The opinion of the court was delivered by
Wilson, J.This is an action of ejectment for certain land in the town of Jamaica. On the 24th day of February, 1832, Samuel Ingram of Newfane, in consideration of love and affection, conveyed to his “ daughter Almena, and heirs of her body forever,” the land to recover which this suit is brought.
The plaintiffs claim that, by the provisions of said deed, the title to the premises, and the right to the immediate possession thereof, upon the decease of the said Almena, vested in the “ heirs of her body,” and that said Angie E., being one of said heirs, the *690plaintiffs are entitled, to recover the estate. The defendant claims title to the premises as tenant by the curtesy. Hence, the general question is whether the said Almena had, at the time of her decease, such title to the land as would entitle her husband, the defendant, to hold said real estate as tenant by the curtesy. The 74th section of the act of 1821 ( Slade’s compilation, page 348 ) provided that the husband of any -woman who should die, leaving-issue by such husband, should have and. hold the real estate of such woman, as tenant by the curtesy. That statute did not limit the right of the husband to hol'd the lands of the wife, as tenant by the curtesy, 'to cases where she was seized in fee-simple, but would include real estate whereof she was seized in fee-tail. In 1823 an act was passed which provides “that when any man and his wife shall be seized of any real estate in her right in fee-simple, and issue shall be born alive of the body of such wife that may or might inherit the same, and the wife die, the husband shall have and hold such estate, during his life, as tenant by the curtesy.” In Giddings & wife v. Cox, 31 Vt., 607, the court decided that the act of 1823 is a revisa! of the entire subject, as to the right of the husband to hold lands as tenant by the curtesy, and that the act of 1821 Avas repealed by the act of 1823. The act of 1823 was in force at the date of said deed, and the provisions of that act have been continued, in all the statutes of this state, since that time. The statute, in express terms, coniines the right of the husband to hold the real estate of the wife, as tenant by curtesy, to cases Avhere they were seized in her right of such estate in fee-simple. Lands in this state are allodial, and the entire and absolute property is vested in the owners according to the nature of their respective estates. Fee-simple is a pure fee; an absolute estate of inheritance, that Avhich a person holds inheritable to him and his heirs general forever. Litt., § 1, Co. Litt., 1 b.; 2 Bl. Com., 106. Termes de la Ley. It is called fee-simple, that is pure, because clear of any condition or restriction to particular heirs, being descendible to the heirs general, whether male or female, lineal or collateral. It is the largest estate and most extensive interest that can be enjoyed in land, being the entire property therein, and it confers an unlimited power of alienation. *6912 Bl., 106 ; Litt., § 11; 4 Kent Com., page 5. We may safely assume that the legislature, in the statute of 1823, used the words “ of any real estate in fee-simple” to signify a pure inheritance clear from any qualification or condition, giving a right of succession to all the heirs generally, according to rules established by the law of this state for the descent of such real property. Under this construction of the statute, we have next to consider whether the deed from Samuel Ingram to his daughter Almena conveyed to her an estate in fee-simple. The granting part of the deed is “ unto the said Almena and heirs of her body foreverThe rvords “ heirs of her body ” are words of descent, and taken in connection with the other parts of the deed, create what would be, by the common law and the statute Be Bonis, an estate tail: or, in other words, the deed creates an estate of inheritance by force of the statute Be Bonis, limited and restrained to the “ heirs of her body,” in exclusion of others. It is hardly claimed by the defendant’s counsel that the words in the granting part of the deed create an estate in fee-simple. But the defendant does claim that the words “ unto the said Almena and heirs of her body,” in the premises, are enlarged by the words, in the habendum, “ to the said Almena and heirs aforesaid, their heirs and assigns, to her and their own use and behoof forever.” We think there is no repugnance between the different clauses of the deed. The language of the habendum shows very clearly that the grantor did not. intend to enlarge or otherwise change what is imported in the granting part of the deed. The words “ heirs aforesaid ” were used to designate the “heirs of her body,” to take from or after her. The words “their heirs and assigns ” mean the heirs and assigns of the “ heirs of her body.” And the words “ to her and their own use and behoof forever ” mean that said Almena was to hold an estate of inheritance, limited and restrained to the “ heirs of her body,” who were, in the exclusion of others, by force of the limitation in the grant, to take the estate from her, upon her decease; and that the heirs aforesaid, that is the heirs designated in the granting part of the deed, were to hold according to the legal effect of said limitation, and so in respect to their heirs and assigns. In this case we have no occasion to define the estate which the immediate *692heirs, that is the “ heirs of her body,” took by said deed. In Jackson v. Hudson, 3 Johnson, 345, Kent, C. J., says, “ the intent, when apparent and not repugnant to any rule of law, will control technical terms, for the intent, and not the words, is the essence of every agreement. In the exposition of deeds, the construction must be upon the view and comparison of the whole instrument, and with an endeavor to give ¿very part of it meaning and effect.” In Flagg, admr., v. Eames et al., 40 Vt., 16, it is said by the court that “ where' the purpose of the grant is clearly ascertained from the premises of the deed, and the premises contain proper words of limitation, and the habendum is repugnant to the grant, the habendum yields to the manifest intent and terms of the grant.” But we think there are no terms in this deed, cither in its premises or habendum, which indicate a purpose on the part of the grantor to convey to his daughter an estate in fee-simple. It is said by the defendant’s counsel that the estate of the said Almena was a fee-simple in expectancy; that it became a fee-simple absolute in the “ heirs of her body,” by descent to them, at her decease, and that tenancy by the curtesy depends entirely upon the estate that passes to the heirs.
Whether the “ heirs of her body ” take an estate in fee-simple or not, does not establish a right in the defendant to hold as tenant by the curtesy. In order to give even plausibility to the argument of the defendant’s counsel upon this point, it would be necessary to assume that her estate became in her right a fee-simple at her decease by relation back to the original grant, notwithstanding she was not seized of the estate in fee-simple in her life time. To hold thus would be to evade the statute and disregard the obvious purpose of the grant. It is, we think, plain from the provisions of the statute, that the question whether the husband is entitled to hold as tenant by the curtesy or not, must be determined by the estate of which the husband and wife were seized in her right in her life time.
If she had not in her life time an estate in fee-simple, then the husband and wife were not seized in her right of an estate in fee-simple, and he can derive no aid from the estate limited to the “ heirs of her body,” even though it descended from her to them, *693and-they held the estate free from the limitation in the grant. In Giddings et al. v. Smith et al., 15 Vt., 344, it was held that a will made in 1774, and proved in 1781, containing a devise to “ Elizabeth Harris and the lawful heirs of her body” gave her an estate tail. The case of Giddings and Wife v. Cox, 31 Vt., 607, decides the main question in the case at bar. In that case it appeared that Daniel Harris, by will, devised certain lands to his “ daughter Elizabeth Harris, and the lawful heirs of her body.” She was married to Christopher Bates, and by him had a daughter Rachel Bates, who married said Giddings and was one of the plaintiffs in that suit. Elizabeth Bates, (whose maiden name was Elizabeth Harris,) died on the 24th day of February, 1833, being-more than fifteen years before that suit was brought; and her husband Christopher Bates died on the 24th day of May, 1836, being less than fifteen years before the commencement of that suit. The plaintiffs claimed to recover the land upon the title of the wife plaintiff, as heir of the body of said Elizabeth, under said devise. The defendant claimed title by adverse possession, and his title by adverse possession was made to depend upon the question whether the statute began to run against the wife plaintiff at the time of her mother’s death in 1833, or not until her father’s death in 1836, and that depended upon the question whether her father was tenant by the curtesy or not. The court decided that the said Elizabeth, by the devise of her father, held the title to the land in fee-tail, and that after the passage of the act of 1823, relating to tenancy by the curtesy, a husband did not become tenant by the curtesy of the land of his deceased wife, held by her in tail.
We think it is clear that the said deed did not give the said Almena an estate in fee-simple ; therefore the defendant is not entitled to hold as tenant by the curtesy.
The result is the judgment of the county court is reversed and judgment for the plaintiffs for the demanded premises, nominal damages and their costs.