It is plain, and has not been controverted, that by the will of the testator, John S. Storrs, there is conferred upon his widow a general, discretionary power to sell all or any part of his estate. The primary question is, whether this power was continuing, or whether it had expired at the time of the sale and conveyance under which the defendant deduced title to the premises in controversy. The purposes for which the power was to be executed are not specially appointed in the will; neither the payment of the debts of the testator, nor the support of his wife and children, nor the education of his children, nor effecting a division between the wife and children, nor the conversion of property from one species to another, is designated as a purpose, to accomplish which the power may be exercised. The power is general, a matter of personal confidence in the donee, and to her discretion solely its exercise is committed, and the policy or expediency of its exercise she was to determine in view of the interests of the beneficiaries to whom the estate is ultimately devised and bequeathed.
The legal title to all the estate of the testator is devised and bequeathed to the widow, coupled with the power to manage and control it during her life or widowhood, or until the period appointed for division and distribution. Upon the legal estate is impressed an express trust for the support, maintenance and education of the children of the testator, enduring until there is a division and distribution. The manifest purpose of the testator was the continuance after his death of his family relations unbroken and undisturbed, the wife and mother having the control, while she remained unmarried. When either of his children arrived at full age, or married with the *267consent of the mother, if such child desired, a division and distribution were to be made, allotting to him or her a share of the estate, corresponding to the share which the statute of descents and distributions would have given in cases of intestacy ; the residue of the estate remaining in the possession, and under the control of the mother, in whom the legal title resided. But upon the marriage of the mother, whenever it occurred, whether during or after the minority of the children, or before or after the marriage of a child, the estate was to be divided and distributed; each child, not having previously drawn a share, taking one-fifth absolutely, and the mother one-fifth during her life, remainder to the children. A will of this general scope and character is not unusual. The controlling purpose is, that during the minority of the children, and the widowhood of the mother, the family relations of the testator may remain undisturbed, and to his place, as the head and governor of the family, the wife and mother may succeed. They spring from affection for the wife, and unlimited trust and confidence that while in widowhood, left only to her own judgment, and a consideration of the interests of herself and children, the powers with which she is invested will be justly and prudently exercised. But while to her, the trust and confidence is extended, and large discretionary powers are committed, as it can not be anticipated when she may marry, the testator is naturally unwilling that the powers .should be exercised after her marriage, wdien her judgment and discretion may be controlled by a stranger to him, and an alien to his children.
The genera] rule is, that powers or trusts can not continue beyond the period required by the purposes for which they are created. — 4 Kent, 233 ; Perry on Trusts, § 312. The power of sale with which the widow was invested is but one of the trusts resting in personal confidence, created by the will. It is the largest and most exclusively discretionary powers with which she is clothed ; a power it can not be presumed it was contemplated she should exercise after the termination of her legal estate, and after the period appointed for division and distribution, when she had formed a new relation, in which necessarily her discretion and judgment were in a greater or less degree subordinated to that of another, who was unknown to the testator, and to whom he did not extend confidence and trust. The exercise of the power after marriage would not be consistent with the division and distribution of the estate,' which the will expressly appointed at the period of the marriage of the widow, and would enable her then to defeat and disappoint the legal estate with which the children, in that event, were invested as tenants in common with her. The sale and conveyance after her marriage was unathorized; the power of sale *268■given by the will had expired ; it was a continuing power only during the continuance of the legal estate of the widow, and was incapable of exercise after the termination of that estate. 2 Perry on Trusts, § 498.
The result is, the circuit court did not err in the instruction given the jury, and the judgment must be affirmed.