his death in 1852. Two presumptions are claimed as barring this legacy, demanded and paid, as it was, after 1874. First, that Ready, being executor for eleven or twelve years, and having assets in his hands, is presumed to have paid himself. Second, that twenty, even more than thirty years had elapsed since the legacy was demandable, and the law presumes its payment. If this legacy was due at the end of eighteen months after the will was probated, then we do not hesitate to declare that the claim was barred by lapse of time — conclusively barred — and Mr. Moody, the administrator, paid it in his own wrong. — Austin v. Jordan, 35 Ala. 642; Pickering v. Lord Stamford, 2 Ves. jr. 272, 280; Portlock v. Gardner, 1 Hare, 594. See, also, Hallett v. Allen, 13 Ala. 554; Marsh v. Hague, 1 Edw. Ch. 174; Ellison v. Moffatt, 1 Johns. Ch. 46; Wisner v. Barnett, 4 Wash. Cir. Ct. 631; Barnet v. Torrence, 23 Ala. 463. This case, then, resolves itself into the single inquiry, when was the Ready legacy due and demandable?
The will of Mr. Sims is inartificially drawn. Its preparation was commenced February 2d, 1838, and on that day he inserted this clause: “ I give unto my beloved wife, Sarah Sims, the tract of land where I now live, with the one on Rum Creek, joining Mother Banks, with all the furniture and stock of all kinds, provisions, and all my negroes, both male and female, with the following restrictions — that is to say : that as my children become of age or marry, they are to have two grown negroes each, say a man and a woman, and as many more as she, my wife, may think proper to give. I mean, when I say stock and furniture of all kinds, horses, cows, hogs, carriages, wagons, carts, plantation tools, and everything as it is now, all during her lifetime or widowhood. But if she should marry or die, then, and in that case, it is my will that ail the property I have left her should be sold on one, two and three years credit, with interest after one year, except the negroes; and they are to be sold at private sale, by my executors, to those that they are willing to go to, and no others, regardless of prices, and not to be parted from their husbands and wives and children in no event whatever; and this [I] enjoin on my beloved Avife, in case she does not [marry], and in case she marries, she is to have ten thousand dollars paid her by my executors, to do as she pleases with.” This will was not completed or signed on that day. Three days afterwards — February 5th, 1838 — testator added this clause: “Being still in my proper senses, and on a further consideration of all the matters and things, I have thought proper to alter a part of the first part of my *515will — that is, in case my beloved wife never marries, I wish for her to have five thousand dollars’ worth of property left her her lifetime or widowhood, she having the choice of it, to be hers forever, to do. as she may think proper with. And, further, by Mr. Aaron Beady, putting in what I have given him heretofore, and his having rendered services which the others could not do, I give him, extra, two thousand dollars. Now, in explanation of this will, as it is done just on my starting to New York, and in a hurry, my will is that the five thousand dollars may be taken out of what I give my beloved wife, and the two thousand dollars extra, which I give Aaron Beady.”
The clause of February 5th, copied above, must be treated and construed as a codicil to that part of the will which was written on the 2d. Its expressed object was “ to alter a part of the first part of his will.” While, under the rules of construction above declared, it must not be construed as revoking or abrogating the first clause, further than is necessary to give it effect according to its terms, yet, being the latest expression of testator’s will, it necessarily revokes all previous testamentary disposition with which it is incompatible. In the original bequest to Mrs. Sarah Sims, testator had incorporated restrictions. In the latter expression, he made alterations. In the first, he gave her an estate, during her life or widowhood, in certain described property; and gave her only a life estate. In the last, he gave her an absolute title to five thousand dollars worth of the same property, to be selected by her; but to be hers in absolute right, oniy in the event she did not again marry. She certainly had the right to select the property during her life; and yet, until her death, it could not be known she would never marry. Selecting the five thousand dollars worth, her right in fee did not attach absolutely until she died testator’s widow. In this clause, testator increased the provision made for his widow, by converting into a fee, contingent or defeasible, that which was before a life-time at most. We think it was a defeasible fee —first, because the widow must select the property, which she could do only in her lifetime; and, second, because so long as she remained testator’s widow, she had the absolute use of the property, with the power of disposition.
So far as the bequest of two thousand dollars to Aaron Beady is concerned, we think it was demandable at the expiration of eighteen months, for the following reasons: First. There is nothing in the will which shows that the payment was to be postponed until the marriage or death of Mrs. Sims. If such had been the intention of the testator, *516lie could easily and doubtless would have so expressed it. Second. If it was intended this legacy should be paid only after the death or marriage of Mrs. Sims, then this was no alteration of the first part of testator’s will. In that first part he had only disposed of the life interest, leaving the residuum of the title for after disposition. The construction contended for would be an alteration, not of the first part of the will, but of a later clause, by which disposition was made of the property, after the termination of Mrs. Sims’ estate.
The record does not inform us of the quantity of land, number of slaves, or value of the property devised and bequeathed to Mrs. Sims. There are facts suggestive of large value. Two grown negroes, and as many more as the widow might “ think proper,” were to be given up to each child, as they severally became of age or married. The widow was to have five thousand dollars worth of the property, to be selected by her. In the event she married, she was to have ten thousand dollars in cash, in lieu of the property otherwise given her. Husbands do not usually make increased provision for their wives, contingent on their entering again into matrimonial bonds. Human instincts lead in a different direction. We suppose the provision for Mrs. Sims was liberal; and the inference is not unreasonable that testator supposed and intended that the pecuniary legacy to Eeady should be paid out of its increase.
The case of Colbert v. Daniel, 32 Ala. 314, has been strongly urged upon us as declaring a rule which will estop applicant from disputing the rightful payment by the administrator of what is known as the Ready legacy. In that case, the executor and the legatees had met together, and had agreed on a construction of the will. The construction was erroneous; but, pursuant to such construction, the executor delivered to the widow certain slaves, as her legacy, which she retained during her life and disposed of by her will. On a proper construction of the will, she was not entitled to the slaves. Subsequent to her death, and to the execution of her will, an attempt was made by one of the legatees to hold the executor responsible for these slaves, as for a devastavit. We held that inasmuch as the complaining legatee was present when the slaves were given off to the widow, under the erroneous construction of the will, and did not then dissent from it, but assented to it, he must stand by the distribution as rightly made. We applied the maxim, consensus tollit errorem. To have ruled otherwise would have been to hold the executor responsible for property he had put beyond his control, by the consent of those in adverse *517interest. This, it will be perceived, would have been a great hardship upon the executor; and the case is very like one of estoppel.
In the case before us, the facts are essentially different. The Ready legacy was made a charge on the devise and bequest to Mrs. Sims. As we have intimated above, its payment was probably expected to be made out of the increase and profits to be earned and made by the life estate given to the widow. She alone would have her portion diminished by its payment; for it was to be taken out of what testator gave his beloved wife. Consequently, its payment during her lifetime could not possibly affect the other legatees. It was made no charge on the remainder of the property given to the children, after the termination of the widow’s estate, which was, in the main, a life estate. Under the one construction or the other, the executors would distribute, and did distribute the same property in quantity and value, when they came to make the first distribution before the death of Mrs. Sims. Consequently, the executors, in turning over to Mrs. Sims her life estate, did not put beyond their control, or part with any property, or interest in property, to which the other legatees had any claim, or by which they could be affected. Hence, the alleged erroneous construction of the will concerned no one except Ready, the legatee, and Mrs. Sims. We do not think Colbert v. Daniel sheds any light on this ease. The will says the Ready legacy is a charge on the estate given to Mrs. Sims. We are asked to sanction its payment out of the remainder, which was given to other legatees. We find no warrant in the will, or in the conduct of the parties, for doing so.
Holding as we do above, that the legacy to Mr. Ready was due and demandable at the end of eighteen months after the probate of the will, the administrator de bonis non had no authority to make the payment, and thus make it a charge on the remainder.
Reversed and remanded.